SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The Tech Garden on Dec. 8 announced five new firms have joined and will gain access to its business resources, free events, mentors, and funding opportunities. The organization’s new members include Aincobio, LLC. The firm is creating a machine for diagnostic laboratory directors in hospital-based labs to accelerate antibiotic-sensitivity testing from days […]
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The Tech Garden on Dec. 8 announced five new firms have joined and will gain access to its business resources, free events, mentors, and funding opportunities.
The organization’s new members include Aincobio, LLC. The firm is creating a machine for diagnostic laboratory directors in hospital-based labs to accelerate antibiotic-sensitivity testing from days to just 60 minutes. The effort seeks to provide “rapid and actionable” test results for clinicians to treat patients with bloodstream and urinary-tract infections, the Tech Garden said in a release.
The second new member is the Health Hatch, which is working to increase the quality of health, while decreasing the “ever-growing” health-care costs. The company says it is developing a dedicated patient database and web-portal platform for patient lifetime medical records, “enabling patients to participate more proactively” in their health-care plan.
In addition, the new firms include NutraFiki, which is described as a “creative toolkit” that seeks to make nutrition-related health-care accessible. The global increase in nutrition-related health issues is a “burden” for many societies, and access to professional nutritional care for a majority of individuals is “hampered” by distance, time. and financial burdens, per the Tech Garden.
“On the other hand, nutrition professionals are looking for effective and efficient means to dispense their services. This is why using the m-health platform, NutraFiki, nutritional services can be accessed remotely, thus bridging the gap between the client and the provider,” per the release.
Another new Tech Garden member is Organic Robotics Corporation (ORC), which integrates its “one of a kind,” Light Lace, stretchable sensor technology into garments to measure muscle fatigue, track performance, and “better assess” injury risk factors. Its Light Lace sensors are “washable, inexpensive, and can bend and twist with the human form,” the company said.
The Tech Garden has also welcomed in Peregrinus Solutions, which works to use autonomous technology to create “a paradigm shift in our collective thought processes that is catalyzed by our autonomous technology products, services, and employment.” These are designed, manufactured, and provided by the firm at its location in Manlius. Each of its products is designed to be manufactured “primarily through the use of autonomous methods leaving only minor and very straightforward assembly to humans.”