- News
News
Scotland Launches World Class Entrepreneurship Programme
A first of its kind programme has launched to help Scottish entrepreneurs with potential to scale-up to grow their businesses with world class training from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Harvard Business School.
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- Blog
Blog
Scottish Engineering Special Leaders Awards – Part 6
Find out the latest from the Strathclyde University team about the Shopping Trolley for the Elderly, in ‘Making It – Part 2’ as they show us classical engineering processes; sketching, teamwork, prototype and model making, investigating and problem solvin
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- Blog
Blog
Scottish Engineering Special Leaders Awards – Part 5
The Strathclyde University Prototype team are starting to get busy… in the fifth vlog they tell us about making prototypes and show us techniques, tools and devices they will be using to build the 2015 winning design.
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- News
News
GCU launches Common Good First
Glasgow Caledonian University (GCU) has launched Common Good First, a digital exchange of grassroots solutions to pressing social problems both in the UK and around the world.
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- News
News
Scottish Genomes Partnership to receive further £6M investment
The Scottish Government has announced £6m of investment for the Scottish Genomes Partnership (SGP), a cutting edge medical research collaboration between Scottish universities and the NHS.
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- News
News
Remanufacturing workshop to focus on standards and certification process
An upcoming workshop is to be hosted by the Scottish Institute for Remanufacture (SIR) in Glasgow to address the topic of standards and certification for remanufacture of products in the Automotive and Electronics sectors.
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- News
News
Glasgow wins industry award ten times in a row!
Glasgow City Marketing Bureau has been named the UK’s Best Convention Bureau for a remarkable tenth consecutive year.
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- Blog
Blog
The Genetics of Gregor Mendel: A Game of Seeds!
It wasn't that long ago that the notion of inheritance of characteristics through genes was somewhat fanciful. As Kirsty Martin explains, one green-fingered scientist's work in particular cultivated the bloom in genetics we see around us today.
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