World Bytes: American Ingenuity Awards

By Terrance Malkinson

“American Ingenuity” is the focus of the November 2014 issue of Smithsonian [45(7) www.smithsonianmag.com ]. Nine articles profile the “imagination, hard work and the perpetual innovation that defines the nation’s spirit” in this, the third annual special issue of the American Ingenuity Awards.  Michael Caruso, editor-in-chief, tells of how the Smithsonian Institution has played a central role in the celebration of invention since 1881 and that innovation is “inevitable in a country that was itself founded on an experiment” [pg. 8].

In technology; the robotic computerized lower limb prosthesis developed by Hugh Herr of the Biomechanics group at MIT’s Media Laboratory has revolutionized the quality of life for amputees including himself as a double limb amputee. In education; the prison reform activist Max Kenner is providing inmates nationwide with a second chance by offering them the opportunity to earn a college degree as part of a strategic planning process so that they have the skills for success when they are released from prison. In the visual arts; cutting-edge technology is used by Janet Echelman to create sculptures that transform urban space serving as a “mediating piece” between people and our alienating urban spaces. In historical scholarship; the filmmaker Bill Morrison’s documentary of one of the greatest natural disasters in American history, the great Mississippi flood of 1927 which spread across 27,000 square miles was selected. In the natural sciences; the pioneering work of two neuroscientists Steve Ramirez and Xu Liu where they have implanted a memory of an event that never happened into a mouse is opening up a new world of possibilities in neuroscience that is both profound and frightening. In social progress; Kimberly Bryant is building diversity by teaching young girls of color how to program computers, inspiring them to lifelong career and personal success. In the performing arts; the singer-songwriter Rosanne Cash shares her voyage of ancestral discovery of voices from the south.  In the physical sciences; the physicist Francis Halzen’s experiments in Antarctica have heralded the beginning of a new era in astronomy. Finally, in youth; the self-taught inventor Palmer Luckey’s homemade virtual reality headset is envisioned to transform everything from gaming to medical treatment and beyond.

In a world where the news media is often preoccupied with communicating stories of failure, disaster, incivility and negativity; we as members of the IEEE must strive to promote the incredible achievements of the nations and the worlds educators, creators, scientists, and innovators who are transforming our world and making everyone’s quality of life better. From World Bytes best wishes for the festival season and for 2015.

World Bytes


Terrance Malkinson is a communications specialist, business analyst and futurist. He is an IEEE Senior Life Member and a member of the American College of Sports Medicine and the World Future Society. He is currently an international correspondent for Today’s Engineer, an associate editor for IEEE Canadian Review, and a member of the editorial advisory board of the IEEE Institute. The author is grateful to the staff and resources of the Reg Erhardt library at SAIT Polytechnic and the Haskayne Business Library of the University of Calgary. He can be reached at todaysengineer@ieee.org or malkinst@telus.net.

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