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Investing: Where’s the seed?

Mary Lisbeth D'Amico's first fortnightly funding column reveals how coming out on top in a start-up talent show does not guarantee funding.

Going for a spin, anyone?

Take care: not all spin-outs end in fame and glory. The path from academia to industry is strewn with pitfalls…

Moi, je suis robot

Technology from one of France’s Grandes Écoles is going towards developing an easy-to-program home robot – with a common touch

A licence to print money

Not everyone can produce a Google, Stanford's way of doing business is making other universities look with interest at the revenue possibilities of equity deals.

Long live the corporate lab

Once upon a time, there were great businesses with massive central labs that did both product development and basic research. Today, most corporate labs have refocused on applied research. They do not know what they are missing.

Roche buys Zürich spin-off

Acquisition gives Roche access to antibody-boosting technology - and possible anti-cancer treatments in the pipeline

From lab to boardroom

How a Swiss university spin-off got to exit in six years - Interview with Joël Jean-Mairet, Chief Executive Officer and Joint Founder, GlycArt.

Guilt by association, an opinion

Scientists who follow government advice and take up links with industry could find that not everyone will see them in a positive light.

A serial entrepeneur

By mixing academic research with commercial ventures, Sir Richard Friend has returned to the scientific traditions of Faraday and Kelvin. He has also created a new role model for the modern scientist.

Patently Ridiculous

Barry Fox thinks that the patent system is deliberately designed to make it hard to find out anything.

Making Clusters Happen

Clusters are acknowledged as one of the most important sources of innovation. But the question is, How to make them happen?