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Today's Picks

Today’s Pick: Suniva unites business and science minds

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John W. Baumstark and Suniva founder, Ajeet Rohatgi

Think you don’t know enough about business to be an entrepreneur?

Meet Ajeet Rohatgi, founder of Suniva, a company planning to make CD case-sized solar energy cells. Rohatgi was a scientist and researcher — he knew nothing about business. Enter John Baumstark. He knew nothing of science, but he knew how to run a business. Together they created an company aimed to spread solar power cells to rooftops around the world.

Read more at ajc.com: “Scientist, exec pool skills in sun power

Today’s Pick: Must-reads for entrepreneurs and business managers


For the “read” file

There are five sources that I read regularly; for entrepreneurs and business managers alike they provide perspectives on a range of topics from current global events to understanding the intricacies of markets, to learning more about the foundational social sciences that contribute to business like sociology, psychology and economics.

This content from the world’s leading minds comes to you free of charge.

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Today’s Pick: Collegiate Inventors Competition

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Now that the Oscars have come and gone, awards junkies may be feeling a little let down. Luckily, the Collegiate Inventors Competition is now accepting applications for their 2008 awards. The competition, which makes up for what it lacks in glittery gowns with creativity and innovation, rewards student inventors in science, engineering and technology.

Corey Centen and Nilesh Patel, the McMaster students behind MaRS client Atreo Medical, were among the 2007 winners.

Today’s Pick: UofT lab software tool wins international award

psiphon — an anti-internet-censorship tool designed by the University of Toronto’s Citizen Lab — is the first recipient of a new award for digital pioneers chosen by an international group of specialists and awarded in Paris this month.


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Today’s Pick: Market economy

A market in my hometown is blending community involvement and creative financing to support the expansion of their store.

Brothers Jamey and Robert Lionette of Lionette’s Market in Boston’s South End are pitching their plan, dubbed a Community Supported Market, to their neighbors.The Boston Globe reports that:

“…People who invest $10,000 will get a two-year stipend of $125 per week at the store (for a total of $13,000 in food). For $5,000, investors get a $55 weekly stipend for two years; $2,500 gives investors a 10 per cent discount on store items for two years…


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Today’s Pick: The slow life

Filed under: Today's Picks, Creativity
February 25th, 2008 by Kathryn @ MaRS
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In Praise of Slow

Did you know that today, February 25, 2008, is the second annual Worldwide Day of Slow Living? If that’s news to you, let’s slow down for a minute and talk about the growing international slow movement.

Carl Honoré, a Canadian journalist based in London, was in Toronto recently to speak about the slow movement at the Ontario Library Association conference.


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Today’s Pick: The Internet is NOT flat!

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This Global Attention Profiles map shows what countries were included in the New York Times news coverage of December 1, 2003. Countries in red received the most attention, while pink and blue countries received smaller and smaller amounts of media coverage.

That was Ethan Zuckerman’s emphatic message at the recent Ontario Library Association conference in Toronto. Zuckerman, a research fellow at Harvard Law School’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society, studies the intersection of technology and developing countries. He co-founded Global Voices Online, a “global citizens’ media project” at Berkman that collects and distills web content from across the world, particularly from the Global South; he’s also behind the Global Attention Profiles project (GAP), which monitors the geographic distribution of media attention.

Zuckerman provides a much-needed counterpoint to Thomas Friedman’s Gospel of Globalization, the idea of the digital revolution as great global equalizer. Zuckerman argues that an Internet connection alone cannot correct the vast disparities between developed and developing nations. While he recognizes the democratizing potential of such technology, he emphasizes the fact that persistent structural and systemic disadvantages keep Friedman’s dream from becoming reality.


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Today’s Pick: CATAAlliance Innovation and Leadership Awards

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Know someone who has made exceptional contributions to science and technology in Canada?

The CATAAlliance Innovation and Leadership Awards are the most prestigious annual awards conferred on individuals and corporations by Canada’s advanced technology community.

Individuals and companies are awarded for achievement in private and public sector innovation leadership as well as product development and technology reporting.

Nominations for 2008 are now open and the deadline for submission is April 8, 2008.

Click here to nominate. Or check out some of the previous winners of these awards.

Today’s Pick: Sara Kirke Award nominations

Filed under: Entrepreneurship and Business, Today's Picks
January 30th, 2008 by Kathryn @ MaRS

As a growing number of women pursue careers in science, engineering and technology, the Canadian Advanced Technology Alliance’s Women in Technology Forum (CATA WIT) wants to celebrate their achievements.


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Today’s Pick: Incubating social entreprise

Filed under: Today's Picks, Social Innovation
January 24th, 2008 by Lisa @ MaRS

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Check out this Toronto Star article on the Centre for Social Innovation (CSI), one of MaRS’ coordinating partners for the 2007 Social Entrepreneurship Summit.

CSI is holding its official launch on February 29th, 2008, even though it has been in operation for four years as a shared space for social purpose enterprises. The event should prove to be an opportunity to rub shoulders with academics, politicians, social activists, business people, members of the community, and the tenants themselves, as well as a chance to scope out the newly renovated 91 year-old warehouse space in which such great work occurs.