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A Science Lab in Your Pocket


PocketLab, a platform that enables hands-on science investigations, through easy-to-use, inexpensive wireless sensors and apps, has announced their Kickstarter launch of PocketLab Voyager and PocketLab Weather—new multi-sensors for conducting experiments on climate change, rocket launches, robotics, and much more. Tens of thousands of users in more than 45 countries are already using PocketLab in maker projects and science experiments. PocketLab Voyager and PocketLab Weather is giving kids, parents, teachers, makers and the simply curious, the ability to answer questions about the world around them.

PocketLab Voyager is an all-in-one science lab that measures motion and position, magnetic fields, light, pressure, altitude, humidity, temperature, and more. Attach PocketLab Voyager to a drone to measure the altitude and vibrations during a flight, put it inside a football to measure the rotation of a spiral throw, design and build rubber-band cars and measure their speed during a race—with PocketLab Voyager, science exploration is only limited by your imagination.

PocketLab Weather is a compact weather center that can measure temperature, humidity, light, barometric pressure, heat index, and dew point. Build a weather balloon and use PocketLab Weather to gather climate data as it travels for days through the sky, discover why lightning strikes by observing changes in atmospheric data during a storm—with PocketLab Weather, you can be a true citizen scientist, contributing your data and discoveries to global experiments on weather and climate change.

Both PocketLab Voyager and PocketLab Weather are available for preorder on Kickstarter at prices many times less than competitive sensor bundles, and meet GLOBE specifications for data collection.

“If you have a device that’s easy to use and inexpensive and durable, what kind of science experiments would people build and try out?” said Clifton Roozeboom, CEO and founder of Myriad Sensors Inc., the makers of PocketLab. “That’s the whole point of science, to explore what’s not known.”

Myriad Sensors’ first PocketLab sensor raised $114,000 on Kickstarter in April 2015 and customers received their PocketLabs that summer. PocketLab has since been adopted by thousands more users for all kinds of science and maker projects. In the state of Nevada, 2,000 PocketLabs were distributed to middle school science teachers as part of an initiative to bring more technology into classrooms.

PocketLab is also working with Google’s Making and Science initiative to stream data from PocketLab sensors to Google’s Science Journal app. The Science Journal app has over 100,000 downloads.

"We're happy to be working with PocketLab on sensors that augment Science Journal", said Jen Phillips of Google's Making & Science team. "We like PocketLab because it's easy to use and can help inspire future scientists and makers."

With both PocketLab Voyager and PocketLab Weather you can record measurements with on-board memory or transmit data hundreds of feet using Bluetooth. Both Voyager and Weather devices connect to the PocketLab app available on almost any device.

The PocketLab app integrates with programs like Scratch for programming education, Google’s Science Journal for an open API, and LEGOs for robot building. Using the upcoming PocketLab Cloud, you can map your experiments and collaborate with other PocketLab users.

type: globe-news

News origin: GLOBE Implementation Office



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