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Archive for August, 2009

Stopping Start-Ups

August 31st, 2009

Excerpted from a New York Times op-ed piece, this issue could become quite crucial in the innovation ecosystem. 

VARIOUS pieces of legislation now making their way through Congress would require private pools of investment capital to be registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The goal is to curtail abuses and protect the public from questionable practices. The proposed laws would cover the range of funds that deal in derivatives, auction-rate and mortgage-backed securities, highly leveraged transactions and a slew of other instruments so complicated as to defy description.

In registering, these funds would need to open their books to the government so that they could be duly monitored, thus limiting further risks to the financial system.

Unfortunately, however, with good intentions, the Obama administration and some members of Congress are aiming this legislation at all pools of private capital. That includes venture-capital funds, which pose no systemic risks and which, especially now, should be kept free of any new reporting rules and allowed the freedom to flourish.

Venture-capital funds deal solely with privately purchased equity securities in start-up companies, which are not traded in public markets. They have as their limited partners only people who meet the S.E.C.’s definition of a “qualified client” (meaning they possess a substantial amount of money to invest). These investors, who typically allocate a small percentage of their portfolios to venture capital, are familiar with risk, but it is long-term risk, stretching out 7 to 10 years. They put their faith not in publicly traded securities but in entrepreneurs, emerging technologies and new markets.

One of the co-authors, Alan Patricof, was on CNBC’s Squawk Box a couple weeks ago.

Full article in the New York Times

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Singularity taps students’ technology ideas

August 31st, 2009
Singularity University

Singularity University

The inaugural graduates of Singularity University, a Silicon Valley school backed by NASA, Google Inc., and tech industry luminaries like Ray Kurzweil, unveiled their grand visions on Thursday for leveraging emerging technologies to solve humanity’s great challenges.

Before a filled conference room at NASA Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, the students faced the dual pressures of presenting what were both final class projects for the faculty on hand, as well as business pitches to the venture capitalists and business leaders in attendance. Most, if not all, of the four teams hope to secure the funding necessary to transform their ideas into viable ventures.

The stated mission of the unaccredited university, founded in 2008, is to foster leaders who will build on rapid advances in and convergence across areas like biotechnology, supercomputing, nanotechnology and robotics to address intractable problems.

During the nine-week interdisciplinary graduate studies program, the 40 students were asked to develop projects that could help 1 billion people within 10 years. The individuals divided themselves into four teams focused on different challenges.

Full article from SFGate.

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Next generation mobile consume…

August 31st, 2009

Next generation mobile consumer devices are shifting to higher level processors http://bit.ly/2CKTX9

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“13 Electric Car Smart Chargin…

August 31st, 2009

“13 Electric Car Smart Charging Players to Watch” by @journojos @Earth2Tech http://bit.ly/cINIG (expand) #electric_cars

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RT @TechCrunch Free the H-1Bs,…

August 30th, 2009

RT @TechCrunch Free the H-1Bs, Free the Economy http://bit.ly/3K3DQ by @vwadhwa

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Reading “Singularity taps stud…

August 30th, 2009

Reading “Singularity taps students’ technology ideas” by @jtemple @sfgate http://bit.ly/1EGmae

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Two cords of very wet firewood…

August 29th, 2009

Two cords of very wet firewood stacked and drying in basement. Ready for Winter which will likely begin right after Labor Day…

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