Archive for the ‘HydroSense’ Category

HydroSense on NPR’s Living on Earth

Monday, July 27th, 2009

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HydroSense was recently featured in a one-minute spot on National Public Radio’s Living on Earth program with Steve Curwood (listen here). Living on Earth is a weekly environmental news and information program distributed by Public Radio International to approximately 300 Public Radio stations. The show airs in 9 of the 10 top radio markets and reaches 80% of the US.

Here’s a transcript:

In the heat of summer, droughts bring water rationing and limits on outdoor use. A new household sensor could soon detect every drip coming out of your pipes, making it easier to conserve water.

Professor Shwetak Patel from the University of Washington has invented a gadget that he calls Hydrosense. Like a water filter, it connects directly onto a faucet. A single Hydrosense device can detect water use from anywhere in the house.

It’s all about pressure. When you take a shower or brush your teeth, the water pressure goes down in all the pipes, and Hydrosense measures the water flow in gallons per minute. The sensors can even distinguish between different water sources. Each time you turn on a sink, for example, the sudden surge of water sends a small shock wave throughout the pipes in your home. Every single fixture, whether it’s the kitchen sink, bathroom sink, or dishwasher–has its own unique shock wave. The sensor uses these differences to monitor water use at various locations.

And what about that dripping faucet? The average American household loses 11,000 gallons of water a year from leaking fixtures. Patel is fine-tuning Hydrosense to find the source of leaks.

Patel and his colleagues have also created similar sensors for electricity and gas. The researchers hope to sell the sensors to utilities as early as next year, generating “smart devices” that track energy and water footprints.

That’s this week’s Note on Emerging Science. I’m Lisa Song.

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HydroSense in BPC Sweet Sixteen

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

HydroSense just made it into the third and final round of the University of Washington Business Plan Competition. After winning the Environmental Innovation Challenge, we added three new members to our team, all of which are UW MBA students: Vandan Parikh, Debbie Tran and Zach Okun.

This year, the BPC had over 90 entries from 10 universities in Washington State; 33 of these teams were selected to advance to the “Investment Round.” There were around 200 judges at this event, lasting from 1-5PM on Tuesday. A week prior, each judge received a one-page executive summary for each team. At the event, judges received $1,000 CIE dollars to invest in a minimum of five teams. Judges walked around the room, talked with teams and looked over their displays. The top sixteen teams were announced at a small ceremony at the end of the night (around 6:30PM).

Here’s a quick write-up in TechFlash.

Some pictures from the BPC Pitch Round:

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Team HydroSense Interview After EIC Win

Monday, April 13th, 2009

After we won the $10,000 grand prize for the Environmental Innovation Challenge, Tim Campbell and I were interviewed and videotaped (silent cameos by team members EE graduate stuent Jianlei Shi and EE undergraduate student Alex Horton). In the video you can hear about how the HydroSense team was formed and how the Environmental Practicum course taught by Professor Emer Dooley played a role in shaping our project. One thing that I am most of proud with HydroSense is the interdisciplinarity of our team and the mixture of graduates, undergraduates and faculty.


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HydroSense Wins UW Environmental Innovation Challenge

Thursday, April 2nd, 2009

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Last night, HydroSense won the $10,000 grand prize in the 2009 UW Environmental Innovation Challenge. The HydroSense team is composed of undergraduate and graduate students in the College of Engineering and the College of the Environment and advised by UW CSE faculty members Shwetak Patel, James Fogarty, and James Landay. The team members include: myself (Jon Froehlich, CSE grad student), Kate Everitt (CSE grad student), Tim Campbell (MechE undergrad), Conor Haggerty (Community, Environment and Planning undergrad), Jianlei Shi (EE grad student), Alex Horton (EE undergrad), and Rahber Thariani (grad in BioE).

HydroSense in the Press

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