From Microsoft to beer: Pair create home-brewing machine

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  • Crow
    Member
    • Oct 2010
    • 4312

    From Microsoft to beer: Pair create home-brewing machine

    If you were one of the top guys who spent much of the 2000s trying to get Microsoft to develop tablet computers, you might be ready for a drink.

    Or two.


    Bill Mitchell, left and Avi Geiger, formerly of Microsoft, with their PicoBrew home beer-brewing machine.

    Fortunately, that guy — Bill Mitchell — has figured out how to easily produce a never-ending supply of absolutely top-notch beer, in any style and flavor you can imagine.

    After leaving Microsoft in 2010, Mitchell started a company called PicoBrew with his food-scientist brother and a gifted hardware hacker he used to work with in Redmond.

    Together they created a dream machine for small-scale brewing that they’re unveiling Monday.

    Called the PicoBrew Zymatic, it’s a device the size of a large microwave oven that almost completely automates the process of producing beer.

    The idea was to take the drudgery out of brewing, without sacrificing the fun or the gratification that comes from creating your own batches, Mitchell said.

    “The beauty for us, especially in beer-making, is it’s this great fusion of science and cooking, of chemistry and cooking,” he said. “We didn’t want to lose any of that — in fact we want to enhance that portion of it — and just take out the bad portions.”

    They’ve also applied modern technologies to the ancient art.

    Zymatic machines were designed to be Internet appliances. They are controlled by open-source software, connected to the Web and managed through a browser.

    PicoBrew’s software dashboard is used to concoct recipes and adjust brewing cycles. Users can share recipes through the service and monitor the brewing process remotely on their smartphone.

    Data collected by this online service — from users who opt to share their brewing activity — will be used to continue refining the machines, which are also designed to be hacked and modified as buyers see fit.


    A sample of some of the beers the PicoBrew machine can make: from left -- Cascadian dark ale, Imperial IPA, Pale Ale, Brown, Imperial Stout and barley wine.

    Continued...
    Last edited by Crow; 01-10-13, 03:47 AM.
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  • lxskllr
    Member
    • Sep 2007
    • 13435

    #2
    That's pretty cool, and the price isn't terrible. Hope they're able to pull it off.

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    • Snusdog
      Member
      • Jun 2008
      • 6752

      #3
      Thank goodness they didn't work for Apple.............or you would only be able to use just one kind of barley.............and ................be forced to drink out of tiny screnes......er glasses


      When it's my time to go, I want to die peacefully in my sleep, like my uncle did....... Not screaming in terror like his passengers

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      • whalen
        Member
        • May 2009
        • 6593

        #4
        Originally posted by Snusdog View Post
        Thank goodness they didn't work for Apple.............or you would only be able to use just one kind of barley.............and ................be forced to drink out of tiny screnes......er glasses


        If it was Apple, you would program it for a stout and all it would ever make is cider!
        wiki "Popcorn Sutton" a true COOT!

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