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The Year That Green Tech VCs Ruled The Hill |
Venture capitalists appear to wield outsized influence in federal energy funding.
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Venture capitalists appear to wield outsized influence in federal energy funding. Read the full article at Forbes
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Posted in Original news source: Queensland Country Life AUSTRALIA has thrashed over its challenges enough, says Albert Goller, chief executive of Siemens Australia. What about solutions? Read the full article at Queensland Country Life
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Posted in Original news source: Business Wire via Yahoo! Finance WAKE FOREST, N.C.—-PowerSecure International, Inc. today announced that the Company and its CEO, Sidney Hinton, were honored at Ernst & Young’s 2010 Entrepreneur of the Year Awards for the Carolinas as finalists in the Clean Tech category. Read the full article at Business Wire via Yahoo! Finance
Adam Grosser has what some might call a weird obsession with golden orb spiders. He totes around drawings of them on his MacBook Pro. He travels near and far to meet experts who have studied their ways. He joyously cites the unusual characteristics of the golden silk they weave. “It’s three times stronger than steel,” says Grosser, a venture capitalist in Silicon Valley, “and better able to … Read the full article at CNN Money
“Technology that allows integration of Home Area Networks to the Smart Grid technology has added security concerns that have to be addressed,” said Chief Technology Officer Satish Chetty, PERI Software Solutions, Inc. (PRWeb May 24, 2010) Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/2010/05/prweb4037894.htm Read the full article at PRWeb
After a slow start, the USPTO tweaks an accelerated green-tech patent program to attract more inventors and patent applications. Read the full article at ZDNet Asia
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Posted in Original news source: Boston Globe Two national laboratories, the state of New Mexico and a Japanese agency are developing smart grid technology to give homeowners and businesses more access to renewable energy sources by controlling the supply and demand of electric power. Read the full article at Boston Globe
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