The DIY Artificial Pancreas: Hacking Wetware with Open Source Software and Hardware

Presented at Kernelcon 2020 Virtual, March 27, 2020, 2:45 p.m. (60 minutes)

Technology to manage diabetes revolves around stagnated tech from the 80s and 90s. Hackers took their lives into their own hands by developing open source hardware and software to augment inadequate products. Developing and building a DIY artificial pancreas, its iterations, and real-life examples of will be discussed and at least one will be working on the presenter. Taking the human out of the loop and replacing them with technology increases quality of life. See what happens when hackers decide they’re not waiting around for government and the MedTech industry to do better. Managing diabetes revolves around stagnated tech from the 80s and 90s. Hackers took their lives into their hands by augmenting inadequate products after market. Building iterations of a DIY artificial pancreas and real-life examples of will be discussed and at least one will be working on the presenter. Replacing human intervention with technology betters quality of life. See what happens when hackers decide they’re not waiting around for government and the MedTech industry to do better.


Presenters:

  • Jay Lagorio
    Jay Lagorio, software engineer and independent security researcher, has been building computers and networks and writing code nearly his entire life. He received a B.S. in Computer Science from UMBC in 2008 and an M. Eng. from the Naval Postgraduate School in 2015. He's a Private Investigator in Washington, DC and specializes in Windows development and OSINT.

Links: