Archive News Articles - February 2008

State looks to invest in technology
Seguin Gazette-Enterprise - 28-Feb-2008
Calling all mad scientists, nutty professors and any clever inventors who want to take a high technology product to the marketplace.
David Clark of the San Antonio Technology Accelerator Initiative office would like to introduce you to the governor.
Clark, director of investment services for SATAI, said inventive entrepreneurs are what the state is seeking to participate in its Emerging Technology Fund, a program to help fund the commercialization of new technology. The fund was created through legislation designed to expedite innovation and commercialization of research that results in placing a high technology product in the marketplace.
Inventors of high tech products can access a pool of about $295 million that is maintained by the governor’s office to promote such activity. See Complete Article


Texas Emerging Technology Fund to Invest in El Paso Tech Company
Secretary of State Phil Wilson Website - 26 Feb 2008
EL PASO Today, Secretary of State Phil Wilson announced that the Texas Emerging Technology Fund (TETF) will invest $150,000 in TXL Group, Inc., of El Paso, Texas. Up to $1 million total investment may be available to the company if they meet certain performance benchmarks.  The decision marks the first pre-seed funding awarded by the TETF and will assist TXL in their development of new technology to harvest roadway heat and convert it into energy. “As a state known for triple-digit summer temperatures and home to the most state highway miles in the country, this is an exciting project for Texas,” stated Wilson.  “The TXL Group has shown innovative leadership in addressing the future energy needs of our state and is a good example of a company turning challenges into opportunities through creative technology.” See complete Press Release

UTB-TSC to offer research-based physics program
The Brownsville Herald - 25-Feb-2008
The National Science Foundation has awarded a $1.05 million grant to UTB-TSC and its Center for Gravitational Wave Astronomy to fund 10 scholarships in physics that include high-level research in astronomy. “Essentially, we’re redefining what it means to be a student in physics and also developing a curriculum around this program,” said Fredrick A. Jenet, a professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Texas at Brownsville and Texas Southmost College and director of the Center for Gravitational Wave Astronomy.
Jenet said the university is targeting the type of student who until recently has had to go out of the Rio Grande Valley to obtain the type of science education they were looking for. See complete article.

Texas a top contender in biotech field, report says

Houston Business Journal - 25-Feb-2008
Texas has been named for the first time as one of the top five biotechnology economic development regions in the world by newsletter FierceBiotech. In addition to Texas, the 2008 rankings include New York, Massachusetts, Florida and California, as having state programs that are "driving the development of new facilities that will likely have a profound impact in determining where the industry will find its most fertile soil for future growth."

The Washington, D.C.-based newsletter chose Texas because of its $3 billion investment in cancer research, led by The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. See complete article.


Bill Gates visits UT computer science students
Microsoft founder says there's a need to focus on software
AMERICAN-STATESMAN - 18-Feb-2008
When you are the founder of Microsoft Corp., Google Inc. may be a business irritant, but the lack of top-notch computer science students is also a pressing problem. Computer science enrollments are down in the top schools across the country since the start of the dot-com crunch seven years ago, which is part of the reason Bill Gates, the world's richest man, was speaking to a packed house Wednesday morning at the Texas Union Ballroom on the University of Texas campus. Gates, 52, exhorted computer science and electrical and computer engineering students to pursue careers in software development, which he says will push the ongoing digital revolution, enable scientific breakthroughs and even help the world's poor. See complete article.


Pickens gift propels brain health research
Dallas Business Journal - 15-Feb-2008
For a brief period on Feb. 12, billionaire and philanthropist T. Boone Pickens entered the world of Asperger syndrome. He did so through a computer program that created a simulation of himself in a virtual world, where others who suffer from Asperger syndrome -- a sort of autism -- learn to interact with others more effectively thanks to a structured simulated environment. "This program has helped me a lot on my job," said one of the patients, who was manning a computer-simulated person -- called an "avatar" See complete article.

Superpowerful 'Ranger' has scientists lining up
Sun Microsystems-UT venture runs on AMD hardware, slated to crunch numbers on nature
AMERICAN-STATESMAN - 18 - Feb - 2008
Waves of color ripple across the screen of Omar Ghattas' laptop. The University of Texas geoscientist is replaying a computer visualization showing waves of seismic energy rippling through the Los Angeles Basin after a simulated earthquake along the San Andreas Fault more than 100 miles away. It took four days to create that visualization a few years ago on a supercomputer in San Diego. Now, Ghattas has a more powerful machine to work with: a new supercomputer nicknamed Ranger at the Texas Advanced Computing Center at UT's J.J. Pickle Research Campus. Ghattas said Ranger is five times as powerful as anything scientists have worked with in the United States in the past. In many fields, better computing translates to better science. In Ghattas' case, the machine will deliver earthquake simulations with twice the level of resolution, or detail, than could be done previously. See complete article.



Chamber calls for creation of Austin medical schoolFull-fledged operation could be worth $2.4 billion a year, 19,000 jobs, study says.
AMERICAN-STATESMAN - 12-Feb-2008
Austin's main business group joined with the city's mayor, state senator and major hospital executives Monday to call for the establishment of a medical school here.

Officials of the Greater Austin Chamber of Commerce released an economic analysis they commissioned that concluded that a medical school would pump $2.4 billion a year into the region's economy and generate more than 19,000 jobs through direct employment, spinoff activity and startup firms. See full article.


UTMB plans $90 million research building

Galveston County Daily News - 10 - Feb - 2008
GALVESTON — Plans are under way to build a $90 million research building at The University of Texas Medical Branch, officials have announced. The research building will be located on Sixth Street and Harborside, across the street from the school’s Primary Care Pavilion. It will house offices and laboratories for medical branch researchers. The building, along with the $167 million, federally funded National Biocontainment Laboratory, should help the medical branch attract scientists from around the world to the island, said Garland D. Anderson, dean of the School of Medicine.
“It means we can continue to make progress with our research,” he said. See complete article.

Two scientists win major prizes

Austin American-Statesman - 08 - Feb - 2008
Two UT scientists — computer scientist E. Allen Emerson and chemist Allen Bard — have won prestigious prizes for their research. Emerson won the A.M. Turing Award, considered the most prestigious in computer science, along with collaborator Edmund Clarke of Carnegie Mellon University and Joseph Sifakis, who worked independently at the University of Grenoble in France. They were cited for innovations in a quality assurance process known as model checking. The Association for Computing Machinery will present the award, which carries a $250,000 prize underwritten by Google Inc. and Intel Corp., on June 21 in San Francisco…See complete article.

Perry pushes universities for more startups

Austin Business Journal - 08-Feb-2008
Gov. Rick Perry has outlined a plan for Texas universities to churn out startup companies faster and with less red tape.

While campuses statewide feel pressure, leaders at the University of Texas say they already have met his mandates.

In the fall, Perry and state officials met with university leaders to outline several goals he wanted to reach within a year, including:

  • Standard intellectual property contracts across university systems.
  • More collaboration between campuses.
  • Having one person at each university as a contact for businesspeople and investors. See complete article.

State wants added path to tenure at Texas universities
Austin Business Journal - 08-Feb-2008
The way academic institutions grant tenure to faculty may change as part of Gov. Rick Perry's push to make commercialization a priority at Texas universities.

Perry is proposing that all public universities make the commercialization of research one of the several factors considered when granting tenure to professors, according to Secretary of State Phil Wilson. See complete article.

 

University of Texas at Dallas professor wins national honor
Nano researcher joins National Academy of Engineering
DallasNews - 07-Feb-2008
A nanotechnologist and University of Texas at Dallas chemistry professor has received a huge honor for working with minuscule technology.
Ray Baughman, the Robert A. Welch Distinguished Chair in Chemistry and director of the Alan G. MacDiarmid NanoTech Institute at UTD, will join another Texan and 63 other new members elected to the National Academy of Engineering, the organization will announce today. See complete article.


New research university considered

Third Texas flagship school could boost economy, increase research availability

The Daily Texan - 06 Feb 2008
UT and Texas A&M may have more academic competition if a proposed committee finds that the state needs a third research university.
Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst ordered a study on the need for such a flagship university last week when he announced his interim charges.
The study will determine the impact of another research university in the state. A committee will review the cost, need and location of the possible university and will also hold hearings and gather testimony from the public and experts in higher education across Texas. See complete article.


McDonald Observatory Receives $190,000 NASA Grant; Will Train Texas Elementary, Middle School Teachers in Science Education

UT Austin News - 07-Feb - 2008
AUSTIN, Texas — The University of Texas at Austin McDonald Observatory has been awarded a grant of about $190,000 from NASA to train teachers across the state in science education. The project will develop, test and implement professional development workshops for 500 Texas teachers of grades 3-8 that will be delivered via videoconference.

In Texas, students are tested on science in the fifth, eighth and 10th grades. This training program will specifically address questions that Texas students score low on in the fifth-grade standardized test (the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills).

McDonald Observatory is partnering with the Texas Regional Collaboratives for Excellence in Science and Mathematics Teaching in this project, and that group is contributing funding for the state-wide effort as well. See complete article.


 

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