NASA Announces 120 Small Research Projects
eldavojohn writes "NASA's Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) has released a list of the winning businesses that submitted research proposals in 2006. This is the second phase of a three phase award system and NASA has announced the winners. If you click on any of the projects, there is an interesting writeup of the proposal and technical abstract."
What the hell is that smell coming from the breakroom?
http://sbir.gsfc.nasa.gov/SBIR/sbir2006/phase2/awards/2006topic.html
!sig
You know that every department of the US has SBIR/STTR proposals and are required to spend a certain percentage of their budget on this. They have sponsored a lot of cool projects in the past, and hopefully will continue to do so. I don't get what is so special about NASA's this time around. Most of the projects for all of the different departments are technologically interesting or clever. If you haven't, go search all of the projects that they have funded in the past, it spurs the imagination if nothing else.
Whenever there is a space story on slashdot, we get comments pining for the privatization of spaceflight. I wish for that also, but I'm pretty pessimistic about it. The financial reward for exploring space is nill. There is no sustainable business model for sending people into space, yet. The viability of commercial communication satellites has given birth to an industry there, but don't expect LEO cruises from United Airlines anytime soon.
So, stuff like this that touches the private sector is always good. Government contracts can keep a small private R&D company in business. Enabling technological competition is a good idea as long as it's done without prejudice. All the problems that were proposed are specific concise things, which is good in that it eliminates the bureaucracy of a large complex project. NASA may have it's problems, but I feel fine spending my tax dollars on this.
Here is a list of 25 companies that look like they are doing fun things with tech. Its a job seekers dream.
I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
Finally, small projects that might actually be finished!
Disclaimer: I work for one of the companies that won two awards listed on the website.
If you like the idea of your tax dollars going to smaller companies, then please let your congressional representative know! The SBIR program has been targeted in recent years by lawmakers who feel that it's a waste of money. Just as worrisome, in the last month they managed to fast-track the passing of a bill letting a "small" company owned by a venture capital firm compete for SBIR dollars. The whole point of the SBIR program was to provide funding for small, innovative firms that didn't have deep pockets.
The SBIR program has become very competitive in the last few years and it's not surprising that big-money is looking for ways to grab that away from smaller, independent companies. If you like the idea of your tax dollars supporting lean, innovative companies, please let your rep know. The SBIR program is a valuable source of funding to allow small companies to develop technology that will let them one day compete with the sluggish, established behemoths (e.g., Microsoft).
GMD
watch this
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I know, it's a real PITA, this new discussion system.
Obama likes poor people so much, he wants to make more of them.
NASA's JPL has announced that they've synthesized a Liquefied Chuck Norris Round-House Kick (LCNRHK). While they admit it's not quite as powerful as the real thing, three gallons of LCNRHK would be sufficient to launch the Space Shuttle into orbit.
1.Netcraft confirms:In Soviet Russia all your base welcomes a beowolf cluster of CowboyNeal overlords. 2.? 3.Profit!!1!
Once again, NASA rejects the plans to build the world's first warp nacelle. Each year, I fight through this bureaucratic red tape. I swear, at this rate, I won't be able to launch a warp vessel until 2063!
It took me almost a whole 30 seconds to figure it out (including the time it took to logout). Decrease your threshold to -1 & change threaded to flat. Then you can see everything even if you are too lazy to sign in :P
//oh, that's cool - there's an MP3 option for the captcha, nice!
"If you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear." - Every fascist, ever
So previously women and the disadvantaged couldn't propose ideas to the federal government?
Handy pocket-sized units conversion chart.
Have gnu, will travel.
"2006" means the initial SBIR proposals were submitted in 2006. How do I know this? I happen to review SBIRs for NASA.
This announcement was for phase 2, which means they've already passed the first 6-12 months of phase 1, and been reselected for additional funding.
The window for submitting SBIRs closes just before the end of the fiscal year. Let's say, September 2006 was the due date for submittals. Then add about a month for review and selection, and a bit longer for contract negotiation. Actual phase I 2006 SBIR research began around January 2007. Add 6-10 months more for the businesses to complete phase I, and here we are announcing the programs that have made it on to phase 2.
When I reviewed (~2 years ago) it was for the MDA (they weren't my employer, just the sponsors of the SBIR and needed my organization's mindshare to review stuff). We were told specifically not to judge the qualification of staff even though it was an evaluation criteria because the staff proposed is non-binding. That is, the company's inclusion of particular people's CVs does not mean that those people have any obligation to actually take part in the actual work. By SBIR standards, this is (or at least, was) okay, which strikes me as wrong. Potential commercialization is rather a moot point as well, and we were told to chiefly ignore it by the sponsors. The idea for this part is that a small business that is just starting out will not have a clear commercialization plan lain out yet. So long as they acknowledged that they would need help making business/government customer contacts, they were golden.
.GOV paid for...
SBIR data rights have indeed changed somewhat as I am just finding out. This case is particularly interesting. Still, five years? That's an awfully long time to wait for the data rights. Not nearly as bad as a 20 year patent, but still pretty bad for research that
It is a delicate balance, I realize. On the one hand you want to encourage small businesses to get into this thing and thrive and get the government's work done, but on the other hand you don't want to get screwed if the small business decides to take the money and run. All too often I saw just that, though: the abusive side to the contracts...companies with a hundred phase 1 and a dozen or so phase 2 awards under their belt, but with no phase 3s.
Reid
The Right Reverend K. Reid Wightman,