Some media lab-developed technologies made it into products or public software packages, such as the , the Fisher-Price's Symphony Painter, the Nortel Wireless Mesh Network, the NTT Comware Sensetable, the Taito's Karaoke-on-Demand Machine. A 1994 device called the Sensor Chair used to control a musical orchestra was adapted by several car manufacturers into capacitive sensors to prevent dangerous
airbag deployments. The MPEG-4 SA project developed at the Media Lab made
structured audio a practical reality and the
Aspen Movie Map was the precursor to the ideas in
Google Street View. In 2001, two research centers were spun off:
Media Lab Asia and
Media Lab Europe. Media Lab Asia, based in
India, was a result of cooperation with the
Government of India but eventually broke off in 2003 after a disagreement. Media Lab Europe, based in
Dublin, Ireland, was founded with a similar concept in association with
Irish universities and
government, and closed in January 2005. Created collaboratively by the Computer Museum and the media lab, the Computer Clubhouse, a worldwide network of after-school learning centers, focuses on youth from underserved communities who would not otherwise have access to technological tools and activities. Launched in 2003,
Scratch is a block-based programming language and community developed for children 8–16, and used by people of all ages to learn programming. Millions of people have created Scratch projects in a wide variety of settings, including homes, schools, museums, libraries, and community centers. In January 2005, the lab's chairman emeritus
Nicholas Negroponte announced at the
World Economic Forum a new research initiative to develop a
$100 laptop computer. A non-profit organization,
One Laptop per Child, was created to oversee the actual deployment, MIT did not manufacture or distribute the device. The Synthetic Neurobiology group created reagents and devices for the analysis of brain circuits are in use by hundreds of biology labs around the world. In 2011,
Ramesh Raskar's group published their
femto-photography technique, that is able to image the movement of individual light pulses. In 2013, the Media Lab launched E14 Fund as a program to support and invest in MIT Media Lab startups. In 2017, E14 Fund launched its first seed stage venture fund to invest in the MIT Media Lab startup community. It invested in companies like
Formlabs,
Affectiva, Tulip Interfaces, Wise Systems, Figur8 and more.
Spin-offs Media Lab industry spin-offs include: •
Affectiva, commercializing software that detects emotions in pictures of faces •
Ambient Devices, which produces
glanceable information displays •
Dimagi, a company that develops software for healthcare in the developing world. •
E Ink, which makes electronic paper displays that power the
Amazon Kindle and
Barnes & Noble Nook. •
Elance • EyeNetra, which makes eye tests as $2 clip-ons for mobile phones, including potential use to correct vision for virtual reality displays. • First Mile Solutions, bringing communications infrastructure to rural communities •
Formlabs makes high-resolution, desktop 3D printers (spin out from Center for Bits and Atoms) •
Groundhog Technologies, global leader in mobility intelligence and its applications on geo-analytics, geo-marketing, and network optimization. •
Harmonix, game company creator of
Rock Band and
Guitar Hero. • Holosonics selling "audio spotlight" speakers using
sound from ultrasound technology • Nanda, a company that markets the
Clocky alarm clock • Oblong Industries, creators of the digital screen used by
Tom Cruise in
Minority Report •
One Laptop per Child's
XO laptop • Physiio International, merged with
Empatica; manufacturer of wearable medical sensors •
Potion Design, an interactive design firm • RadioSherpa, an online guide for HD Radio stations. acquired by Tune-in. •
reQall, a memory aid company. • Salient Stills, a video resolution enhancement and video forensics company founded in 1996, acquired by DAC in 2013. The combined entity has been rebranded Salient Sciences. •
Sifteo, a company that has developed a tabletop gaming platform that grew out of
Siftables. •
Squid Labs, engineering consulting company •
The Echo Nest, a music intelligence platform • Tulip Interfaces, an industrial software company founded by Natan Linder and Rony Kubat in 2012. • Wireless 5th Dimensional Networking, Inc. (acquired in 2006), which developed the first hybrid search engine •
Zebra Imaging, a digital holographic display company ==See also==