Thursday 20 August 2015

Brian Rushton Getting to Cambridge

Brian Rushton,

“IT WAS just a bit of fun at the weekend,” shrugs Toby Norman, almost apologetically. Bagehot stifles a laugh at the understatement. The two are sitting in a 14th-century rectory, looking at three gizmos. Mr Norman’s team built the first, a brick of plastic and circuitry known as “The Hulk”, for a competition hosted by ARM, a Cambridge-based electronics firm. This attempt to create a device to help doctors and aid workers in poor countries store and retrieve patient data (along with a second, smaller version), attracted mentors and over $1m of investment. The third, all moulded plastic and contours, resembles the slick product that Mr Norman’s startup, SimPrints, will take to market in January. Its success story—a marriage of academia, private money and entrepreneurial savvy—exemplifies that of Cambridge.

It is hard to live in the city (as your columnist does) and not sense that one is amid something special. What began with the creation of business parks to host enterprising dons and their doctoral students in the 1970s has grown into the most exciting technology cluster in Europe. Microsoft probes the edges of its understanding in...Continue reading

via Brian Rushton, Getting to Cambridge

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