Skip to main content

Home/ MaRS/ Group items tagged IT

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Assunta Krehl

The Transition Year - BioscienceWorld - 0 views

  •  
    Tony Cruz, Founder and CEO of Transition Therapeutics plans to be looking to partner some its products and be on the US stock exchange.
  •  
    Tony Cruz, Founder and CEO of Transition Therapeutics plans to be looking to partner some its products and be on the US stock exchange. Sept 1, 2006
Assunta Krehl

Bridging Medicine's Great Divide - The Star - 0 views

  •  
    MaRS celebrates its first anniversary. Judy Steed, Toronto Star Reporter, caputures some of the people, ideas and developments in commercializing leading edge research at the MaRS Centre.
  •  
    MaRS celebrates its first anniversary. Judy Steed, Toronto Star Reporter, caputures some of the people, ideas and developments in commercializing leading edge research at the MaRS Centre. Sept 26, 2006
Assunta Krehl

MaRS, after a year - The Varsity - 0 views

  •  
    MaRS Discovery District celebrates its one year anniversary.
  •  
    MaRS Discovery District celebrates its one year anniversary. Sept 28, 2006
Assunta Krehl

McGuinty government supporting start-up technology companies with MaRS: Connecting inve... - 0 views

  •  
    The McGuinty government announced it is funding the creation and expansion of angel investor network to help Ontario's leading-edge start-up companies to grow and succeed.
  •  
    The McGuinty government announced it is funding the creation and expansion of angel investor network to help Ontario's leading-edge start-up companies to grow and succeed. Oct 4, 2006
Assunta Krehl

Clean energy comes to the coffee table - Clean Break - 0 views

  • Is green, renewable energy a sexy enough topic to be the centrepiece of a coffee table book? Tom Rand, who leads cleantech development at Toronto’s MaRS Centre, believes so
  • a book that will expose a broader section of the population to the issues, technologies and opportunities around renewable energy. Rand has written a soon-to-be-released book called Kick The Fossil Fuel Habit: 10 Clean Technologies To Save Their World.
  • This is an accessible package, cleverly assembled and pleasant to look at, while at the same time making it enjoyable to learn about the technologies that, while seemingly “alternative” or “new” today, are destined to become a dominant and permanent way of energizing future generations and the economies that support them.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • The plan is to distribute it through mainstream outlets such as Starbucks to coincide with the big climate-change conference coming up in December in Copenhagen. It will be released in October.
  •  
    Tom Rand, MaRS Practice Lead in Cleantech, will be releasing his book called Kick The Fossil Fuel Habit: 10 Clean Technologies To Save Their World in October 2009. This book will expose the broader population to the issues, technologies and opportunities around renewable energy.
  •  
    Tom Rand, MaRS Practice Lead in Cleantech, will be releasing his book called Kick The Fossil Fuel Habit: 10 Clean Technologies To Save Their World in October 2009. This book will expose the broader population to the issues, technologies and opportunities around renewable energy. Aug 30, 2009
Assunta Krehl

A grand finale! - The Star - 0 views

  •  
    The Toronto Star is celebrated its grand finale of their four-month Build a Business Challenge. Skymeter, a MaRS Tenant, was selected as one of the 9 chosen Entrepreneurs. April 30, 2007
  •  
    The Toronto Star is celebrated its grand finale of their four-month Build a Business Challenge. Skymeter, a MaRS Tenant, was selected as one of the 9 chosen Entrepreneurs.
Assunta Krehl

Green meets high tech-MaRS - Tech Media - 0 views

  •  
    Energy conservation with IP based technology is creating surprising forms of convergence in buildings. Mention of MaRS Discovery District winning the Intelligent Building of teh Year award for its inventive use of technology.
  •  
    Energy conservation with IP based technology is creating surprising forms of convergence in buildings. Mention of MaRS Discovery District winning the Intelligent Building of the Year award for its inventive use of technology. Sept 13, 2007
Assunta Krehl

Science City - The Globe and Mail - 0 views

  • This is Toronto's research district, a maze of concrete and glass where the finest minds collaborate, turning the city into a global centre of biomedical discovery.
  • Nine research institutes employing 5,000 university faculty members, 2,000 graduate students and 1,100 postdoctoral and clinical fellows lie within a 20-minute walk of each other. This biomedical cluster at the heart of Toronto is one of the largest on the continent, and is one of the 10 largest in the world.
  • Tom Hudson from Montreal; cell biologist Ben Neel from Boston; and stem-cell biologist Gordon Keller, who came to Toronto in 2006, just months after New York magazine named him one of the scientists that city could not afford to lose. Toronto is also home to Tak Mak, who discovered the "key to the immune system" T-cell receptor, and John Dick, who discovered the first cancer stem cell in 1994 and last year grew a human cancer in a lab mouse for the first time.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • "There's an enthusiasm in the research community that's very exciting to be part of," says Dr. Keller, who now heads the McEwan Centre for Regenerative Medicine.
  • Dr. Hudson, who left Quebec to head the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, says the city's "tremendous power" is built on a strong history: Stem-cell research began here. "It's innovative," he says of Toronto. "I've never felt closer in my research career to thinking we will have an impact. I feel my goals are going to happen here."
  • Still, John Evans, board chairman of the non-profit MaRS Centre, which helps to turn research into viable businesses, envisages a day when research is seen as a social and economic driver, and the city shines as brightly as better-known centres such as Boston and Palo Alto.
  •  
    Tenille Bonoguore, Globe and Mail features the MaRS Centre and meets 12 of its' "best specimens." MaRS is one of the 10 largest biomedical clusters in the continent.
  •  
    Tenille Bonoguore, Globe and Mail features the MaRS Centre and meets 12 of its' "best specimens." Bonoguore states "MaRS Centre is one of the 10 largest biomedical clusters in the continent." Jan 5, 2008
Assunta Krehl

Ottawa must get moving on the MaRS project - The Star - 0 views

  •  
    The Ontario government provided support of $20M to the MaRS project. It is hoped that the Canadian federal government's commitment will be announced during BIO2002.
  •  
    The Ontario government provided support of $20M to the MaRS project. It is hoped that the Canadian federal government's commitment will be announced during BIO2002. Nov 23, 2002
Assunta Krehl

The 5 Spot - Biotech 360 - 0 views

  • This blog is hosted by MaRS, a convergence innovation center located in downtown Toronto. MaRS staffers and guests blog on topics such as emerging science and technology, entrepreneurship and business, and innovation policy. What sets MaRS apart from other blogs is the depth of coverage in each of these categories and well as the demonstrated desire to ask, and address, fundamental questions.
  •  
    Biotech Blogger, Yali Friedman, picks MaRS as one of its top 5 must read blogs. What sets MaRS apart from other blogs is the depth of coverage in each of these categories and well as the demonstrated desire to ask, and address, fundamental questions.
  •  
    Biotech Blogger, Yali Friedman, picks MaRS as one of its top 5 must read blogs. What sets MaRS apart from other blogs is the depth of coverage in each of these categories and well as the demonstrated desire to ask, and address, fundamental questions. Jun 2007
Assunta Krehl

Ontario - A Leading Centre Of Stem Cell Research That Is Building A Foundation - Biosci... - 0 views

  •  
    Ontario is the home of stem cell research. Canada is ranks as one of the top 6 countries worldwide for its ongoing leadership in stem cell research. According to the Regenerative Medicine reported release in January 2008 by Veronika Litinski and Lincoln Kim, Ontario consistently ranks in the top 5 regions in North America for Stem Cell Research.
  •  
    Ontario is the home of stem cell research. Canada is ranks as one of the top 6 countries worldwide for its ongoing leadership in stem cell research. According to the Regenerative Medicine reported release in January 2008 by Veronika Litinski and Lincoln Kim, Ontario consistently ranks in the top 5 regions in North America for Stem Cell Research. Jul 11, 2008
Assunta Krehl

Toronto's place in the "creative economy" - Excalibur - 0 views

  • What is this creative economy? It is an economic system that relies most on ideas to serve as its major capital, instead of services or physical capital. Take Google for example. In an economy based on ideas, the potentialfor breakaway successes like Google is far greater.
  • According to Richard Florida’s The Rise of the Creative Class: And How it’s Transforming Work, Leisure,Community and Everyday Life, members of the creative class are very different from those who are employed in the manufacturing, service or agriculture industries. They contribute to our economy primarily by producing the new forms and ideas exploited by our various industries and decision-makers.   What Florida terms the “super creative core” of this new class includes “scientists and engineers, university professors, poets and novelists, artists, entertainers, actors, designersand architects, as well as the ‘thought leadership’ of modern society: non-fiction writers, editors, cultural figures, think-tank researchers, analysts and other opinion-makers.”
  • What sets a creative city apart from a non-creative city? Florida proposes that it is the “three Ts of economic development”: technology, talent and tolerance.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • Florida promote a drawback on new capital investments in such traditional creative staples as ballet, opera, symphony and museums. Although these are necessary public entertainment options to maintain, studies show the majority of university students and young to middle-aged professionals who make up the bulk of the emerging creative class, in fact, prefer more accessible venues.
  • Florida is not saying the city should fund the construction of all these venues, but should support them with entrepreneurial assistance, specified tax-cuts and governmenttools to ease operation, like streamlining the bureaucracy behind applying for liquor licences and permits for musical events and public attractions.
  • The MaRS centre, located at College St. and University Ave. in downtown Toronto, is a fantastic first step in better integrating the city’s creative talents in the technology and science fields. But more buildings and communities like this need to be developed to take advantage of all of Toronto’s creative economic potential.
  •  
    David Tal contributer to Excalibur exams what is the creative economy. Mention of MaRS being a fantastic first step in integrating the city's creative talents in technology and science.
  •  
    David Tal contributer to Excalibur exams what is the creative economy. Mention of MaRS being a fantastic first step in integrating the city's creative talents in technology and science. Sept 23, 2009
Assunta Krehl

MaRS Innovation selects umbilical cord stem cell technology from Samuel Lunenfeld Resea... - 0 views

  • MaRS Innovation and the Samuel Lunenfeld Research Institute of Mount Sinai Hospital are pleased to announce that they have entered into an agreement to collaboratively initiate commercialization of an umbilical cord stem cell technology for potential treatment in cardiovascular disease, diabetes and neurological disorders.
  • With the Toronto area identified as a world-leading cluster in stem cell research, we are extremely excited to have identified this technology as our first commercialization opportunity,” said Dr. Rafi Hofstein, President and CEO of MaRS Innovation.
  • MaRS Innovation, along with the inventors and Mount Sinai, will initially focus on the diabetes application for the technology, as research has demonstrated that these cells uniquely secrete insulin in response to glucose, thereby mimicking the “normal” physiological state.
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • The technology – invented by Mount Sinai scientists Dr. Ian Rogers and Dr. Robert Casper – offers a proprietary method to create multi-potent stem cells (MPSCs) from human umbilical cord blood.
  • With MaRS Innovation's participation, we are optimistic we will succeed."
  • Our partnership with MaRS Innovation on developing methods for using stem cells for diseases such as diabetes will allow us to work towards advancing care for these critical conditions." With the launch of this first exciting opportunity, MaRS Innovation has embarked on a journey to transform the Toronto-based research enterprise into a successful commercialization cluster.
  • MaRS Innovation is building its own internal infrastructure to support intellectual property and market due diligence to identify the most promising commercial opportunities. MaRS Innovation is dedicated to converting the outstanding science of its member institutions into products and services, making a significant contribution to Canada’s future economic outlook and the quality of life for Canadians and others around the world
  • “We are deeply committed to creating a powerful engine for commercialization that brings together an experienced team to identify and validate market opportunities, develop technologies to market requirements and build the linkages that will advance the exceptional research of all of our institutional members,” added Dr. Hofstein. “We look forward to announcing additional technologies to add to our pipeline over the next several weeks.”
  •  
    MaRS Innovation and the Samuel Lunenfeld Research Institute of Mount Sinai Hospital are announce that they have entered into an agreement to collaboratively initiate commercialization of an umbilical cord stem cell technology for potential treatment in cardiovascular disease, diabetes and neurological disorders.
Assunta Krehl

Room for the Future - 0 views

  • 2009 Cleantech Issue
  • exclusive look at the continent’s greenest hotel: The Planet Traveler Hotel in Kensignton Market, Toronto.
  • The big talk by the cleantech lead at the MaRS Discovery District, and the man behind VCi Greenfunds and Green Bonds, is backed by bigger action. Rand’s latest project is what he claims to be “the continent’s greenest hotel”, which Corporate Knights first told you about in October 2008.
  • ...8 more annotations...
  • Speaking to a full house at Toronto's MaRS Centre on July 9, 2009, Tom Rand explains why he has decided to focus on buildings in his approach to climate change. “Buildings are responsible in our large urban centres for between a half and three quarters of our carbon emissions. That’s a huge part of our footprint,” he says. “In terms of climate change, buildings are the lowest hanging fruit, as far as I can tell.”
  • Tom Rand’s talk Green or Green Wash? Lessons from Building North America’s Greenest Hotel in Toronto
  • According to Tom Rand, if you’re not talking low carbon, you’re greenwashing.
  • Tom Rand believes any building can and should achieve in the immediate future using sustainable technologies that already exist.  Moreover, he claims to have found a magic bullet, alleging that these carbon cuts can be made without spending a dime.
  • and has come a long way since then, transforming the Planet Traveler hostel into a kind of cleantech gallery. Utilizing solar-voltaic and solar-thermal heating, geo-exchange, 100% LED lighting, and a wastewater heat re-capturing unit called the Powerpipe, it boasts a rich collection of renewables. It also seeks to educate. The geo-exchanger and Powerpipe are featured behind a glass wall in the basement, and the rooftop mezzanine bar offers a full view of the solar panels in the foreground of Toronto’s skyline.
  • Rand had to look to an adjacent alley to bury the pipe.
  • Rand, a carbon tax, widespread education campaigns, and third party support for green infrastructure via green bonds or a geo-utility are sure-fire ways “to build a cleantech economy in Canada without spending a dime.”
  • If any country wants to participate in the next economic revolution they had better start dealing with clean-tech and they had better start dealing with it quickly.”
  •  
    An exclusive look at the continent's greenest hotel: The Planet Traveler Hotel in Kensignton Market, Toronto. Tom Rand talks about Cleantech and the lessons he has learned from Building North America's Greenest Hotel in Toronto
  •  
    An exclusive look at the continent's greenest hotel: The Planet Traveler Hotel in Kensignton Market, Toronto. Tom Rand talks about Cleantech and the lessons he has learned from Building North America's Greenest Hotel in Toronto.
Sarah Hickman

Making Innovation Work: How to Manage It, Measure It, and Profit from It: Amazon.ca: To... - 0 views

  •  
    This book challenges the prevalent misconceptions about innovation, and lays out the tools and processes necessary for an organization to harness and execute innovation.
Sarah Hickman

Innovation Nation: How America Is Losing Its Innovation Edge, Why It Matters, and What ... - 0 views

  •  
    Once a Harvard School of Business professor, an entrepreneur, a pianist, and currently a consultant, Kao describes the state of innovation in the US, depicting best practices and explaining how innovation works. Kao also puts forth a strategy proposal - to help the government.
Assunta Krehl

Smaller town, bigger edge - The Globe and Mail - 0 views

  • MaRS, a non-profit, collaborative entity of the university, provincial and federal governments and industry, which aims to turn these discoveries into commercial projects.
  • MaRS, a non-profit, collaborative entity of the university, provincial and federal governments and industry, which aims to turn these discoveries into commercial projects.
  • MaRS, a non-profit, collaborative entity of the university, provincial and federal governments and industry, which aims to turn these discoveries into commercial projects.
  • ...8 more annotations...
  • Sure, some of the world's best biomedical minds work in Toronto's MaRS Centre and hospitals.
  • Sure, some of the world's best biomedical minds work in Toronto's MaRS Centre and hospitals.
  • Sure, some of the world's best biomedical minds work in Toronto's MaRS Centre and hospitals.
  • Sure, some of the world's best biomedical minds work in Toronto's MaRS Centre and hospitals.
  • Sure, some of the world's best biomedical minds work in Toronto's MaRS Centre and hospitals.
  • Sure, some of the world's best biomedical minds work in Toronto's MaRS Centre and hospitals.
  • Sure, some of the world's best biomedical minds work in Toronto's MaRS Centre and hospitals.
  • The closest thing to a would-be Waterloo in Toronto is the medical "discovery district" around College Street and University Avenue, near the University of Toronto and several teaching hospitals. In the midst of it is
  •  
    MaRS aims to turn discoveries into commercial projects. Some of the world's best biomedical minds work in Toronto's MaRS Centre and hospitals.
  •  
    Waterloo is getting better public traction with 500 tech companies, led by global juggernaut Research In Motion and its high-minded institutional spinoffs. MaRS aims to turn discoveries into commercial projects. Some of the world's best biomedical minds work in Toronto's MaRS Centre and hospitals.
Cathy Bogaart

Milken Institute Publications - Research Reports - Capital Access Index 2008: Best Mark... - 0 views

  • infrastructures that support entrepreneurial activity by providing access to capital
  • Canada, with its stable equity market and a sound economic policy framework, was able to withstand some of the global credit market issues and moved to first place in the Milken Institute’s 2008 Capital Access Index.
  •  
    Canada ranks #1 in global access to capital index from Milken Institute, apparently thanks to our stable equity market and sound economic policy framework. That means entrepreneurs here have more support than elsewhere in the world. And we're STILL complaining about lack of start-up money? Think about how hard it must be to be everyone else.
Assunta Krehl

Small business expert Ron Close on dealing with rejection, Wednesday - Business Exchang... - 0 views

  •  
    Ron Close discusses Police Prep's success and what other entrepreneurs can learn from it.
  •  
    Ron Close discusses Police Prep's success and what other entrepreneurs can learn from it. April 10, 2009
Assunta Krehl

Robarts and WORLDiscoveries go to MaRS - Western News - 0 views

  • The event will mark the official opening of the new WORLDiscoveries office at MaRS.   WORLDiscoveries is a joint business development consortium formed between Western, Robarts and Lawson Health Research Institute to bridge local inventions and global industry.  
  • The MaRS Discovery District is a non-profit innovation centre that connects science, technology and entrepreneurs with business skills, networks and capital to stimulate innovation and accelerate the growth of successful Canadian enterprise
  •  
    John MacDonald, new Director of Robarts Research Institute was at a luncheon at MaRS on March 17 to bring awareness of the leadership role Robarts and The University of Western Ontario, plays in furthering Canada's innovation agenda through the production of leading research. It also mentions about the official opening of WORLDiscoveries office at MaRS.
  •  
    John MacDonald, new Director of Robarts Research Institute was at a luncheon at MaRS on March 17 to bring awareness of the leadership role Robarts and The University of Western Ontario, plays in furthering Canada's innovation agenda through the production of leading research. It also mentions about the official opening of WORLDiscoveries office at MaRS. March 16, 2009
« First ‹ Previous 101 - 120 of 385 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page