Gold Out of Dross
First Published January 2007
The Back Story
PHOTO: Randi Silberman
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Lots of reporters can join the cheering section for
whatever technology project has lately captured the
fleeting attention of business journalists, bloggers,
and talking heads. But it takes a special kind of writer
to tell you why a project is doomed.
Harry Goldstein is such a writer. This issue marks the
fourth January in which we have taken up the “Winners
& Losers” theme, and of the 20 losers we’ve covered
so far, Goldstein has written five of the more memorable.
There was the giant solar plant in rainy Bavaria and
NTT’s plan to use people’s bodies to transmit high-speed
data. And who can forget Microsoft’s clunky, pricey
wristwatch, which displays sports scores in tiny
characters, incurs monthly user fees, and has to be
recharged frequently?
It would be hard to outdo such an array of misfires,
but in this issue, Goldstein sets his sights on a
flexible garment display dubbed Lumalive from the
Philips Photonics Textiles group in Eindhoven, the
Netherlands. The cloth incorporates an array of LEDs
that can be programmed to flash messages and images.
Philips thinks it will be irresistible to teen
fashionistas and conference exhibitors looking to stand
out in a crowd. But Goldstein’s sources took a dimmer view.
“Fashion maven Summer Hogan didn’t hold back,”
Goldstein says. “She called it a ‘surefire flop.’ ”
And then there’s the history-repeating-itself angle.
“In 2000 there was a US $900 MP3 jacket wired up by
Philips,” Goldstein points out. “Hardly anyone bought
it. In some ways, Lumalive is even worse: it requires
its own phone number to program. And after all that, you
look like you’ve been impaled by a lava lamp.”