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It looks like there is a new site focusing on wireless sensor network news. We are featured in stories on the Discovery Channel segment on FIRE and the CNN segment on FIRE.
The FireEye project highlighted in the Wired article is a head-mounted display (HMD) in the firefighter's mask, designed to relay performance and safety enhancing decision support information in a hands free format. This is exciting because firefighting can be extremely demanding and chaotic where quick decisions are mandatory and information is scarce. Firefighters must constantly divide their attention between many immediate events, which makes it difficult to complete critical tasks such as search and rescue, possibly costing lives. The FireEye system, led by Joel Wilson, mounts two heads up displays inside the fire fighters helmet -- one transparent, the other opaque. The design is based on user needs studies with the Chicago and Berkeley Fire Departments, with primary design goals being rugged, inexpensive relative to most HMDs, minimally distracting, and easy to operate. The FireEye shows an interactive floor plan map with current locations of the user, their Buddy according to the National Fire Protection Agency "Buddy System", other company members, areas where smoke alarms have activated, and remaining air supply. The GUI is simple to prevent the FireEye from becoming an excessive attention cost. The Research @ Berkeley Magazine has a much more in depth write up of the FIRE system. Moteiv is glad to provide Tmote Sky for sensing and Boomerang, an enhanced distribution of the open source operating system TinyOS, which helps the wireless sensor devices sense, react, and report changes in the environment to the mobile firefighters.
Vinnie taught himself TinyOS, purchased Tmote Sky motes with help from his family, and integrated application specific sensors to enable work on his award winning project titled "A Collaborative Framework to Enhance Camera-Based Security Systems Using Intelligent Wireless Sensor Networks". His work combines wireless sensor networks with his school's camera-based security system to reduce deployment costs and increase security coverage. Vinnie was also awarded 2nd place in the engineering category and received additional awards from the National Society of Professional Engineers, Professional Engineers in California Government, Intel for Excellence in Computer Science, and the U.S. Army. He will now be competing at the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair in May. Vinnie also received support and encouragement for his project from Assistant Principal Stuart MacKay and the school's security officer Phillip Espinosa. |
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Moteiv and the University of California, Berkeley are
Vinayak Ramesh, a Sophomore at Oak Ridge High School in El Dorado Hills, California has won