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H3tec "Gaining Traction" on Google Deal

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Utah-based

“The concept of the H3 detector sprang from the fascination I had as a young boy watching Star Trek and seeing the fictional tricorder,” says Christensen. “Although I am in no way a Treky, I said to myself that someday, it would be possible to build a working tricorder. Over the years, I have had great opportunities to focus my mind on developing solutions to a lot of really difficult problems, but I never forgot the Star Trek tricorder. Although I pushed it to the back of my mind, it wouldn’t leave me alone, and 8 years ago I started my first designs for the H3 detector. I am a firm believer that anything is possible if you don’t know it isn’t!

“I have been building and refining the H3 detector over the last eight years of experimentation. I started out building analog machines that weighed 200 lbs. This version of the detector is the fourteenth iteration of the device and it weighs less than 10 ounces. . . . The next version of the H3 detector will feature full mapping through GPS.”

Among the possible applications (aside from what he calls their “most important markets” which “must remain confidential”):

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