Photos from the 2015 Innovation Festival at the National Museum of American History
Anyone can file a patent
Elizabeth Dougherty from the U.S. Office of Patents and Trademarks walked the audience through the process of filing a patent, and with help from the audience, stressed that anyone can be an inventor.
The two-day event featured interviews with inventors about their projects and their processes. Pictured are Jeff Brodie (left) deputy director for the Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Xavier Carnegie (right), Living History Theatre creative director, interviewing Rory Cooper (middle) about his work on wheelchair design.
Also on the candy front, Mars Chocolate talked about patenting chocolate flavors and making a white chocolate that’s more preferable to even those who aren’t big fans.
Kansas State University used plenty of props to explain it hydrogel, which is made of proteins and can go from liquid to gel in seconds based on pressure applied. It can be used for many purposes including cell therapy, sustained release, vaccine development, 3D cell culture, and more.
The USDA developed peppers with very specific traits, like the Lil’ Pumpkin which has black leaves, is small, and orange. Asexually reproduced plants can be patented.
NASA talked about the tech, like hydration systems, that help not only astronauts in space, but adventurers headed to extreme places like Mount Everest. Here’s a suit used for an Everest expedition.
Students from Benjamin Banneker Academic High School Lemelson-MIT InvenTeam devised a way to keep intruders out by sliding a metal piece over a door’s pivot hinge. They were troubled by the frequency of school shootings and decide to tackle the problem of keeping safe themselves.