FEATURE
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Security in the Ether
December 24, 2009 | MIT Technology Review
Information technology's next grand challenge will be to secure the cloud--and prove we can trust it. In the immensity of a cloud setting, the possibility that a hacker could even find the intended prey on a specific server seemed remote. This year, however, three computer scientists demonstrated how cloud computing could give rise to new kinds of insecurity.
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Related:
Is Our Data Too Vulnerable in the Cloud?
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Innovation Occurs Only If Demanded
December 22, 2009 | Arizona Daily Star
The Corporate Curmudgeon is going to tell you today exactly how much innovation there will be in your organization in the coming year.
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Is Wall Street Irrelevant to an Innovation Economy?
December 20, 2009 | The Ingensist
The most difficult challenge facing the modern creative entrepreneur is the funding of innovation. Likewise, the greatest constraint on an innovation economy is the funding of innovation. Having great new ideas is the easy part; actually building something around those ideas is hard work.
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New York Study of Industry-University Partnerships
December 20, 2009 | University World News
The Task Force on Diversifying the New York State Economy through Industry-Higher Education Partnerships issued its final report last week. Governor David Paterson created the Task Force in May to examine how the State can better utilise its university-based research and development resources to drive economic growth
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H-1B Visas See Slow Demand but Finally Reach Limit
December 25, 2009 | San Jose Mercury News
After a slow start because of the recession, applications for the high-tech industry's favorite work visa, the H-1B, reached the annual cap of 65,000 this month, federal immigration authorities said this week. The announcement by the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services might appear to be one more sign of an economy on the mend.
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VCs Compete Hard For Early-Stage Science Projects
December 22, 2009 | peHUB
Mohr Davidow this month named four researchers — two from Stanford and two from UC Berkeley — as recipients of a new Innovators Award that the venture firm designed last year. “This program is designed to identify, award and accelerate the early careers of professors we think have high potential for research and commercialization,” says MDV partner Erik Straser.
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Top 30 Innovations that Changed the World
Innovation Hubs Off the Starting Block
Health-Care Reform and Innovation
Scripps at a Crossroads
Entrepreneurship Centers Become Part of Landscape at Colleges
Nevada Can Accept Status Quo, or Learn, Innovate, Change
A Wrong Turn on the Way to Recovery
Technology Transfer: Further Considerations
N.C.'s Job-Incentive Bets Don't All Pay Off
Hawaii Lawmakers Blast DBEDT, Director
Arizona Dips in Tech-Based Economic Ddevelopment
Performance Of 2009’s VC-Backed IPOs Boosting Investor Optimism
IP References Left Out Of Last-Minute, Weak Global Climate Deal In Copenhagen
Microsoft Loses Appeal in Patent Case, Must Make Changes to Word, Office
Seeing Customers as Partners in Invention
Top Business School Stories of 2009
World's Largest Solar Project Prompts Environmental Debate
Solar Firm: Michigan Poised For “Solar Explosion” In 2010
Silicon Valley Places Solar Energy Bets
Desert Vistas vs. Solar Power
Gopher Wishes University of Minnesota Were More Like UW
Let Us Praise the Venture Capitalists
The State of Venture Capital
A Bank Idea, With Ancient Roots, for Helping Small Businesses
The Great Abdication: Consumer Internet, Venture Capital, and Angels
The Justice League of Entrepreneurs
The Seed Industry Has Grown 'Out of Hand'
As Colleges Add Green Majors and Minors, Classes Fill Up
West Coast Culture Nurtures New Ideas
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