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Cleantech new technology competitive returns for investors and customers providing solutions to global challenges & environmental change. http://cleantechnetwork.com/index.cfm?pageSRC=ResourcesAndInformation. Recent Tech Applications Based on : Ring-down spectroscopy Mie scattering - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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  • Cleantech new technologycompetitive returns for investors and customers providing solutions to global challenges & environmental change. http://cleantechnetwork.com/index.cfm?pageSRC=ResourcesAndInformation

  • Recent Tech Applications Based on:

    Ring-down spectroscopy

    Mie scattering

    Differential Refraction

    Raman Spectroscopy

  • Cleantech Business Development Sectors:Energy Generation Energy Storage Energy Infrastructure Energy Efficiency Transportation Water & Wastewater Air & Environment Materials ManufacturingIndustrial Agriculture Recycling & Waste

    http://cleantechnetwork.com/Publications/EU_report_abstract.pdf

  • Optical Science Creates Value:Optical Science finds solutions to seemingly intractable problemsOptical science & engineering finds solutions not available to other disciplines, with pragmatic & moneywise resultsOptical science enables solutions for other disciplines

  • CleanTechRSS Subscribe By EmailMain DigitalMedia LifeScience CleanTech Mobile/Comm Friendfeed, the site for ... Main Benchmark entrepreneur talks making ... Optoelectronix draws funding to move LEDs out ofthe labsChris Morrison | March 25th, 2008 | Add CommentAlthough many have heard of LEDs, and are ready to buy the more efficient, environmentally friendly lights, commercializing the technology has proved a tougher road.Optoelectronix, a Silicon Valley company, is one of the first small startups Ive seen show up thats ready to start manufacturing and selling LEDs, rather than just researching them. Investments into LED by venture capital firms so far havebeen toward developing specific LED technologies, rather than bringing LEDs to stores.The San Jose, Calif., company has just raised $6 million in a first full round of capital from private unnamed investors.Commercializing LEDs is challenging. Rather than a simple bulb with a hot wire, LEDs are actually made up of several parts, including a thermal management system used to vent the heat, a lens to diffract the light, electronics and the semiconductor that actually produces the light. The CEO of Optoelectronix, Chuck Berghoff, told me these complexities often mean a complete disconnect between what lighting fixture makers know how to do traditional light bulbs and what the hell to do with a pile of semiconductor chips.The Optoelectronix team, made up of former employees of Siemens, got its start custom-building LEDs for specialized applications. However, with costs going down and quality going up for various components, as well as a growing market demand, the company is ready to start mass-producing lights.

  • Clean technologies propel venture capital fundingBy ngel GonzlezSeattle Times business reporterShrugging off credit-related economic woes,venture capitalists bet heavily on new companiesin the third quarter, driven by opportunities inclean technologies, software and biotechnology.But Washington companies didn't attract as muchcash as in the recent past, as new funding forlocal biotech plummeted. An Ernst & Young/VentureOne report ranked the state in eighthplace by dollar amount received, down from thirdin the second quarter.The VentureOne report said the venture-capitalamount invested this quarter, at $8.07 billion, isthe highest since the first quarter of 2001, duringthe tech bubble.The competing PricewaterhouseCoopers/NationalVenture Capital Association MoneyTree report,based on Thomson Financial data, came up witha different number: $7.1 billion, slightly down from the second quarter, but still robust.The "steady pace" of investment may result in "the highest level since the fourth quarter of 2001," saidMatthew Toole, private-equity-research director for Thomson Financial, during a conference call with

    http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/cgi-bin/PrintSt...d=2002119995&slug=venturecapital20&date=20071020

  • Space Sunshade for Global Warming Emergency

    ScienceDaily (Nov. 5, 2006) The possibility that global warming will trigger abrupt climate change is something people might not want to think about. But University of Arizona astronomer Roger Angel thinks about it. Angel, a University of Arizona Regents' Professor and one of the world's foremost minds in modern optics, directs the Steward Observatory Mirror Laboratory and the Center for Astronomical Adaptive Optics. He has won top honors for his many extraordinary conceptual ideas that have become practical engineering solutions for astronomy. For the past year, Angel has been looking at ways to cool the Earth in an emergency. He's been studying the practicality of deploying a space sunshade in a global warming crisis, a crisis where it becomes clear that Earth is unmistakably headed for disastrous climate change within a decade or two. . . .ScienceDaily 5 November 2006. 16 March 2008 .

  • PSiViSiON Surveillance Systems State-of-the-Art Broad Area Persistent Surveillance

    Eiji Yafuso, President & CEO, PSI Origins (Organized, 2006)B.S., Physics, University of California, Santa BarbaraPh.D., Optical Sciences, University of Arizona [Dissertation: Digital Acquisition System for High-Speed 3-D Imaging, 1997]MBA, Finance, Wharton School, U of Penn

  • People really matter. If you cant be satisfied working with me, then I wont succeed.

    Key Business Lessons:

    Be astute to the difference between good mentors and the mostly self-righteous. The former represent perpetual opportunity and the latter, a time-intensive sink-hole. In many ways the technical solution is easy. Optical technologists bring expertise to bear that most won't begin to comprehend.

    Advice to New Optics Entrepreneurs:For the cerebral types it's easy to be insensitive to the fact that it's the people you engage who count. Focus on your team and your customer. Although counterintuitive you will find yourself needing to "sell" your idea, and that requires deliberately refined people skills. You will not create your golden chalice in a void without people. You need good communication and or good communicators around you. Eiji Yafuso

  • Optical Insights -- Scientific and industrial users of multispectral and polarization imagingFounded 1997 [2 partners (see pic., L.)]Exit 2005, Sold to Photometrics, a division of Roper Scientific

    Yash SabharwalB.S., Optics, University of RochesterPh.D., Optical Science, University of Arizona [Dissertation: Remote-access slit-scanning confocal microscope for in-vivo tumor diagnosis, 1998]

  • Entrepreneurship is not taught there is a huge commitment. And if you dont want success to happen bad enough, its' probably not, unless you're very, very lucky.

    Approach to business:Getting into business has always been one of my dreams. In our first enterprise, we ( he and his 2 partners) took on dissertation topics that we believed would have market potential. We also went into business together, buying a house we lived in and a guest house we rented out.

    Yash Sabharwal

    A Key Business Lesson:Our friends all thought it was just a spectral imaging system, just a beam splitter but the biology people saw it as a way to simultaneously view images on two different wave length bands, saving them a lot of time. One of the key things we learned was nott to get too bogged down in how cool the technology is, but to focus on the market. We let our customers tell us what they wanted.

    Advice to new optics entrepreneurs.You have to do whatever it takes. We maxed out a lot of credit cards in the beginning, balance transferring from one card to another. And then we found a web-site for an unsecured loan. In the end, we self-financed and that made a huge difference in our success and commitment.

  • NUMERO #1COMMUNICATION TELL YOUR STORY. TAKE A SCIENCE EDITOR OR TECH REPORTER TO LUNCH.

  • NUMERO #2

    INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY

    Joseph E. Gortych, [email protected] IP LAW PLLChttp://www.opticus-ip.com

    Joseph E. Gortych, Opticus IP president ([email protected]), has worked as an optical engineer and possesses over a dozen years of experience in the intellectual property field. After receiving a B.S. in physics from Rutgers University and an M.S. in optics from the University of Rochester's Institute of Optics, Gortych received his J.D. from Vermont Law School. A member of the Vermont Bar and a registered Patent Attorney, Gortych is also a member of the Optical Society of America (OSA), the International Society for Optical Engineering (SPIE), the American Bar Association (ABA), the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), and the Licensing Executives Society (LES). In addition, he serves as OSA's representative to the National Inventor's Hall of Fame.

  • NUMERO #3START-UP CAPITAL

    Science Foundation of Ireland [http://www.sfi.ie]Science Foundation of Arizona [http://www.sfaz.org]

  • NUMERO #4HAVE A PLAN

    http://www.businessplans.org

  • WARREN BUFFETSIR RICHARD BRANSONBILL GATESMILTON CHANG

  • Esteemed members of the Society, ladies and gentlemen. You who are the future of the Society and our World. Thank you for coming.

    I believe in respecting your time, our time together. What I have to suggest today is really very simple. And I will keep this very brief.

    This is the world we live in together. This is the world we live in together. As we sit here, it is under-going vast change. More than at anytime

    since human-kind emerged.

    *No picture can show how dark our lives will be unless we do what is needed.

    Optical scien ce can make a difference.*But the future begins with me, you, all of us. There are business approaches to solve problems.*If we do nothing, life as we know it will end.

    No picture can reveal how black the future is without action on the part of us all.

    **Our first entrepreneur is currently occupied in his growing business venture, PSIOrigins, organized in 2006, and which began with a precursor company called Lux Solis in 2005.**Yash Sabharwal and his partners were bought out after 8 years of committed, focused activity. Each had a degree in optical science and a complimmentary specialty.*We all make the planet a little better.*We all make the planet a little better.**Optical Science can make the difference that makes a difference.*For a brilliant future.

    Questions, comments?

    Thanks to you all.*