Hillis has founded a number of technology companies, including
Thinking Machines Corporation, Applied Minds,
Metaweb Technologies, Applied Proteomics, and Applied Invention. Hillis has over 300 issued
patents in fields including parallel computers, touch interfaces,
disk arrays, forgery prevention methods, electronic and mechanical devices, and bio-medical techniques,
RAID disk arrays,
multicore multiprocessors and for
wormhole routing in
parallel processing.
Thinking Machines As a graduate student at MIT, Hillis co-founded
Thinking Machines Corporation to produce and market
parallel computers, developing a series of influential products called the
Connection Machine. At the time the company produced many of the fastest computers in the world. The Connection Machine was used in demanding computation and data-intensive applications. It was used by the
Stanford Exploration Project for oil exploration and for pioneering
data mining applications by
American Express, as well as many scientific applications at organizations including
Schlumberger,
Harvard University,
University of Tokyo, the
Los Alamos National Laboratory,
NASA,
Sandia National Laboratories,
National Center for Supercomputer Applications, Army High Performance Computing Research Center,
University of California Berkeley,
University of Wisconsin at Madison, and
Syracuse University. At Thinking Machines, he built a team of scientists, designers, and engineers, including people in the field as well as those who later became leaders and innovators in multiple industries. The team included
Sydney Brenner,
Richard Feynman,
Brewster Kahle, and
Eric Lander.
Disney Imagineering In 1996, Hillis joined
The Walt Disney Company in the newly created role of Disney Fellow and as vice president, Research and Development at
Disney Imagineering. He developed new technologies and business strategies for Disney's theme parks, television, motion pictures, and consumer products businesses. He also designed new theme park rides, a full-sized walking dinosaur, and various micro mechanical devices.
Applied Minds In 2000, Hillis co-founded the R&D think-tank Applied Minds with his Disney colleague
Bran Ferren. Minds is a team of engineers, scientists, and designers that provide design and technology services for clients. The creative environment and the diverse projects it undertook gained Applied Minds abundant media attention. "It's as if Willy Wonka's chocolate factory just yawned wide to welcome us. Only here, all the candy plugs in," said an article in
Wired magazine. Work done at the firm covered the range of industries and application domains, including satellites, helicopters, and educational facilities. While at Applied Minds, Hillis designed and built a large-scale computer
data center for
Sun Microsystems (the
Sun Modular Datacenter) that would fit into a standard 20-foot
shipping container, solving, among others, the problems of accommodating processor capacity, cooling, power requirements, and storage within a uniquely portable solution. This type of "datacenter in a box," has now become a common method for building large data centers. For
Herman Miller, Hillis designed an audio privacy solution based on
phonetic jumbling—Babble—which was received in the media as a version of the
Cone of Silence, and was marketed through a new company, Sonare. Also for Herman Miller, Hillis developed a flexible reconfigurable power and lighting system, which was marketed through another new company,
Convia. As part of an early
touchscreen map table interface, Hillis invented and patented the use of multiple touch points to control a zoom interface, which is now called "pinch to zoom.". One of these patents was the basis for the
USPTO decision to reject
Apple Inc.'s claim on a "pinch-to-zoom" patent in its legal dispute with
Samsung, on the grounds that it was described in the Hillis patent.
Metaweb Technologies In 2005, Hillis and others from Applied Minds founded
Metaweb Technologies to develop a
semantic data storage infrastructure for the
Internet, and
Freebase, an open, structured database of the world's knowledge. That company was acquired by
Google, and its technology became the basis of the
Google Knowledge Graph.
Cancer research and Applied Proteomics In 2012, Hillis helped to create a research program on cancer and
proteomics as Professor of Research Medicine at the
Keck School of Medicine of USC, and the principal investigator of the
National Cancer Institute's Physical Sciences in Oncology Laboratory at USC. He co-founded Applied Proteomics (API) Hillis and his colleagues at API developed one of the first protein
biomarker discovery platforms and a
blood test for early stage
colon cancer, but they were unable to convince investors to finance taking their proteomic technology to the market. Hillis has also served as Research Professor of Engineering at the
USC Viterbi School of Engineering. He was the first principal investigator of the
National Cancer Institute's Physical Sciences in Oncology Laboratory at USC. Applied Invention co-founded Dark Sky, a
weather forecasting technology company with consumer web and
mobile applications that was eventually sold to Apple. ==
The Pattern on the Stone==