Espresso cups are traditionally smaller versions of coffee cups, but all cafe drinks are derivative of the espresso shot. This is a cafe service set designed around the espresso shot.
Internship at Johnson Space Center in Houston Texas Summer 2015. Module Launched in April 2016 from Cape Canaveral.
Engineers at NASA designed an electronic module to detect exhaled carbon dioxide from astronauts aboard the ISS, and export data to the paired iPad App. To gather data correctly, the housing for the module had to attach securely to the astronaut’s clothing or workspace in their respiratory zone, adhere to all weight and safety restrictions, and be updated according to testing.
More information about the mission available at NASA.gov
Detailed sensor information available at Tech Briefs
The sensor aperture was modified to prevent turbulence and provide more consistent data.
3D-printed housing bodies before and after cleaning.
iPad app icons: Home (app), Upload Current Data, Return/Back, Help, Diagnostics/Settings
Interior of housing, and suggested clip attachment methods
April 2016 Launch from Cape Canaveral
In the spring of 2015, I participated in the MIT GrandHack where I met and formed a team of Doctors, Medical Device Salesmen and Business Consultants. Over the course of 48 hours we conceptualized and prototyped a hand-washing solution that won runners-up. Our solution utilized a smartwatch’s accelerometer to capture a hand-washing gesture. The wearable would then glow green, visually signaling to nearby individuals that the user had washed their hands. Over the summer, our multi-disciplinary team stayed together and had remote weekly calls, and submitted the concept to several incubators and accelerators. In the fall, our team continued to enter new original concepts into Cambridge hackathons, taking several first and second place finishes.
Other award-winning concepts addressed tracking of capital equipment and dictation of medical notes.