Essentials of the week : January 2-9

EssentialsDear all,

welcome back for this new edition of the Essentials of the Week, the first of 2012 ! The year is off to a flying start with great news and forecast for the weeks and months to come. No doubt that Innovation & Entrepreneurship will be the flagship of the year, and the key to growth & definite recovery. Take a look at our selection !

Article of the Week
Is Massachusetts Losing its Edge ?  - John Towne – Business Telegram

Innovation
5 Steps to Increase Innovation Skills Set - Innovation Management – Marc Juszczak
Tony Fadell’s Newest Invention is the iPod of Thermostats – Fast Company – John Pavlus
Continue reading

The grand challenge: how can big companies keep being innovative ?

This year, entrepreneurship and innovation have been praised as “life savers”, not only for the american economy, but all over the world. Mostly, we focus on small companies and entrepreneurs. We expect them to be the next generation of innovators, creating fantastic new startups that will revolutionize markets, create jobs and get the economy back on track.

But what about the big companies ? They’ve been surfing the innovation wave, proudly boasting about their innovation ability and their will to change the world. But when we look behind the curtain, the picture is not so cheesy. Most big firms really struggle to turn innovation into a profit and implement it at the core and roots of their global strategies.

Continue reading

Essentials of the weeks : Nov 29 – Dec 13

EssentialsDear all, seems like Santa Claus brought us a lot of interesting news a little bit in advance ! So enjoy this selection of great articles about innovation, entrepreneurship and strategy, it will be the last of this year !

Article of the week :
Can Venuture Capital Save the World ? Helene Coster – Forbes Magazine 

Innovation
MIT President on How to Improve America’s Economy - Alan Weissberger – Viodi 

Continue reading

Harvard finally embraces entrepreneurship with the I-Lab

 Last week, Harvard’s President Drew Faust and Boston’s mayor Thomas Menino gathered for the launching of Harvard’s brand new Innovation-Lab, whose great goal is to foster Entrepreneurship projects in the various faculties composing the University. The $20 millions facility will offer collaborative spaces, rooms, mentoring supports and entrepreneurship classes to all students willing to develop a project on their own, be it with other Harvard student or “outsiders”. While its development model is still to be determined, Gordon Jones, director of the Lab, plans to let the student envision the future of the lab. Sounds a lot like developing a startup! 4 000 students already visited the I-Lab during it’s opening day, and a startup scramble week end engaged some of them to explore and develop business ideas.

While the I-Lab is still a kindergartner compared to similar facilities such as the MIT Media Lab or Stanford’s Desisseroth Lab, it ambitions to become a must-go place for Boston based entrepreneurs. Will that be enough to keep the most promising startups to fly to Silicon Valley ? Let’s hope so !

Read the whole article in French

Essentials of the week: November 21-28

EssentialsDear Readers, even Thanksgiving did not prevent us from digging the best new for you ! This is our Black Monday of Innovation, and it is free, so enjoy !

Entrepreneurship
“Students Startup America” With Lessons On What It Takes To Be a Successful Entrepreneur
– Lauren Landry - Bostinno.com
Boston, Meet the i-lab: The Future of Entrepreneurship Begins Here – Zachary Hamed – Xconomy Boston
Selena Gomez Invests in Los Angeles Start-up – Courtney Rubin – Inc
Understanding Equity Splits: Insights from TechStars – Carlos Dedesma – MIT Entrepreneurship Review

Innovation
Case Study on How Collaboration Drives Innovation in Emerging Economies -  Madhu Mani & Jayesh Badani – InnovationManagement.se
Richard Li-Hua on Innovation and Innovation Management – Karin Wall – InnovationManagement.se
Who to Follow on Twitter for Innovative Business Ideas – Kara Ohngren – Entrepreneur.com

Investment
The Top Tech Investment of 2011 – Christina DesMarais – Inc.com
Investors should be even more worried about Groupon, as its share price falls – Rocky Agrawal – Venture Beat

Enjoy the reading !

US Congress finally finds a way to support Innovation Financing !

After months of unproductive quarreling that hampered the adoption of crucial entrepreneurship bills, the US Congress surprised us all by adopting two new bills aimed at spurring innovation financing. The first bill, called the Entrepreneur Access to Capital Act, will make it easier to businesses to raise capital through “crowdfunding”, allowing the companies to solicit small equity investment from a large number of people, up to $2 millions. That bill opens a whole new field of investment opportunities for startups, and also for regular people, who can now dream to invest in the next Facebook !

The second law, entitled Small  Company Capital Formation Act, will allow companies to issue up to $50 millions stocks without registering it to the Security & Exchanges Commission. This is a great alternative to IPO who needs important financing amounts and don’t want to go through the long and expensive process of SEC’s registration!

Those two bills still have to be approved by the Senate, but the bipartisan nature of the bills and the huge support at the House makes it almost certain ! This is a great new for entrepreneurs and companies looking for cash, and a proof, if needed, that government representative can collaborate for the greater good of America !

To read the entire article (In French), please click here !

France Tech Insight Nov 2011 : Fresh Tech News from France & New England

France Tech Insight is our monthly newsletter, dedicated to provide you with the latest news in Research, Innovation and Bilateral Program between France and New England. A primary source for fresh news, FTI also informs you of the great events happening in the region. So get comfortable and enjoy !

It is not Christmas yet, but we are already bringing you great news ! Our flagship program, the French American Innocation Day, held in December at Harvard Medical School, is coming soon and we hope to see you there !  Also, we completely revamped our blog to provide with the latest news in Innovation & Research from France and new England

This November FTI issue includes articles in the fields of immunology and cells aging, the Nobel Prize awarded to a French Immunologist and new grants opportunities for bilateral collaboration. And as ususal, you’ll find also the latest news in Innovation and Research from France !

So get comfortbale and enjoy the reading !

READ FRANCE TECH INSIGHT

Erasing the signs of aging in cells is now a reality

Inserm’s AVENIR “Genomic plasticity and aging” team, directed by Jean-Marc Lemaitre, Inserm researcher at the Functional Genomics Institute (Inserm/CNRS/Université de Montpellier 1 and 2), has recently succeeded in rejuvenating cells from elderly donors (aged over 100). These old cells were reprogrammed in vitro to induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) and to rejuvenated and human embryonic stem cells (hESC): cells of all types can again be differentiated after this genuine “rejuvenation” therapy. The results represent significant progress for research into iPSC cells and a further step forwards for regenerative medicine.The results are published in the Genes & Development Journal dated 1 November 2011.

Human embryonic stem cells (hESC) are undifferentiated multiple-function cells. They can divide and form all types of differentiated adult cells in the body (neurones, cardiac cells, skin cells, liver cells, etc., see Figure 1).
Since 2007, a handful of research teams across the world have been capable of reprogramming human adult cells into induced pluripotent cells (iPSC), which have similar characteristics and potential to human embryonic stem cells (hESC). This kind of reprogramming (see Figure 1, opposite, in red) makes it possible to reform all human cell types without the ethical restrictions related to using embryonic stem cells.

Until now, research results demonstrated that senescence (the final stage of cellular aging) was an obstacle blocking the use of this technique for therapeutic applications in elderly patients. Today, Inserm researcher Jean-Marc Lemaitre and his team have overcome this obstacle. The researchers have successfully rejuvenated cells from elderly donors, some over 100 years old, thus demonstrating the reversibility of the cellular aging process.

Figure 1 – © INSERM

To achieve this, they used an adapted strategy that consisted of reprogramming cells using a specific “cocktail” of six genetic factors, while erasing signs of aging. The researchers proved that the iPSC cells thus obtained then had the capacity to reform all types of human cells. They have the physiological characteristics of “young” cells, both from the perspective of their proliferative capacity and their cellular metabolisms.

A cocktail of six genetic factors…

Researchers first multiplied skin cells (fibroblasts) from a 74 year-old donor to obtain the senescence characterized by the end of cellular proliferation. They then completed the in vitro reprogramming of the cells. In this study, Jean-Marc Lemaitre and his team firstly confirmed that this was not possible using the batch of four genetic factors (OCT4, SOX2, C MYC and KLF4) traditionally used. They then added two additional factors (NANOG and LIN28) that made it possible to overcome this barrier (see Figure 2).

Using this new “cocktail” of six factors, the senescent cells, programmed into functional iPSC cells, re-acquired the characteristics of embryonic pluripotent stem cells.

In particular, they recovered their capacity for self-renewal and their former differentiation potential, and do not preserve any traces of previous aging.
To check the “rejuvenated” characteristics of these cells, the researchers tested the reverse process. The rejuvenated iPSC cells were again differentiated to adult cells (see Figure 1) and compared to the original old cells, as well as to those obtained using human embryonic pluripotetent stem cells (hESC).

“Signs of aging were erased and the iPSCs obtained can produce functional cells, of any type, with an increased proliferation capacity and longevity,” explains Jean-Marc Lemaitre who directs the Inserm AVENIR team.

… Tested on cells taken from donors over the age of 100

The results obtained led the research team to test the cocktail on even older cells taken from donors of 92, 94 and 96, and even up to 101 years old. “Our strategy worked on cells taken from donors in their 100s. The age of cells is definitely not a reprogramming barrier.” He concluded. “This research paves the way for the therapeutic use of iPS, insofar as an ideal source of adult cells is provided, which are tolerated by the immune system and can repair organs or tissues in elderly patients.” adds the researcher.
Inserm Transfert filed a patent request for this research.

This article is an extract from the INSERM’s website. All rights reserved.
See the original article. 

Essentials of November 1-7 2011

EssentialsDear Readers, it is my pleasure to introduce you to one of our new section of this blog : The Essentials of the Week !
Every week we will scrutinize the web looking for the best news in Innovation, Entrepreneurship, Tech Transfer and Business, and gather them in a single article. The best of the web put in a nutshell !

Article of the week:
The way companies are getting financed is Completely Changing
– Business Insider – Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry

Entrepreneurship
Venture Capital’s Boom & Bust Cycles – MedCity News
7 Start-ups Changing Peer-to-Peer Commerce – Inc.

Strategy
How to Master the Ansoff Matrix – Inc.
Zuck: “If I were starting (Facebook) now, I would have stayed in Boston.” – Gregory Gomer – Bostinnovation
How the Rift Between Sales and Marketing Undermines Reps – Matthew Dixon and Brent Adamson – Harvard Business Review

Innovation
The future of innovation Management: 5 keys steps for future success – Rick Eagar – Innovation Management

Enjoy the reading !

Tweet This