Mary Lou Jepsen Quote
Elon Musk is talking about silicon nanoparticles pulsing through our veins to make us sort of semi-cyborg computers. But why not take a noninvasive approach? I've been working and trying to think and invent a way to do this for a number of years and finally happened upon it and left Facebook to do it.
Mary Lou Jepsen
Elon Musk is talking about silicon nanoparticles pulsing through our veins to make us sort of semi-cyborg computers. But why not take a noninvasive approach? I've been working and trying to think and invent a way to do this for a number of years and finally happened upon it and left Facebook to do it.
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About Mary Lou Jepsen
Mary Lou Jepsen is a technical executive and inventor in the fields of display, imaging, and computer hardware. She was the co-founder and first chief technology officer of One Laptop per Child (OLPC), and later founded Pixel Qi in Taipei, Taiwan, focused on the design and manufacture of displays. She founded and led two moonshots at Google X, and was an executive at Facebook / Oculus VR, leading an effort to advance virtual reality.
Her contributions have had adoption in head-mounted displays, HDTV, laptop computers, and projector products. She contributed to low-cost computing and innovative consumer and medical imaging technologies. In 2008 Time magazine named her in their list of the hundred most influential scientists and thinkers in the world, and in 2013 CNN named her as one of their "10 thinkers" for her work in display innovation.
In 2016 Jepsen founded Openwater, a startup working on fMRI-type imaging of the body using holographic, ultrasonic and infrared techniques. Over the years, Openwater's work expanded into therapeutics using infrared light and low intensity ultrasonics with extremely promising results with lifesaving potential to treat mental diseases, cancers and cardiovascular diseases that have been in testing in pre-clinical and clinical since 2020 and are going into production in 2025. In addition all 68 patents from Openwater are free to use, the firm's software is open source via the AGPL license, and hardware designs (optics, ultrasound, mechanical, etc.) are freely available via Creative Commons Share-Alike 4.0.
Her contributions have had adoption in head-mounted displays, HDTV, laptop computers, and projector products. She contributed to low-cost computing and innovative consumer and medical imaging technologies. In 2008 Time magazine named her in their list of the hundred most influential scientists and thinkers in the world, and in 2013 CNN named her as one of their "10 thinkers" for her work in display innovation.
In 2016 Jepsen founded Openwater, a startup working on fMRI-type imaging of the body using holographic, ultrasonic and infrared techniques. Over the years, Openwater's work expanded into therapeutics using infrared light and low intensity ultrasonics with extremely promising results with lifesaving potential to treat mental diseases, cancers and cardiovascular diseases that have been in testing in pre-clinical and clinical since 2020 and are going into production in 2025. In addition all 68 patents from Openwater are free to use, the firm's software is open source via the AGPL license, and hardware designs (optics, ultrasound, mechanical, etc.) are freely available via Creative Commons Share-Alike 4.0.