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CLASS
OF 01
Drop
the Laptop
and Put Your Hands Up

Illustration
by Regan Dunnick
|
Anyone
who owns a laptop computer
understands that to have it stolen would be a nightmare. E-mails, business
reports, class notes, personal filesall in the hands of a total stranger.
What if there were a way to get that laptop back and catch the thief in
the process? Well, now there is.
One year ago,
Ravi Hariprasad M01 was seeing patients as a fourth-year medical
student, when his car was broken into and his laptop stolen. Not only
did he lose a $2,000 computer, but he lost a massive amount of important
data. Driving home that night, with glass covering the seat next to him,
Hariprasad came up with an idea for a program that could make it possible
to track stolen laptops over the Internet. When he rose the next morning,
he discovered that the Wharton School had a business-plan competition
and the deadline was noon of the same day. I found out about the competition
at 9 a.m. He got the proposal in on time and won first prize for best
Internet and information-technology concept. After further development
of the concept, it went on to win prizes at the MIT, Morgan Stanley-Dean
Witter, and Nantucket business-plan competitions.
Hariprasad has
interrupted his medical studies and now lives in Boston, where he has
formed the company Lucira Technologies and continues to develop this tracking
concept for other devices, such as cell phones and Palm Pilots. The original
Lucira Pinpoint Program uses only 100k of memory and is available
for free download on the Internet. The user must first register the program
online and print out a card with a number on it.
If this persons
laptop is stolen, he or she simply goes to a phone, calls Lucira Technologies,
and gives the number on the card. Company employees can pinpoint the location
of the computer when the thief (or anyone unlucky enough to buy the stolen
computerIf youre going to buy a hot laptop, he suggests, make sure
you get a receipt.) signs on to the Internet. Lucira Technologies immediately
relays this information to the police, and the laptop is returned. This
can be done from anywhere in the world, and the software is indetectible
once installed. The only way to keep the computer from being tracked down
is to physically remove the hard drive.
Hariprasad likened
his sudden success to a movie: I just sit back and watch. At some point
it starts to seem surreal. His company is working on many advancements
in the new field of Internet tracking and plans to expand into Europe
and Asia.
Though he plans
to complete medical school eventually, Hariprasad says, I cant see myself
going into clinical medicine in the near future. Right now my company
needs me. Having come up with a great idea, he explains, it is hard to
look the other way. Opportunity knocks very quietly, he says, but if
you are always listening, you can hear it.
Jonas
Raab C02
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Copyright 2001 The Pennsylvania
Gazette Last modified 11/1/01
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