A growing gap in the transition of inventions from research labs to market is slowing the development and scale-up of new hardware technologies in the United States. This is particularly evident in complex microelectronics advancements, in which U.S.
MIT, RPI, and SUNY co-organized a Semiconductor Technology Translation and Hard-Tech Startups workshop to bring together academia, industry, government, and other areas to identify challenges and opportunities for translating ideas from academic labs to industry and into the market.
LEBANON Old Glory and the Maple Leaf were flying in the morning breeze on Wednesday at a gathering behind The Fort @ Exit 18 truck stop.The flags adorned pickup trucks, a fuel truck, a logging truck and several sedans parked for a couple of hours.
LEBANON Old Glory and the Maple Leaf were flying in the morning breeze on Wednesday at a gathering behind The Fort @ Exit 18 truck stop.The flags adorned pickup trucks, a fuel truck, a logging truck and several sedans parked for a couple of hours.
Workshop: Semiconductor Technology Translation & Hard-Tech Startups Identifying challenges and opportunities for translating ideas from academic labs to industry and into the market. U.S. universities are hotbeds of innovative technologies and new knowledge. Yet a growing gap has developed between nascent advanced hard-technology development (in academia and university-rooted startups) and technology concept commercialization (in established