Dr. Steve Dickerson Sc.D.

Professor Emeritus, Georgia Tech
Founder Modnar Corporation, DVT Corporation, CAMotion, Inc., RideCell LLC, SoftWear Automation, Inc.

Dr. Dickerson received his Sc.D. (Doctor of Science) degree from MIT in 1965, MSME from Berkeley in 1963, and BSME from IIT in 1962. He was a Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Georgia Tech until retirement in 1996, and was elected Fellow of the Society of Manufacturing Engineers in 2004. Automation, advanced manufacturing, and urban transportation are his primary interests. Specific research projects led to the founding of various companies: DVT Corporation revolutionized machine vision and was sold for over $100 M in 2005; CAMotion, Inc. made breakthroughs in light-weight, high performance robotics and has annual sales now of about $5 M; RideCell uses advanced communications and computing to support urban transportation and is profitable; and SoftWear Automation Inc. will introduce disruptive solutions in garment cutting and sewing. The last two companies are early stage ventures. He holds several patents covering these technologies. And in each case he made the initial capital investments.

Regarding manufacturing automation Dickerson has invented and introduced a number of innovations. DVT Corporation was founded in 1990 based on research and a patent held by Georgia Tech that enabled very compact and inexpensive machine vision systems where the image detector was coupled directly to the image processing computer. In the end this became the standard for machine vision today and allows very inexpensive manufacture and great performance. CAMotion’s technology is based on the work of three faculty members in Mechanical Engineering at Georgia Tech. Very capable and light-weight and low power robotics is the result. SoftWear Automation is now funded by DARPA to enable the return of garment manufacture to the US. It is thought that domestic production can be at less than the “China price.”

Regarding urban transportation in particular, Dickerson founded the Peachtree City Commuter Program in 1975 that was credited by the US DOT as being the first community based vanpool system in the US. That operation was owned by Modnar Corp. Dr. Dickerson took a leave from Georgia Tech to serve the US Department Transportation as a Research Analyst in 1974-75. Today, RideCell provides higher utilization of transportation resources and improved customer experience through advanced communication between vehicles and customers. He holds a patent that describes an integrated approach to information systems to assist urban transportation.