Spinoff 2005; Innovative Partnerships Program
Washington DC: National Aeronautics and Space Administration, NASA Center for AeroSpace Information (CASI), Publications and Graphics Department, 2005. Presumed First Edition, First printing of this annual report. Trade paperback. The format is approximately 11 inches by 8.5 inches. 167, [1] pages. Illustrations (most with color). Annual report on technology transfer or "technology twice used" inventions from NASA. Since 1976, Spinoff has profiled technologies that benefit from NASA investment and expertise. These developments have transformed into commercial products and services that are used throughout daily life, from your cell phone camera to the memory foam in your mattress. When Congress created NASA, it mandated the agency disseminate its innovations as widely possible. To that end, the Technology Transfer Program was created in 1964, and it has functioned ever since, making it NASA’s longest continuously operated mission. Early publications about NASA inventions, made available to the scientific and engineering communities, resulted in feedback indicating a broad interest in the private sector in adapting NASA technology for commercial uses. As products began to emerge, NASA began preparing annual reports on these successes to present at congressional budget hearings. Spinoff has been published in a four-color edition,and it has been released every year since 1976. All together, since its first edition, NASA has shared the stories of more 2,000 products and services that began as, or have benefited from, NASA technology. In addition to the general public, NASA sends copies of Spinoff to politicians, representatives at the United Nations, economic decision makers, company CEOs, academics, scientists, engineers, professionals in technology transfer, the news media, and many others. More