Google Trends is a public web facility of Google Inc., based on Google Search, that shows how often a particular search-term is entered relative to the total search-volume across various regions of the world, and in various languages. Read More....
MARKETING
TAKE FINANCIAL APTITUDE TEST
CCRM Industry Consortium
TORONTO ECONOMIC DATA CENTRE
Your chance to win $ 150,000,-
Oxbridge Biotech Roundtable and SR One present: OneStart competition 2015 – Your chance to win $ 150,000,- to realise your business idea
Oxford Nanotechnology Summer School July 2-6
Introduction to Cell Biology and Bionanotechnology
What is bionanotechnology? Challenges and Opportunities
Prof Peter Dobson, Academic Director of Begbroke Science Park at Oxford Univeristy
http://www.conted.ox.ac.uk/courses/infosysfiles/O11C561F2J_2_LongDescription.pdf
Applications Now Open For The 2014 CIX Top 20!
MARS INNOVATION
LEEDING EDGE
People & Planet’s Internship Scheme 2014-2015 (paid)
Harvard Business Review Guide
BAT TALENT SEARCH
ACCEPTING PROPOSALS FOR WATER TECHNOLOGY CHALLENGES
SOSCIP
Life Science Idea Competition
LEAN STARTUP MODEL
Find a Job with Biotalent
Why should anyone be led by you?
Search Internships in US
BIO TUESDAY LONDON Sept 10
Professional Development at Oxford
Interview with Professor Peter Dobson, the academic director of Begbroke Science Park
SPECIAL OFFER
ORACLE Customer Experience CX
Oracle RightNow CX Cloud Service helps deliver exceptional customer experiences (CX) across the web, social networks and contact centers, all delivered via the cloud
NanoFATE Project Oxford
Oxford Instrument and Asylum Research
CATA
Nine business lessons from Bob Metcalfe, Ethernet inventor who spoke at Gig Tank
By C. Morrison, August 7th 2013
Bill Wallace with US Ignite interviewed inventor of the Ethernet Bob Metcalfe at Tuesday's Demo Day. He wore Asics trail running shoes, but noted via Twitter that he doesn't run.
Inventor of Ethernet Bob Metcalfe headlined Tuesday's Gig Tank and received a warm welcome as he professed "startup-ery" and shared his expertise on innovation and business.
US Ignite official Bill Wallace interviewed Metcalfe, whose invention allowed computers to connect and communicate with one another, laying the foundation for the modern-day Internet.
He's currently a professor of innovation at the University of Texas at Austin, and he received his Ph.D. from Harvard.
In 1979, the Internet pioneer founded 3Com Corporation, which is now part of HP. He has also spent time as a venture capitalist and is a self-described “publisher-pundit.”
"I'm here from the Chattanooga of Texas—Austin," Metcalfe said.
He entertained and informed an enthusiastic tech-centric crowd Tuesday.
Here are nine lessons from Bob Metcalfe.
"Invention is a flower, and innovation is a weed."
Chattanooga has the tools and resources for innovation, he said. But the public often resists innovation and change.
"If you’re an innovator, you have to be a weed and grow—despite the status quo," he said.
Be competitive.
He attributed part of his success to being competitive.
"Ethernet competition is fierce," he said. "From that competition comes great progress."
MOOCs are good.
MOOC stands for massive open online courses. Metcalfe just learned Python coding language via an MIT MOOC. He and his son both took classes and competed against each other for better grades.
A lot of people don't like the idea of MOOCs because they don't allow for personal interaction with the professor. But Metcalfe doesn't agree.
Disruption can be good.
When speaking on the potential of what could be done with 1-gig infrastructure, Metcalfe said that it has the potential to disrupt industries that need a jolt, such as education, energy and health care.
"The Internet disrupted the U.S. Postal Service with electronic mail, and we disrupted music with iTunes," he said. "We've done serious disruption to retail with companies like Amazon."
Now, MOOCs and other Internet applications are disrupting and improving education.
"The Internet is going to disrupt education in a positive way," he said.
Now, someone just needs to create an app that solves the unsolved problem of MOOCs—how to create a learning community with peer-to-peer and professor interaction under the MOOC model, he said.
Metcalfe's Law.
In addition to inventing Ethernet, Metcalfe also developed an idea that's now named for him.
Metcalfe's Law states that the value of a telecommunications network is proportional to the square of the number of connected users of the system.
For example, a single fax machine doesn't have much use, but the value increases when more people get fax machines. Or a social network is more valuable the more users it has.
And eventually, value passes the cost.
Metcalfe said that it's important for Chattanooga to team up with the other gig city, Kansas City, and it's important to develop critical mass and connect to other networks for the gig to reach its greatest potential.
Everyone makes mistakes.
Metcalfe once wrote a column predicting the total demise of the Internet by 1996. He listed about a dozen reasons for his prediction, which obviously didn't come true.
When the prediction didn't come to fruition, he kept his word that he would literally eat his words and ate his column, he said.
"I'm more famous for having been wrong about the prediction and eating my column than I am for Ethernet," he said Tuesday.
Engage students, schools.
At least on first impression, Metcalfe said he didn't get the impression that the area's colleges, such as UTC and Covenant, were engrained enough in the community's innovation.
In successful startup communities, such as Silicon Valley, universities are key to success, he said.
Nerds and suits needed.
Good startups have two kinds of people—nerds and suits, he said.
The suits are the salespeople. They play golf, wear ties and drink too much, Metcalfe joked.
The nerds sleep late, don't dress well and probably avoid most contact with the public.
And those personalities sometimes clash, he said.
"Natural animosity develops," he said. But the city can’t let that happen because it will hurt business, he said.
Learn to sell.
In "startup-ery," you have to be able to sell. First, sell the idea to yourself, then to your co-founder, because no one can start a business alone, he said.
Then, you sell to customers and investors.
"The most important thing is to learn to sell in startups," he said.
http://nooga.com/162843/nine-business-lessons-from-bob-metcalfe-ethernet-inventor-who-spoke-at-gig-tank/
SEARCH OUR FUNDED RESEARCH PROJECTS
Apply for Funding
EARN YOUR CERTIFICATION
Invite your friends to join to help the movement grow
SMALL LOAN BIG CHANGES
FOR YOUNG ENTREPRENEURS ACROSS CANADA
IBM STARTUP ADVICE
You Don't Become a Social Business by Just Building Social Networks
Businesses are starting to realize that implementing social is an economic necessity rather than just a marketing strategy.
Sandy Carter, Vice President of Social Business, IBM Jul 29, 2013
Shopping online used to seem novel. But then traditional commerce and e-commerce merged, until there wasn't any more “online business.” Only business.
A similar shift is unfolding right now with social and mobile technology. The companies that see opportunity in this shift are moving fast, weaving social technologies throughout their operations. Their customers, partners, and employees are demanding a digital experience that is consistent across mobile devices to help them find the information, products and services they need. These companies realize that in order to be more efficient, innovative and sustainable, their businesses have to become social by design.
Here are a few ideas on how your business can become more social:
Use social technology to connect with customers: Social technology is about more than likes or tweets. It’s about helping customers create the communities and experiences they need to get the most out of the world. Some 60 percent of customers use social media to discover new brands and products, 46 percent of customers use it to strongly influence purchase decisions, and 40 percent check social media before making purchase decisions, according to a recent study. Your customers are already talking about your brand on their social networks. Connect with them socially, and they can become brand advocates.
ibm_injector_why
Italian poultry leader Amadori Group has been using social technologies to interpret the web as an infinite focus group. By creating different sites for different audiences and listening to and engaging with those communities, the company is picking up insights and using them to respond to customers’ changing tastes, and turning customers into advocates.
Provide social tools so community members can share with one another – and keep coming back: Social networks need to be useful. Smart organizations aren’t just tailoring their social media offerings to their audience, they’re making sure they’re connected to other kinds of information and services that their customers, partners and employees need.
Become a social business by doing more than simply building a social network: You must be committed to constantly collecting and making sense of the vast amount of big data that social networks and the people within them create. About 81 percent of purchasers get product purchase advice from social networks. Who is saying what and why, and how you tap into that particular conversation, is critical to your success.
Being a social business isn’t a marketing push. It’s an economic reality. During the next five years, 95 percent of standout organizations will focus on getting closer to the customer and 57 percent are more likely to let people use social and collaborative tools, according to an IBM study. Going forward, social business will be the only way to do business.
About The Author Of This Post
Sandy Carter, Vice President of Social Business, IBM
Sandy Carter is Vice President of Social Business at IBM. She holds an MBA from Harvard and a Bachelor of Science degree in math and computer science from Duke University. Follow her updates on Twitter @sandy_carter.
Sponsored Content Presented By
Read more: http://www.theatlantic.com/sponsored/ibm-social-business/2013/07/you-dont-become-social-business-just-building-social-networks/4/#ixzz2bOqI3hG3
WHAT IS EQUITY CROWDFUNDING?
Startup Market Week Nov 18-23, 2013
THIRD PARTY CERTIFICATION
Start Up Support
GET CERTIFIED
THE PUBLIC HEALTH AND SAFETY COMPANY
Download for your iPhone or iPad
Medsitations is a physics game about meditation and balance.
GET CERTIFIED
Journal of Biochemistry OUP
Oxford Univ Press 's Journal of Biochemistry
OXFORD ONLINE PUBLIC SCIENCE
Animation and Teacher Resources
SUPPORT MINUUM KEYBOARD PROJECT
Handbook of Nanostructure Characterization
CLICK HERE TO ENTER AND VOTE FOR YOUR FAVOURIT START UP or PICK FROM THE LIST ABOVE AND WIN PRIZES IF YOUR PICK COMES FIRST
iShares Understanding ETF
the Centre for Impact Investing provides a national hub to increase the awareness and effectiveness of social finance to catalyze new capital, talent and initiatives dedicated to tackling social and environmental problems in Canada
SOCIAL INVESTMENT FOR SOCIAL IMPACT
Oxford Photovoltaics OPV
The cells can be printed directly onto glass in a range of colours, making them suitable for use in glazing panels and facades.
Science and Religion: A Very Short Introduction
Laboratory Focus is asking its readers and web site visitors to vote on who makes the best lab stuff – instruments, gadgets, software tools, and resources that make it possible to do lab research. We want to share the results with all the readers in the November 2012 issue. Here’s your opportunity to voice your opinions in print! Please click here and answer 10 questions about the best lab stuff you are using. Remember to click the next button on the bottom of the page to access the second page of the survey. We thank you in advance for your valuable participation in this survey, as a result you will be entered into a draw for $100 AMEX Travellers Cheque.
Animations about DNA structure
Zoom in your genome
Electron Microscopy
June 2012
Journal of Microscopy
Sustainable development
The ability to manipulate the matter on atomic scale opens the possibility of designing and manufacturing new materials and devices of nanometric size. This possibility will alter the methods of manufacturing in factories, allowing for greater process optimization and automation, and therefore contributing to global sustainable development.
Yip lab at the University of Toronto
Scanning Probe Microscopy: Digital Instruments / Veeco Nanoscope IIIA Multimode
NETWORKING AND EVENTS AT TORONTO
CIHR Strategic Training Program in Structural Biology
http://biochemistry.utoronto.ca/CIHR_membrane/
Download Handbook of surface and interface analysis - methods for problem solving Ebook
SuperSTEM
A consortium of five UK universities (Oxford, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester and Glasgow) has been awarded £4.5M to operate SuperSTEM
by the help of Microscopes, there is nothing so small as to escape our inquiry; hence there is a new visible World discovered to the understanding......by Robert Hooke, 1665 (in the Preface of Micrographia)