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The DTrace trouble-shooting software from Sun was chosen as the Gold
winner in The Wall Street Journal's 2006 Technology Innovation Awards
contest, the second time in three years that a Sun entry has won the
top award. The panel of judges, representing industry as well as
research and academic institutions, selected Gold, Silver and Bronze
award winners and cited one technology for an Honorable Mention.
In the Energy and Power category , *Runner-Up*Sun Microsystems (U.S.): UltraSPARC T1, an eco-friendly
processor that generates less heat
Computer systems are notoriously finicky. They'll hum
along just fine and then unaccountably slow down, freeze up or stop
working altogether. Finding the cause of some unexplained problem is
difficult and time-consuming, especially with complicated systems in
real-life settings.
Bryan Cantrill and a team of engineers at Sun Microsystems
Inc. have devised a way to diagnose misbehaving software quickly and
while it's still doing its work. While traditional trouble-shooting
programs can take several days of testing to locate a problem, the new
technology, called DTrace, is able to track down problems quickly and
relatively easily, even if the cause is buried deep in a complex
computer system.
The DTrace trouble-shooting software from Sun was
chosen as the Gold winner in The Wall Street Journal's 2006 Technology
Innovation Awards contest, the second time in three years that a Sun
entry has won the top award. The panel of judges, representing industry
as well as research and academic institutions, selected Gold, Silver
and Bronze award winners and cited one technology for an Honorable
Mention.
For the awards, now in their sixth year, judges
considered novel technologies from around the world in several
categories: medicine and medical devices, wireless, security, consumer
electronics, semiconductors and others.
A Wall Street Journal editor initially screened more
than 600 applications. The judges then considered 121 of the entries,
selecting 12 category winners and 37 runners-up. Among the category
winners are the top three award winners.
In selecting winners, judges considered whether the
technology truly represents a breakthrough from conventional methods,
rather than just an incremental improvement. (One of the judges, Robert
Drost, won the Gold award for Sun Microsystems in 2004; he recused
himself from voting on Sun's DTrace software.)
The Silver award went to HelioVolt Corp., of Austin,
Texas, which has come up with a way to make lightweight solar-energy
panels that are powered by an alternative to the more common silicon
solar material and that can be applied to glass or other building
materials.
HelioVolt President and Chief Executive B.J. Stanbery
developed the method for manufacturing thin-film solar material based
on a compound called CIGS, for copper indium gallium selenide, which is
more efficient at producing energy than silicon-based solar cells.
Dr. Stanbery's advance uses the same kind of printing
process used in making integrated circuits to apply a power-producing
coating to just about any building material. With $8 million in venture
funding, he is developing prototype equipment to begin manufacturing
CIGS film and hopes to have products available for testing by the end
of next year.
THE JUDGES
The
following served as judges for The Wall Street Journal's Technology
Innovation Awards. None of them voted on any entries in which their
companies or organizations may have had an interest. MARK BERNSTEIN
President and Center Director, Palo Alto Research Center
ASHEEM CHANDNA
Partner, Greylock Partners
ROBERT DROST
Distinguished Engineer and Director, Sun Microsystems Labs
Gold Winner, 2004 WSJ Technology Innovation Awards
PETER GRAF
Executive Vice President for Solution Marketing, SAP
DIANE GREENE
Co-Founder and President, VMware Inc.
ANTHONY KOMAROFF
Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School
Editor in Chief, Harvard Health Publications
RICHARD S. LANG
Chairman of the Department General Internal Medicine, The Cleveland Clinic
Editor in Chief, Cleveland Clinic Men's Health Advisor
PEDRO NUENO
Professor of Entrepreneurship, IESE Business School, Spain
Executive President, China Europe International Business School, China
JANE ROYSTON
Branco Weiss Professor of Entrepreneurship and Innovation, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
President, Create Switzerland
KENNY TANG
Founder and Chief Executive, Oxbridge Capital Ltd.
PETER TERWIESCH
Chief Technology Officer, ABB Ltd.
WILLIAM WEBB
Head of Research and Development, U.K. Office of Communications
Pfizer Inc. of New York and Nektar Therapeutics,
of San Carlos, Calif., won the Bronze award for their development of a
powdered, inhalable insulin designed to replace shots for the treatment
of diabetes.
Almost 200 million people world-wide suffer from
diabetes, Pfizer says. But because using insulin to control blood-sugar
levels has required daily shots, many sufferers don't get the treatment
they need, leading to serious complications.
The powdered insulin, along with a specialized inhaler
that can disperse the powder effectively inside the lungs, was
developed in the early 1990s by Nektar, a biotechnology company. The
product, known as Exubera, was approved in January by the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration and by the European Commission, and is available in
Ger-many, Ireland and the U.K. The company plans to make it available
in the U.S. this month.
An Honorable Mention award went to Sonos Inc., Santa
Barbara, Calif., for a system for broadcasting music around a home over
a wireless network. With the system, music lovers can transmit tunes
stored on a computer to speakers in several rooms.
Here are the winners in the 12 industry categories:
BIOTECH-MEDICAL
Pfizer's and Nektar's Exubera powdered insulin won in
the biotech-medical category. Researchers for years have been looking
for a substitute for insulin shots to control diabetes, and several
leading pharmaceutical companies are in the process of developing their
own inhalable alternative. But Exubera is the first to market, and the
leading competitors are still in clinical trials. (One rival, Novo Nordisk
AS of Denmark, has sued Pfizer, claiming Exubera infringes on several
Novo patents for inhalable insulin; a hearing on Novo's request for an
injunction has been set for December. A Pfizer spokeswoman says the
company is considering its defense but "is confident in the innovation
behind the development of this important new medicine.")
While some judges questioned whether Exubera offers an
improvement over injected insulin in treating diabetes, others said the
drug could encourage diabetes sufferers to get treatment earlier and
more often. "This has such a tremendous advantage for a huge number of
people world-wide," says Pedro Nueno, professor of entrepreneurship at
the IESE Business School of the University of Navarra, in Barcelona,
Spain. "It is a real breakthrough."
CONSUMER ELECTRONICS
The Sonos digital-music networking system was the
winner in this category. While other companies offer products that
wirelessly broadcast music around a home, Sonos's use of mesh networks
-- basically an efficient way to route data among multiple devices --
enables it to stream music between distant rooms without lost signals.
Sonos got extra points from judges for its user-friendly design, the
result of its decision to bring in an experienced product designer
early in the development process.
ENERGY AND POWER
HelioVolt won in this category for its process of
making ultrathin solar-power materials. Dr. Stanbery founded HelioVolt
in 2001 to devise a procedure to manufacture CIGS film cheaply and
efficiently. The technology is still in its early stages; the company
is using its funding to build prototypes of the equipment necessary for
commercial-scale manufacturing. Still, judges liked the promise of
delivering solar power at dramatically reduced cost. "Solar power at
one-tenth the cost will be a revolution," says Sun's Mr. Drost.
ENVIRONMENT
ET Water Systems LLC, of Corte Madera, Calif., won for
a landscape-irrigation system that promises to reduce water use by
gauging the precise watering needs of a home or business based on the
location's plants, soil types and rainfall. Unlike other electronically
controlled watering systems, the technology uses Web-based controls for
users to enter details about their irrigation needs -- landscape
features, local watering restrictions, and soil and plant types. It
also relies on a central computer to analyze weather conditions and
determine each location's watering schedules; the centralized controls
make it easier to update the software that performs that analysis. The
company has about 100 customers, mainly large commercial sites and
residential developments.
MATERIALS
Eikos Inc., of Franklin, Mass., won in this category
for a transparent, electrically conductive coating that can be used,
among other things, to make solar cells, flexible displays, and
touch-screen monitors that are less prone to dead spots. The company (www.eikos.com)
uses carbon nanotubes -- microscopic structures that can conduct
electricity -- which it purifies and spreads as a clear coating. It has
received contracts from the Air Force to develop a coating for aircraft
canopies that can dissipate electrostatic charges, and from the
Department of Energy to research the use of the coating in solar cells.
MEDICAL DEVICES
Incisive Surgical Inc., of Plymouth, Minn., won for a
new mechanical skin stapler, which uses absorbable skin staples to
close wounds after surgery. Traditionally, surgeons could choose
mechanically applied metal staples, which are fast but require
additional visits to have the staples removed, cause unsightly scarring
and have a higher risk of infections. Or they could use absorbable
sutures, which leave less scarring but take much longer to sew into
place. Incisive's Insorb stapler, says John L. Shannon Jr., the
company's president and chief executive, can save up to two hours of
suturing time for some surgeries. Since the company introduced the
product in late 2004, more than 50,000 of the disposable staplers have
been used.
IT SECURITY AND PRIVACY
AuthenTec Inc., of Melbourne, Fla., won for its
fingerprint-reading technology, used to authenticate users of personal
computers, cellphones and other devices. The TruePrint sensor uses
radio-frequency waves to get more-accurate fingerprint readings by
detecting the patterns under the surface of the skin. (Surface
fingerprints can be affected by age, injuries and other factors.) The
more-accurate readings mean the sensors can be smaller and cheaper,
reducing the cost of embedding fingerprint readers. About 10 million of
the sensors have been sold and are used in laptops from Hewlett-Packard
Co. and Lenovo Group, and cellphones offered by NTT DoCoMo Inc.
"This seems to have massively changed the commercial
proposition and allowed them to sell very large numbers of sensors,"
says William Webb, an Innovation Awards judge and head of research and
development at the U.K. Office of Communications.
SECURITY (FACILITIES)
AxonX LLC, of Sparks, Md., won for a security-camera
system that uses artificial-intelligence software to detect and
identify smoke and fire in large commercial buildings. While typical
fire-detection systems either respond when smoke reaches a sensor or
when a fire's heat triggers a sprinkler system, the axonX system
analyzes video images picked up by security cameras to spot smoke or
flames before fire advances. In March, Johnson Controls Inc. announced
it would distribute the technology as part of its building-controls
products.
SEMICONDUCTORS
Semprius Inc., a start-up based in Chapel Hill, N.C.,
won for a process for making large-scale, high-performance electronic
circuits that can be applied to any surface. The technology, developed
by John Rogers, the company's president and co-founder, along with a
team of researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
does this by using a two-step process: In the first, electronic devices
are formed on semiconductor wafer using conventional techniques. Then
an extremely thin layer that contains the complete transistor is lifted
from the wafer and printed onto the desired material, which can include
thin plastic sheets, fabric or rubber.
Among other things, the process can be used to make
large flexible displays, or rubber gloves with built-in sensors that
could be used by surgeons. Semprius recently developed a prototype
automated printing system for cellphone displays.
SOFTWARE
Sun Microsystems, of Santa Clara, Calif., won in this category for its DTrace trouble-shooting software.
Mr. Cantrill came up with the general idea for DTrace
in 1996, while he was a computer-science student at Brown University,
but didn't get to start work on it until late 2001. It took nearly
three years for him and his team -- Michael Shapiro, a Sun
distinguished engineer, and Adam Leventhal, a staff engineer -- to make
it work; a final version shipped early last year as part of Sun's
Solaris 10 operating system.
Where most debugging takes place as software is being
developed, DTrace analyzes problems with systems that are in production
-- running a company's database, say, or executing stock trades. It
does this with a process called "dynamic tracing," which enables a
developer or systems administrator to run diagnostic tests on a system
without causing it to crash. Before DTrace, such tests often took days
or weeks to reproduce the problem and identify the cause. With DTrace,
performance problems can be tracked to their underlying causes in
hours, even minutes.
"This allows much better visibility into performance
problems than anything else out there," says judge Diane Greene,
president of VMware Inc., of Palo Alto, Calif.
TECHNOLOGY DESIGN
Seagate Technology
LLC, of Scott's Valley, Calif., won for a hard-disk recording
technology that dramatically increases the amount of information that
can be stored on a single disk. Seagate's "perpendicular" recording
method stores data bits on end, which allows information to be more
tightly packed than traditional methods, which store data bits parallel
to the disk surface. Seagate began shipping disk drives using the
technology earlier this year, and expects that by the end of the year
all of its disk-drive products will use the technology.
WIRELESS
Zensys Inc., of Fremont, Calif., won for wireless
technology for controlling home lighting, entertainment and security
systems. Like Sonos, Zensys uses a mesh network to transmit signals
around a home -- in this case, radio waves convey on-off commands to
any electrical device connected to the system. By using a mesh network,
instead of simple radio controls, the Zensys system can detect when a
new device is added to or removed from the network and can route
commands without interruption anywhere in a home. More than 125
home-electronics companies sell products that can work with the
technology.
Read the original article: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB115755300770755096.html
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