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SXSW

6 Cool Innovations That Are Making the World a Better Place, Vol. 2

Reason's choice of SXSW's 2017 innovator awards

Stephanie Slade | 3.24.2017 4:45 PM

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Large image on homepages | Molecule
(Molecule)

Reason readers already know that smart people + free markets = innovations that can change the world. But just in case you needed a reminder (or a proof of the pudding for your more skeptical friends), below are six products we found at South by Southwest Interactive (SXSWi), the big technology and entrepreneurship confab that happened in Austin, Texas, this month, that are working hard to make life a little better. Each was a finalist for one of the conference's Interactive Innovation Awards, and a couple of them took home first-place prizes, too.

6. Molekule: Fighting Indoor Airpollution at a Molecular Level

I am one of those poor souls who are allergic to anything and everything in the air. Dust. Dander. Smoke. Pollen. Carbon. Oxygen. I become a weezing, sniffling mess at the first sign of any of them. In desperation a few years ago I got myself an air purifier, but it didn't make much of a difference. Eventually the HEPA filter needed to be replaced, and I wasn't sure where to go to get a new one. Soon, rather than reducing the floating particle content in my apartment, it became just another object (ironically) collecting dust. And then I threw it in a dumpster. Enter Molekule, whose creators claim to have cracked the code on using nanotechnology, free radicals, and solar energy science (stick with me, I swear I'm not just blurting out buzzwords) in a process called Photo Electrochemical Oxidation (PECO) to actually break down indoor air pollutants at a molecular level. And the device—a finalist among Health, Med & Biotech products—knows when it needs a new filter and will automatically order one for home delivery, at a flat annual subscription rate. Although I can't testify that it works as promised, I very much hope I'll have a chance to find out in the near future.

Molekule / Facebook

5. Pavegen V3: Human-Powered, Er, Power

Pavegen has created a flooring system that absorbs the shock of pedestrians walking across it and, using tiny generators on the undersides of the triangular tiles, transforms that movement into electricity. In addition to being a true renewable source of energy, it would seem to hold a lot of promise for letting there be light (among other things) in remote locations without access to traditional power hookups. According to the Pavegen website, the "rotary motion" caused by a footfall "creates 2 to 4 joules of energy via electro-magnetic induction." The company's first permanent outdoor installation came to Washington, D.C.'s Dupont Circle neighborhood (also, coincidentally, home to Reason's D.C. office) last fall, showing that the system can stand up to relatively harsh winter conditions. V3 was the Innovation Award winner in the Smart Cities category.

Pavagen.com

4. The ODIN: Do-It-Yourself Gene Editing

Self-described "biohacker" Josiah Zayner wasn't content to get a Ph.D. in biophysics from the University of Chicago and do research for NASA. In 2016, he launched a crowdfunding effort to found The ODIN, which for $150 will sell you a DIY bacterial gene editing kit. That product, a nominee for the Health, Med & Biotech award, comes with all necessary components "to make precision genome edits in bacteria at home including Cas9, tracrRNA, crRNAm," plus a template so you can experiment on your own. "I believe that the only way that this works is if Science is democratized so everyone has access," Zayner wrote on Indiegogo. "Until now, no one has taken the time to develop protocols and methods and then be willing to provide all of this for a reasonable price that can be afforded without large institutional grants."

Josiah Zayner
S. Slade

3. TunnelBear: Routing Around Internet Censorship

One of the ways oppressive governments manage to keep a stranglehold on their citizens is by controlling the flow of information via spying, censorship, and propaganda dispersal. Fortunately, Virtual Private Network (VPN) services can shield a user's online activities from her internet provider and, by creating a "tunnel" to a server in another country and connecting her to the internet from there, open up access to websites that would otherwise be blocked. TunnelBear is, of course, not the only such service. But it's making a bid to be the one that the masses turn to first to keep their communications safe. Unlike a lot of information security products, the website is slick and straightforward, the software is easy to install, and the interface is comprehensible. Because how much good can a service like this do if non-experts are too intimidated to give it a try? At $50 a year, TunnelBear—a finalist in the Privacy & Security category—is one of the most affordable VPN providers out there. Oh yeah, and they take Bitcoin.

TunnelBear
TunnelBear.com

2. The PRIME Needle-Free Injector: Because We All Hate Getting Shots

Portal Instruments set out to invent a better means of injecting medications—one that avoids the pain and anxiety many people experience from handling needles. The result is the PRIME injector, a handheld device that lets chronic disease sufferers self-administer a full dose of a drug in half a second (vs. the 10 to 20 seconds it takes now) and to do it without a needle or syringe. If that sounds like magic, well, you won't be surprised to hear the medical device startup (which is privately funded, Portal goes out of the way to point out on its website) took home the Innovation Award for Health, Med & Biotech. The technology works with a variety of biologics. Now all it needs is Food and Drug Adminstration approval.

The PRIME injector
www.portalinstruments.com

1. Tokken: The Banking Solution for Cannabusiness

Due to labyrinthine federal regulations, marijuana growers, dispensaries, and other businesses—even in states where it's totally legal—can't get access to bank accounts and so must conduct all transactions in cash. Right? Not quite. A Denver-based startup called Tokken is here to change the game by offering companies and customers in the state a solution to this tricky problem. Founded by a former bank regulator, CEO Lamine Zarrad, the blockchain-based platform promises "to comply with every relevant regulatory requirement" on behalf of banks so they can rest easy knowing they won't get in trouble with the feds for extending their services to a cannabusiness. Consumers can then use the Tokken app to make purchases via a credit card stored in their own personal mobile wallet. Easy peasy. Tokken, which plans to expand beyond Colorado in the near future, was a finalist for the SXSW New Economy prize.

Tokken logo
www.tokken.com

BONUS! What Reason TV found at SXSW: People using tech to take on tyrants. Check it out!

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NEXT: Obamacare Repeal Bill Dies in the House, Free Speech Threatened at DePaul: P.M. Links

Stephanie Slade is a senior editor at Reason.

SXSWInnovationTechnologyScienceEntrepreneurship
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  1. Julien Couvreur   8 years ago

    I look forward to more articles like this one, highlighting solutions and entrepreneurship, as opposed to the typical libertarian criticism (which is valid but gets old).

    1. Fist of Etiquette   8 years ago

      Next up: This nifty gadget allows you to criticize statism in new and efficient ways!

      1. Fascist loofa-faced shitgibbon   8 years ago

        Until they invent a Fist Firster, I'm not interested.

      2. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   8 years ago

        You must not be talking about Reason commenting system. Or you are, and it works about as well as the above inventions will.

    2. Fatty Bolger   8 years ago

      I look forward to when they invent a reliable way of commenting on said articles.

  2. SIV   8 years ago

    We All Hate Getting Shots

    Even morphine?

    1. Robbzilla   8 years ago

      Yep. It gets better REALLY quick though.

  3. John Titor   8 years ago

    came to Washington, D.C.'s Dupont Circle neighborhood (also, coincidentally, home to Reason's D.C. office) last fall, showing that the system can stand up to relatively harsh winter conditions

    Pick one, southern child.

    1. Austrian Anarchy   8 years ago

      In ivory tower land, a film of snow does count as relatively harsh. BTW, in DC if someone is injured on a public sidewalk, the closest property owner is held liable.

  4. Greg F   8 years ago

    According to the Pavegen website, the "rotary motion" caused by a footfall "creates 2 to 4 joules of energy via electro-magnetic induction."

    One kWh is equivalent to 3.6 million joules. I doubt they will ever recover the energy used to build it.
    .

    Vertual Private Network (VPN) services can...

    That should be virtual private network.

    1. Sevo   8 years ago

      "One kWh is equivalent to 3.6 million joules. I doubt they will ever recover the energy used to build it."

      Yes.
      There are some 'energy recovery systems' that are not worth inventing...

    2. BunkerBill   8 years ago

      Yes, this one has "trolling for government subsidies" written all over it.

  5. Scarecrow Repair & Chippering   8 years ago

    I remember needle-less vaccine injectors decades ago, which then disappeared. What was that all about, and how does it differ from the PRIME injector?

    1. Fascist loofa-faced shitgibbon   8 years ago

      "Prime injector" was my nickname.... etc.

  6. MikeP   8 years ago

    Pavegen has created a flooring system that absorbs the shock of pedestrians walking across it and, using tiny generators on the undersides of the triangular tiles, transforms that movement into electricity. In addition to being a true renewable source of energy...

    This must be stealing some energy from the pedestrians, no?

    Does all the shock of a pedestrian on a conventional surface go immediately into heat? Because if any part of it rebounds to the user to aid the next step, then this is not entirely free. Think of it as the user being made to walk uphill both ways.

  7. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   8 years ago

    I see the feds have already taken down Tunnel Bear.

  8. Fascist loofa-faced shitgibbon   8 years ago

    "Think of it as the user being made to walk uphill both ways"

    In the snow.

  9. MikeP   8 years ago

    The real application of Pavegen is to connect it to an external energy source and run it backwards so it gives pedestrians a little boost with every step, as though they are walking downhill both ways.

    As an added benefit, that same external energy source can be used to power the lights!

    1. Fascist loofa-faced shitgibbon   8 years ago

      Hopefully scientists can find vast underground lakes of inexpensive fuel to power this dream.

  10. AlmightyJB   8 years ago

    All of these products look extremely dangerous if they get in the wrong hands. We'll definately need to ban most of them and heavily regulate and tax the others. /Everybody else.

    1. AlmightyJB   8 years ago

      So now I'm 1 for 4 on being able to comment today. 2 for 5 if this goes through.

  11. AlmightyJB   8 years ago

    Tokken founder will be in jail within 3 years. So you think we going to let people play God with Gene editing or let terrorist design bacteria for biological warfare? Oh, and tunnelbear, we're going to need a backdoor to your customers data usage for the children.

  12. AlmightyJB   8 years ago

    At my orphan call center, I have pedals under the desk hooked up to generators used to power their computers

  13. db   8 years ago

    Pavegen has created a flooring system that absorbs the shock of pedestrians walking across it and, using tiny generators on the undersides of the triangular tiles, transforms that movement into electricity.

    Just sounds like slavery with more steps to me.

  14. Austrian Anarchy   8 years ago

    Reason has made the full transition to VOX2.

  15. Bender B. Rodriguez   8 years ago

    "Now all it needs is Food and Drug Adminstration approval."

    I think I found a flaw in their go to market strategy.

  16. Voros McCracken   8 years ago

    "it would seem to hold a lot of promise for letting there be light (among other things) in remote locations without access to traditional power hookups."

    And such locations tend to have very heavy foot traffic.

  17. Malvolio   8 years ago

    "A flooring system that absorbs the shock of pedestrians walking across it and, using tiny generators on the undersides of the triangular tiles, transforms that movement into electricity" -- is that a joke?

    All you are doing is generating electricity by burning hamburgers and salads.

  18. godaferiro   8 years ago

    my buddy's mother gets 66 each hour on the internet, she has been out of a job for twelve months.. the previous month her payment was 16114 just working on the internet four hours per day. go here to this
    +_+_+_+_+_+_+_+_+ http://www.moneytime10.com

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