Our projects include work in areas such as the Semantic Web, knowledge management and collaboration, information retrieval, electronic commerce, online community, MEMS, new energy technologies, superconductors, space industrialization and space tourism.
     
 
  RADAR Networks, Inc.
www.radarnetworks.com
Radar Networks, Inc. is a software company, based in San Francisco, that
has developed a patent-pending Java™ platform for "Web 2.0" applications and
services. The platform is based on the company's proprietary Semcard™ and
Semlet™ technologies, and provides a high-level environment for rapid
development of database-driven applications with AJAX user-interfaces. The
company is now developing applications on the platform for commercial
release in 2006.
           
 
  Room Temperature Superconductors (ROOTS)
www.ultraconductors.com
A venture to commercialize a revolutionary polymer developed in Russia that superconducts at a variety of temperatures including "room temperature." This incredible material has the potential not only to dramatically improve the world's energy efficiency but also to enable radical increases in the miniaturization of computers and electronic devices.
           
   
  Zero Gravity Corporation
www.zerogcorp.com
A new aerospace venture with a patented parabolic flight system that enables commercial jets to safely provide "zero gravity" parabolic flight capabilities for customers including space agencies, commercial customers, scientific research projects, and cutting-edge adventure seekers.
           
 
    * The Metropolitan Museum of Art
* The New York Stock Exchange
* AT&T
* Bertelsmann
* Reuters
* EarthWeb
* Sun Microsystems
* IBM
* Microsoft
* Morgan Stanley
* US West
* Stanford Research Institute (SRI)
* and Sarnoff Laboratory
* Metropolitan Venture Partners
* Thinking Machines
* Xerox Kurzweil
* Individual/Desktop Data
* Lexis Nexus
* The International Space University
* Digital Equipment
           
      Includes past clients of Mr. Spivack as well as Spivack's clients while at EarthWeb