The creator of the Segway is one of the most successful and admired inventors in the world. He leads a team of 300 scientists and engineers devoted to making things that better mankind. But he's not done

Think Car: Kamen's personal vehicle has Deka-designed parts on the inside  Car photographed at Five Forty North Associates

The design committee is at a crossroads. Should they do the same contest over and over, so that fans don't have to learn how to watch a game? Is boosting popularity and growth worth the sacrifice of making FIRST less challenging for the future innovators of America? FIRST could very well prove to be the perfect solution to an intractable problem; he may well have devised the formula for making the ideal engineer, scientist, inventor — the perfect problem-solver. Or maybe, as with some of his other lofty inventions, he's found a beautiful solution that fails to account for the marketplace. Maybe he just expects too much of other people.

There is nothing in Kamen's life that is superfluous, nothing that does not serve the greater mission. Not even his home. He'll lead you through his hexagonal maze to tour centuries of science and industry: the three-story steam engine, the hand-cranked elevator from the set of The Sting, the Wurlitzer jukebox stocked with classical music, 19th-century wooden wheelchairs juxtaposed with his iBot, a pinball machine, a flight simulator, a chess-playing robot. For the endless string of overnight VIPs or the families of employees called to work on Sunday afternoons, Westwind is also a five-star resort, complete with indoor pool, hot tub, sauna, championship-grade tennis court and lighted baseball diamond, most of which Kamen has never enjoyed himself. But then, this is a man who hasn't taken a vacation in 30 years (he's 58). Or so the rumor goes, though it's a hard one to believe; even Kamen's hero Einstein took vacations.

And indeed, Kamen denies the allegation — sort of. "I take vacations all the time," he says. "Vacations from the Slingshot to work on the Stirling, vacations from the Stirling to work on the prosthetic arm, vacations from any of that for FIRST. But if you mean going to some island and lying on the beach all day doing nothing, no, I have never done that. If you could point to one thing I'm working on that is not so important that I can spare to waste a week, well then, I'll go on vacation. But you see, those are the projects that I've already given up. What's left — these are too important to waste even a minute."

Stirling Engine: The silver-colored heart of the Think car is a Deka design

Time. It's the only thing Kamen fears running out of. It's why he can't take a day off. It's why he can't stop working until he is too exhausted to think. It's why, only in the wee hours of the night, after too much wine and too little sleep, will Kamen the preacher, the salesman, the uncompromising moralist finally take a vacation from the hard sell. In the comfort of his hexagonal wine cellar, with its redwood panels and thousands of aging vintages, Kamen turns into an ordinary man, with fears unconquered and dreams unrealized and an almost obsessive awareness of his own mortality, heightened by the recent loss of his father to cancer.

"Other people have peace because I think maybe they just don't think about it — the ticking clock. But it's always there with me. I know that I have this finite amount of time, and there's so much to do, so much in this world that needs fixing," he says. "What if I don't have time to finish all this before . . ." The London Symphony (playing the Moody Blues) fills the silence of a long pause. "I can't cheat death," he says finally. He begins to talk with his hands. "I'm not a religious man," Kamen says, "but I have a kind of faith. Faith that these kids will be able to finish what we've started."

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20 Comments

what is with the picture. i sorry popsci but i think this picture is so racist. the reason i think it all the picture is weird not only that when you see the magazines version of the picture. there is a person that has all the figurer of what a Asian boy would look like. not only that the picture could had been better if they would use real people instead of a artist drawing it. it would show what FIRST really mean to people.

The picture... is racist.

Yeah, seeing as racism is an ideal and a picture is an inanimate object, I don't think that's even possible. Maybe I just can't wade through your grammar to understand what you mean by saying the picture is "racist." Could you clarify?

On topic, guys.

I admire him for trying to do this. I only hope that everyone else will actually listen to him...

~O

He has taken chances and delved into many areas of innovation. Where others see risk, he sees opportunity. Dean has been doing his thing for many years and my guess is he will continue for many more. I look forward to his next big "secret" project.

Well, the guy is a fair inventor and self promoter -- in the tradition of Edison.

But, if he wants to encourage innovation, he should share his methods of selling inventions. There are lots of innovators around -- few know how to make a buck from it.

Kudos to him for promoting the robot contest.

I do wonder why everybody cites the Segway as possibly his greatest invention. As far as I can tell, it's a fairly limited concept. Granted, it's innovative, but it solves problems that few people have. Sone of his other stuff is far more impressive.

It is true what you say about the segway, that it has met with limited acceptance but perhaps only a niche market is all that is needed until another inventor takes the ball and runs.

Mr. Kaman's invention selling methods aren't the real keys to his success. If you re-read the article, you will find what he does is not aimed at selling. His aim is to better mankind through his inventions. When the inventions succeed in this regard (the only measure of an invention's success to Mr. Kaman), he is handsomely rewarded. So, don't focus on how much you can make with an invention; Focus on how much better it can make people's lives, and they will beat a path to your door.

As for the comments regarding racism, I could go on for days about this. The main message is this: What you resist persists. If you are looking for evidence of racism, you will see it everywhere. And for God's sake, learn the language! Like it or not, people will judge you based on what you say or write, and may dismiss you without even thinking about your message. Even if the message in the first post was well-thought out (I can't see much evidence that it was), the point would be hopelessly lost due to the inability to communicate it well....or at all. I have tried several times to struggle through the poor grammar and punctuation, and I still don't see any substantiation of the point. Actually, I'm not sure I see the point either.

I agree with the third post. This is not the forum for comments about racism and the like. Take that fight "outside," if you really still believe you can fix anything by fighting. I think of my comments as correcting the record, and in case you think I'm doing exactly what I say shouldn't be done, I will not post on anything like this again.

Now go invent something that helps people, or support those who do!

W

"Give me ambiguity, or give me something else."

"Mr. Kaman's invention selling methods aren't the real keys to his success. If you re-read the article, you will find what he does is not aimed at selling. His aim is to better mankind through his inventions."

I got a good chuckle at this. The fact that you believe the above statement only proves just how good at marketing himself Mr. Kamen really is.

Regarding the racism thing; your second paragraph was exactly my point, though in more words.

Even if one or more of his inventions never becomes commercially viable, we cannot predict the spin-off affect it may have on the subsequent development by others who take the idea and run with it.

Kamen's most important invention was the one that spurred development of the Segway; the iBot, wheelchair replacement. Contenders include the insulin pump for pregnant women and the Slingshot water purification device. And let's not forget the stent.

I was a mentor for a First team for 3 years. To me the biggest difference between First and any other competition is that the all of the competitors work together. I helped a rookie rival team, from a rural school from North Dakota set-up next to us in a regional competition, write the software they needed so they could compete. The team had no access to anyone with programming skills and was hoping someone could help them. The kids from MY team heard their about their dilemma and asked if I could help.
The regional competition has announcers in the pit who make general requests if say one team's robot is broken and they need parts. Four teams will show up 5 minutes later parts in hand, because no one wants to see another team sitting out from a match. It is so hard to explain how different it is compared to any "competition" in our culture.
Honestly the most prestigious award, The Chairman's Award" has nothing to do with how well your robot performs, and all to do with the difference your team has mad in the community.
It really is a great thing to be a part of if you can.

I was staring at the Distiller and thinking there has to be a better way. The world's poor can't afford a machine that's going to cost thousands if not 10's of thousands, even if it's purchased at a village level. Like the solar cookers, they need something fashioned out of a foil-lined cardboard box or the like. Preferably with a minimal CO2 footprint and not requiring any oil-based components.
You're so right, Dean. The world's a mess and we are messing around with distractions. I could cheerfully throttle the next person who boasts yet another electric car that can do 0-100 in 12 secs. We need bikes made entirely of bamboo.

"Dean Kamen Won't Be Satisfied Until He Reinvents Us All" I thought this might be an interesting article and started it with the thought that it would be something about saving the world from it's current predicaments. Then I find out that what the title should have been is "Dean Kamen wants to change everyone else" as he enjoys his 32,000 sq. ft. home (32,000!), his Tesla, Porsche, and Hummer, his 2, 2 mind you, helicopters, and his own private island!! I can't believe that he takes his helicopter to work and not a Segway! I could not bring myself to finish the article because I am not interested in the least to hear from an egotistical hypocritical bigot. I've often wondered myself why the Segway hasn't become more popular, could it be that the cost is paying for the basic "needs" in life for Mr. Kamen...

I have a response for you, Bruce Borrowman.

You should have kept reading.

I have been a member of a FIRST Robotics team for 3 years now, being a full-time member of not one but two FIRST teams in the 2008-2009 season, one of which (a rookie team) ranked 20th at the Nationals in Atlanta. (By the way, it was a lot of fun, you should try to go to a regional next March, if you have the time!)

But to the point: Mr. Kamen is not as egotistical as some of the other comments seem to indicate. He has these things because he is in such high esteem and high demand by his professional acquaintances, he requires personal, private long- and short-distance transportation. And besides, if you had earned as high a living standard as he has, wouldn't you acquaint yourself with a Porsche?

Also, his business and his home are miles away. Could you ride a Segway for miles? I didn't think so. The batteries would die, or the device would end up broken. Plus, I don't know if you've ever seen one, but they're not especially fast. I think that a more correct analysis of Dean is as a idealistic realist. He sets off on journeys to improve humanity, and actually accomplishes them.

And besides, when I spoke with him, he didn't seem too thrilled to be a veritable rock star of engineering. It's almost as though he's doing all of this out of a sense of duty to the world, as though he's the one who has the ability and drive to change the world, and so he's the one who has to do it, whether or not he gets tired, or upset, or frustrated about it.

Please, before you sound off about an article in the future, make sure you actually read the whole thing. Thank you.

This is very detailed and informative post. I agree with others saying "i sorry popsci but i think this picture is so racist. the reason i think it all the picture is weird not only that when you see the magazines version of the picture".

http://earnextrarupees.com

Stand in front with style.Honestly i didn't who is Kamen before this.

Regard,
Dave learn online

He is a very great man, I wish that I can do like him.
http://tinyarticle.com

Bah! Anyone who dresses in denim is a ijit. Worst clothing fabric on the face of the Earth, with the possible exception of burlap.

Focusfusion.org will do more to change the world than Dean Kamen.

P.S. Anyone who accuses others of racism to discredit their ideas is also a ijit.



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