Hey Jason, a guy from their company was actually at the biobar camp 2
weeks ago at the Institute for the Future. From what we heard they
dont actually have the thing ready quite yet and its probably going to
cost like $5,000. So not exactly the era of affordable personal pcr
yet. I however, am interested in developing a really cheap machine
for the DIY community. The university of Texas A&M announced a "10"$
machine in 2007 but never did anything with the prototype. We spoke
to them and the provisional patent actually expired so it is pretty
much fair game/public domain for anybody to come along and
manufacture.
http://www.scribd.com/doc/104545/Mini-PCR-Machine
I'm talking to investors now and we'd like input from the DIY
community about how to best establish a company to serve the needs of
users looking for this kind of super low cost solution. Basically, we
wouldn't look to make much off the machines--instead opting to build
an ongoing relationship with the community; establishing brand loyalty
and selling reagents/primers etc.