Utah
High Tech Firms Showcase Accomplishments
Mike
O'Sullivan
Salt
Lake City
16
Feb 2002

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The Winter Olympics are
underway in Salt Lake City, and Utah's burgeoning high tech industries
are showcasing their accomplishments to visitors. Mike O'Sullivan takes
a look at two of the state's high tech firms: one designs computer games
and the other makes life-saving medical software.
Since 1994, the Saffire
Corporation of American Fork, Utah has designed games for Nintendo, Gameboy,
and Sony Playstation.
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Walter
Park, lead artist for the Playstation 2 game Barbarian
VOA Photo - M. O'Sullivan |
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Lead Artist Walter Park is working
on a game called "Barbarian." "Once we've got the sketches taken
care of, and we've decided on a few core characters, we'll actually start
to finish those characters," he says. "We'll paint them. We will do everything
we can to render them out so we know what they're going to look like in
the game. Now, this is one of the most fun parts for us as artists. We
get to get in there, draw anything we can imagine, create any sort of character
that we like, and eventually we know it's going to end up on somebody's
TV at home."
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The
Voxel imaging device
Courtesy Voxel, Inc. |
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A company called Voxel in the
high tech city of Provo sells medical software that combines data from
MRIs and CAT-scans, scanning devices that produce images of the inside
of the body. The software creates a three-dimensional holographic image.
Dan Burman, the company's president, says "that data is sent to us over
the Internet, and we laser-image each of those slices that are created
when a patient is scanned, one by one on a piece of film, so that when
you take that piece of film and put it on our light box, projected off
of the film in 3D [three dimensional] space is an exact replica of the
anatomy as it was scanned in the patient."
Mr. Burman says a colleague
at Voxel, chief technology officer John Wright, is fighting a family battle
with the help of the company's product. Mr. Wright's daughter, Natalie,
suffers from a brain tumor.
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Natalie
with her mom (Dana) and dad (John Wright) and Dan Burman of Voxel
VOA Photo - M. O'Sullivan |
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Natalie is now four. She had
her first operation at age two-and-a-half. Mr. Burman says the girl's doctor
projected a three-dimensional image of her brain in mid-air, so large that
he was able to walk inside it. "In coordination with the University of
Utah and their supercomputer, the images were projected on their supercomputer
in a manner in which he could put on 3D glasses, and then take a walk up
inside of her brain," he says.
Natalie's father, John
Wright, says his daughter's doctor has used the company's imaging system
on five other patients, in addition to Natalie.
Natalie is not cured
yet and she continues to undergo treatment, but her father says the new
technique is helping her beat the tumor. "We're still chasing it. She's
in chemotherapy. She might have to have surgery again, so we hope technology
gets better and better over time," he says.
Local officials say
Utah rivals states like California in its software and Internet companies
and its biotechnology products. They say the companies come here for the
state's low operating costs and educated workforce. The officials hope
to attract more high tech firms here during the Olympics.
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