![]() |
Zaharia Dragos wins Galileo Masters 2007
French inventor Zaharia Dragos has been awarded this year’s Galileo Masters 2007 in the European Satellite Navigation Competition for his novel scheme to secure financial data transmissions against fraud. His winning proposal is to combine the very precise time signal of the European satellite navigation system Galileo, with conventional encryption algorithms, to make the coding of financial transactions more difficult to break.
For this idea Zaharia Dragos received the coveted Galileo Masters 2007 award and a cash prize of €10 000. In addition, he will be given the opportunity to further develop his idea into a viable business with support from experts at the Sophia Antipolis incubation centre close to Nice in France.
The European Satellite Navigation Competition objective is to find new ideas for commercially viable global navigation satellite system applications.
Now in its fourth year, the competition has grown to become one of Europe’s largest networks for satellite navigation down-stream applications and covers 11 high-tech regions in Europe. This year 258 entries were received; double that of previous years. Next year’s competition could be even bigger as interest has been expressed by more regions, from both within and outside Europe, including Queensland in Australia and Taiwan.
For the first time this year, three sponsored special topic prizes were given by sponsors T-Systems, the DHL Innovation Center and the German Centre for Aerospace (Deutsche Zentrum für Luft-und Raumfahrt, DLR). In addition the regional winners were appointed.
The winner was Giuliano Visintini from the region Bavaria, Germany. He proposed a web-based approach to improve current postal delivery services by actively involving customers. This uses satellite navigation to facilitate the handling of mail and its delivery to temporary addresses and remote locations.
T-Systems special topic prize
Colin Wilson and Lee Masey from the region Sophia Antipolis, Nice in France, won the DLR/Gate prize with their proposal for a landmine archive and retrieval system (LARS) which integrates radar imaging and GPS/Galileo coordinates with conventional map data to locate, identify and map hidden landmines. Regional winners
Baden-Württemberg (Germany)
Winners: Ernst Pechtl and Hans Geiger, superWise Technologies AG Idea: eye-Phone is an advanced object recognition and knowledge tool which can identify any object in an image, whether architectural, landscape, art, animal or plant, and then combine this information with GPS/Galileo positioning data to provide information from Internet databases about the selected object.
Göteborg (Sweden)
Hessen (Germany)
Winner: Selene Kolman, bliin BV Idea: bliin YourLIVE is a GPS-enhanced mobile and online social network. It enables users to track, locate and follow friends and colleagues on a map in real-time. The system also supports uploading and sharing of geo-tagged information, such as photos, videos, audio and text.
Lombardy (Italy)
Madrid (Spain)
Winners: Andreas Zachariah and Nick Burch, Carbon Hero Idea: Carbon Hero is a mobile-based application to give users their personal environmental carbon dioxide ‘footprint’ when travelling. With almost no user input, Carbon Hero with its specialist database and algorithm, determines the varying environmental impact created by different forms of transport.
United Kingdom and Ireland: About ESA's Technology Transfer Programme Office (TTPO) The main mission of the ESA TTPO is to facilitate the use of space technology and space systems for non-space applications and to further demonstrate the benefit of the European space programme to European citizens. The TTPO is responsible for defining the overall approach and strategy for the transfer of space technologies including the incubation of start-up companies and their funding. For more information, please contact: Technology Transfer Programme European Space Agency – ESTEC Keplerlaan 1, P.O. BOX 299, 2200 AG, Noordwijk The Netherlands Office: +31 (0) 71 565 3910 Fax: +31 (0) 71 565 6635 Email: ttp @ esa.int Web: http://www.esa.int/ttp
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||