Star Simpson


Star Simpson is a prominent maker, inventor, and serial entrepreneur based in Los Angeles. She is responsible for a number of high-profile projects with drone design and applications, including TacoCopter, the original drone delivery concept demonstration. She also developed autonomous aircraft for DARPA at the San Francisco Research & Development lab Otherlab.

Early life

Simpson was born and raised in Hawaii, where her parents owned a jewelry business. She was drawn to technology at an early age.
Simpson first heard about MIT when she was 8. In high school, she got involved in projects that helped develop her technical skills. She contributed to building one of the world’s largest wifi networks, and worked with what was at that time an emerging software with the Hawaiian name of “wiki”.

Education

Shortly after arriving on the MIT campus, she met a small student group called MITERS. MITERS is centered around a machine shop, and everyone is welcome as long as they want to learn how to turn ideas into prototypes.
In September 2007 while a student at MIT, several months after the Boston Mooninite Panic, Simpson created an electronic fashion sweatshirt featuring a colored, glowing name tag. While wearing this sweatshirt during a visit to Boston Logan Airport, Simpson was arrested at gunpoint and charged with the possession of a hoax device, a charge that was dropped by prosecutors a year later. In an echo of MIT's official later treatment of Aaron Swartz, the MIT media office released a statement condemning and disavowing Simpson's actions before she was even released from questioning.
Simpson studied at MIT between 2006 and 2010. She returned to MIT in 2015 to speak about the experience at an MIT conference on the Freedom to Innovate.
In 2017, MIT established a "disobedience" award to reward forms of disobedience that benefit society, partly as a way to re-orient its own institutional responses to creativity at the boundaries, as demonstrated by Simpson while a student at MIT.

Career

Simpson's stealth project TacoCopter was the first drone delivery project to receive widespread media attention in March 2012, more than year before Amazon and Google X's announcement of similar concepts.
Star Simpson served on the Open Source Hardware Association board as a member in 2013-2014.
In 2013, Simpson founded PLIBMTTBHGATY, or Programming Languages I've Been Meaning To Try But Haven't Gotten Around To Yet. PLIBMTTBHGATY is a light-hearted social and networking event for people to learn new programming languages.
In 2016, Simpson launched Circuit Classics, reviving Forrest M. Mims III's hand drawn "Getting Started in Electronics" projects as hardware kits. Circuit Classics are printed circuit boards designed to help educate people on the basics of circuit design.
Simpson developed the APSARA while at Otherlab, a San Francisco Engineering R&D firm. The APSARA drone is a cardboard glider that can carry up to two pounds of cargo. Simpson's team designed and built APSARA with funding from DARPA, in response to a desire for a single-use delivery vehicle for emergency scenarios. Uniquely, the drones had to not only carry a small package and land precisely, they had to disappear completely once on the ground.
In 2017, Simpson co-founded Project Alloy along with Ian Michael Smith, a non-profit that subsidizes conference attendance for under-represented minorities in tech.
Star Simpson is the co-founder of a UAS-focused startup.
In 2018, Simpson served as a central source in a New York Times investigation of Richard DeVaul, a director at Google X who resigned after a series of articles that detailed sexual harassment allegations against him and other executives at the company. Approximately 20,000 Google employees in the 2018 Google walkouts organized in support of Simpson and others.
Star Simpson is also a private glider pilot.

Public Speaking