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October 25, 2007
Paul Watson - http://www.paulmwatson.com/journal/
sent me this and I just had to create an entry for it. RedFin bucked the trend and made public some of their predicted and actual costs.
http://blog.guykawasaki.com/2007/10/financial-model.html
Very interesting read.
Posted by bdownes at 11:56 AM
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October 23, 2007
Seems I am not the only one that loves the iPhone.
Telecoms.com reports today that Apple has sold 1.38 million iPhones to date, after shifting 1.119 million in the third quarter.
According to Telecoms.com (link to story below) Apple introduced the iPhone on June 29 and sold its 1 millionth device 74 days later. The iconic device is due to reach European shores next month, first arriving in the UK and Germany, followed by France.
During the three months to end September, the iPhone delivered $118m in revenues, helping to push Apple's revenues for the quarter up to $6.22bn with a net quarterly profit of $904m, compared to revenue of $4.84bn and net quarterly profit of $542m in the same period last year.
Surely this must go down as one of the greatest products launches in history?
Link to story
http://www.telecoms.com/itmgcontent/tcoms/news/articles/20017472102.html
Posted by bdownes at 2:40 PM
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I am speaking at an Enterprise Ireland (EI) seminar on the 1st of November in Dublin that is aimed at highlighting the EI mechanisms to engage in R&D for the Institutes of Technology.
AGENDA
Applied Research Enhancement Programme (ARE) EI Support Mechanisms to Institutes of Technology to engage in R&D Research Commercialisation / Technology Transfer
Thursday 1st November 2007 - Venue: Crown Plaza Hotel, Santry, Dublin
Details
09.00 Registration and Coffee
09.20 Welcome and Opening Remarks - Deirdre Brougham, ARE Programme Manager Enterprise Ireland
09.30 “Strategic Management of Technology Transfer” Author, James Cunningham Senior Lecturer in Strategic Management NUIG
10.00 Patenting and Exploitation of Research, Patent Funding - Michael Sharp Head, Intellectual Property Unit Enterprise Ireland
10.30 Commercialisation of Research - Gerard Lande Commercialisation Specialist Department of Informatics /ICT Enterprise Ireland
11.30 Technology Transfer - Mary Gillick Manager, Technology Transfer Unit Enterprise Ireland
12.00 Campus Incubation - Nickie O’Connor Manager, Incubation Centres Enterprise Ireland
12.30 Spin Ins and Spin Outs Case Study - Barry Downes 3CS ARE Centre Manager Waterford Institute of Technology
13.00 Concluding Remarks - Martin Lyes Divisional Manager Innovation, Research and Commercialisation Enterprise Ireland
Download Full Agenda (word doc)
I would recommend this event to any researcher that is interested in commercialising their research. It is also of interest to Technology Transfer Offices and companies that want to find out more about how to exploit researched technologies.
Posted by bdownes at 12:49 PM
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Engineers Ireland is currently accepting nominations for the following prestigious awards:
- Innovation Company of the Year Award
- Innovation Engineer of the Year Award
Deltails below:
Download pdf Overview
Applicants are required to submit a one page summary addressing the following criteria:
- Originality of the idea
- Continuous improvement of the innovation. Benefits of the innovation and the potential to enhance people's lives or bring about social change
- Development and implementation of the innovation and its market potential. Degree of successful commercialisation of the innovation.
Applications by email only to sectorsupport@engineersireland.ie
Submission Deadline: October 26th at 5pm
For further information, please contact:
Sector Support, Engineers Ireland, 22 Clyde Road, Ballsbridge, Dublin 4
T: +353 (01) 668 4341
E: sectorsupport@engineersireland.ie
W: www.engineersireland.ie
Posted by bdownes at 12:33 PM
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October 21, 2007
On 24th October, Enterprise Ireland's Innovation and Technology Transfer
Unit will present a conference "Innovating the Business Model" at the
Stillorgan Park Hotel. The keynote address will be given by Prof. Henry
Chesbrough, adjunct professor at the Haas School of Business at the
University of California, Berkeley, author and researcher on Open
Innovation and Open Business Models. Speakers from Irish and overseas
companies including Multis Group, Nortel Networks and Arvetica
(Switzerland) will present their innovative business models and methods
- full details at http://www.openinnovation.ie
Posted by bdownes at 1:57 PM
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To all those South Africans in the organisation, congratulations and well done on winning the Rugby world cup. I am sure you are still celebrating :-)
Posted by bdownes at 1:55 PM
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October 15, 2007
So - I saw this report in the Irish Independent
http://www.independent.ie/national-news/watchdog-defends-universities-low-ranking-in-leagues-1166265.html
The basis of the story is that the old universities (TCD, UCD, UCC et al) ranked poorly in the Shanghai University Rankings. Dr Padraig Walsh, of the Irish Universities Quality Board (IUQB), said in the article that such rankings tended to rate institutions on their research output, citations in journals and the number of Nobel prize-winners on their staff, rather than on the quality of teaching.
So I had a look at the ranking site:
Firstly, the top ten are very predicable:
1 - Harvard Univ; 2 - Stanford Univ; 3 - Univ California Berkeley; 4 - Univ Cambridge; 5 - Massachusetts Inst Tech (MIT); 6 - California Inst Tech; 7 - Columbia Univ; 8 - Princeton Univ; 9 - Univ Chicago; 10 - Univ Oxford.
Secondly, the ranking methodology is at the following link:
http://www.arwu.org/rank/2007/ARWU2007Methodology.htm
Thirdly, I think the IUQB's is trying to reframe the debate (in the wrong way) in defence of the old universities poor performance by focusing on the quality of teaching. According to the Irish Independant, Dr. Walsh, who was speaking ahead of the board's annual conference in Galway, said none of the league tables such as the Shanghai rankings, evaluated the quality of teaching and they "don't measure how happy students are".
Seriously? Does anyone think that students don't get a good education from Harvard? Or MIT? Or Berkeley? Or Cambridge? I think not.
I think a better approach to these rankings is to evaluate how they can suggest improvements in what we do, learn from them, and work to improve our rankings!
Also, what's wrong with evaluating universities on:
1. Alumni of an institution winning Nobel Prizes and Fields Medals
2. Staff of an institution winning Nobel Prizes and Fields Medals
3. Highly cited researchers
4. Articles published in Nature and Science
5. Articles in Science Citation Index-expanded, Social Science Citation Index
6. Academic performance with respect to the size of an institution
Nothing in my opinion. They are all academic achievements of the highest level. We should all be working towards these goals.
I do have an obvious and serious criticism of the rankings methodology though and this is a point the IUQB seems to have missed. The current rankings methodology primarily assesses knowledge creation. However there are no criteria that assess the universities' performance at exploiting the new knowledge they create. No assessment of patent's filed or technology transfer (license agreements for the exploitation of, for example, a patent). This I see as the major weakness of the ranking methodology. Increasingly it is a key objective of most universities to exploit the new knowledge they create by filing a patent and then licensing it; or even developing a prototype to validate the patent (and dare I say it - the market opportunity) and transfer it to an existing company or to help create a new company (the so called Campus Company).
It is a major oversight in my opinion that patents filed and technology transfers executed are excluded from the methodology of the Shanghai University Rankings. Perhaps our universities would rise in the rankings if such criteria were included? I know WITs ranking would!
Posted by bdownes at 3:46 PM
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October 12, 2007
So I am one of those lucky enough in Europe to own an Apple iPhone and I have used it heavily for the past three months and still love it. In my opinion the recent launch the iPhone, and in particular the YouTube service on the iPhone, has redefined what subscribers will expect from advanced mobile services in the future. Even though the iPhone is (in effect) a closed, propriety platform and the YouTube service on the iPhone has been highly customised for this one specific platform, the resultant user experience of the iPhone YouTube service is phenomenal – a major leap in the performance and usability of mobile media services. The result is that service providers should realise that any mobile service that they launch in the future will have to compete in this post-iPhone world and this raises serious issues and challenges as to how they should approach their mobile strategy.
These recent iPhone (YouTube and Google Maps) services parallel similar developments on the Web. The World Wide Web (delivered over broadband) originally signalled a decrease in the popularity of the desktop (thick client) application, as many comparable services became available online in the form of Web applications. However, despite this, many users felt that they were missing some of the usability that was engrained in the desktop equivalent. The Rich Internet Application (this term RIA was I believe introduced by Macromedia in 2002) has recently emerged to addresses these issues. An RIA is a web-based application that has the features and functionality of a traditional desktop application and although they can run inside a web browser (with the aid of Ajax, Flash and Applets), a truly integrated user experience often requires the installation of a thin client on the desktop (e.g. Apple iTunes, Google Earth).
GoogleMaps and YouTube on the iPhone use a similar approach: a thin client on the phone, server based technologies and rich web experience through Ajax to deliver an incredible mobile experience. The result is a new class of mobile application that goes beyond the capabilities and user experience of WAP and On Device Portals (ODP) to completely redefine the standard for compelling mobile services. As a result, these new iPhone services should be classed as a new category of mobile service – a Rich Mobile Internet Application (RMIA). The Apple and Google RMIA have effectively raised the bar for all new mobile services; even though they are effectively "hard-coded" to the iPhone.
The challenge for other service providers is to provide an iPhone/YouTube-like experience for their mobile service across Open Mobile Environments (OME), including IMS (IP Multimedia Subsystem). As a result, a leading Internet Brand has turned to the Telecommunications and Software Systems Group (TSSG), as recognised leaders in the field of mobile and communications services, to help them with the research and development required to deliver a similar RMIA service for open mobile environments.
The goal of this joint research programme will be to analyse current and future technologies and trends to determine the optimum approach to delivering next generation RMIAs across open mobile environments (i.e. access network; core network – e.g. IMS; service delivery platform (SDP); and terminal operating systems, functional and development environments). Furthermore, the research programme will assess the companies requirements for its mobile service and create a service framework for OME Rich Mobile Internet Applications. The project will then validate this service framework with a demonstrator and the company will use this demonstrator to obtain market feedback (Operator and Subscriber), which will help further refine the results of the project.
We expect a number of mobile service innovations to result from this work and I look forward to highlighting them here over the coming months.
Posted by bdownes at 2:47 PM
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October 10, 2007
Just read this really interesting article on the google phone. Will it be a new mobile operating system based on Linux rather than a phone? Very interesting.
Full article at the following link
http://www.last100.com/2007/10/08/the-google-phone-may-not-be-a-phone-but-an-operating-system/
Thanks for the link Helene.
Posted by bdownes at 3:48 PM
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October 9, 2007
I was delighted to pick up the Enterprise Ireland Informatics Commercialisation Award 2007 in Dublin last week for the TSSG. See picture below.

Picture of me (Barry Downes - Commercial Director, TSSG) and Gearoid Mooney (Director of Informatics Commercialisation, Enterprise Ireland) above:
See the TSSG press release:
http://www.tssg.org/archives/2007/10/the_telecommuni.html
Posted by bdownes at 4:29 PM
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Here's a picture of Henley Management College. Had a great time there last week. Yes that is the river Thames :-)
Link: http://www.henleymc.ac.uk/
Hi to everyone I met there. It was great to meet such a diverse and friendly group.
Posted by bdownes at 4:18 PM
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Congratulations to the IM-Enabled team who had a successful review in Brussels on Friday.
Well done to Tom Curran who leads the project and Sean Lyons who recently joined it to drive the business planning and business development activities for its key output - Zimbie (http://www.zimbie.com). Also thanks and congratulations to Kevin Quinn who came in as an advisor and Paul Savage from Aceno who was also at the re-review. Also thanks to the full IM-Enabled team who worked so hard over the past couple of months to ensure the success of the project.
Posted by bdownes at 4:10 PM
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Here is a photo from the event :-)
Pictured above (l-r): Paul McDaid (Vice-President, Waterford Chamber), Barry Downes (TSSG), John McGrath (Vhi Healthcare), Siobhan Flynn (Mothercare), Nigel Pim (Pims Business Systems), Robert Finnegan (Waterford Harbour Sailing Club) and Michael Broderick (Vhi Healthcare).
Posted by bdownes at 3:59 PM
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I was delighted to accept the Quarter 2 Award for Business Excellence in Manufacturing from the Waterford Chamber of Commerce (www.waterfordchamber.ie) recently, on behalf of the TSSG (www.tssg.org). VHI Healthcare sponsors this award and it was great to meet the members of the Chamber, IDA and other businesses at the luncheon.
See the TSSG press release below:
http://www.tssg.org/archives/2007/08/tssg_accepts_wa.html
Posted by bdownes at 3:50 PM
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