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INCITE Participates in IST 2006, Helsinki


INCITE, together with the Monsoon project, is participating at the IST 2006 event in Helsinki (Finland) with one high profile Networking Session and a comprehensive Information Stand. The networking session goes under the title of "Euro-India ICT Cooperation Gateway" and its objective is to unveil Indian potential, resources, focus, and actors in order to make India an attractive and rewarding proposition for Europeans. Click on the icons below to know more and put it on your agenda on the 22nd of November 2006 in Room 230B at 11.00am.

The Information Stand is called The Euro-India IT Gateway, and will function as a permanent one-stop shop for information and contacts with the Indian IT research world. You will find us at the stand No 7 I during the whole duration of the event.

Download below the agenda of our the Euro-India ICT Co-operation Gateway networking session and a background document on EU-India IT research co-operation

Source : INCITE Project

 

INCITE receives more proposals


The one to one mentoring sessions have yielded tangible results. The manifestation has led to two more companies submitting proposals, besides Ajay Rajasekhar of Rarefind. One proposal has been submitted in the gaming sector. It is rather heartening to note, that though the gaming technology sector in India is still in its nascent stages, a very competitive proposal in this section has been submitted and everybody is gearing is up to a global challenge. Embedded Systems is the other sector in which a proposal has been submitted.

Source : INCITE Project


India IT Mapping has begun


With the launch of the INCITE website (www.inciteproject.org) the mapping process of IT competencies has now begun. A host of organisations Indian universities, research centres, companies etc, from the database have been introduced to the project. These organisations and any interested organisation can now go online and register. Besides registering they can also participate in our survey. Any organisation registering and participating in the survey online, will qualify to be part of the database and therefore eligible for all the benefits that the project confers.

Source : INCITE Project

 

INCITE in a host of events


INCITE has participated in a gamut of events locally and internationally.

'Bangalore IT. in' is a very premier IT trade event that takes place in Bangalore, India annually. Bangalore reckoned as the Silicon Valley of India hosts this trade exhibition which provides a platform for all the IT organisations of actively participate and engage in business. INCITE was showcased during this prestigious event and attracted a lot of interest from every visitor.

Presentation by Mr. Peter Simkens, Managing Director, DSP Valley.
A presentation was put forth, in Bangalore by ITSMA. The event was attended by representatives from universities, trade commissioners based out of Bangalore, the Managing Director of DSP Valley Mr Peter Simkens. Besides there were also SMEs participating and exuding interest in INCITE.

EICC-Europe India Chamber of Commerce hosted the 'EU-India Strategic Plan: Enhancing Trade and Investment' in Brussels. The Conference was represented well by industrialists and business leaders from Europe and India, representatives of multinational corporations, European law makers, Parliamentarians, representatives of the European Commission and also representatives of various Chambers of Commerce and the EU Trade Commissioner Mr. Peter Mandelson.

Barcelona meeting: A meeting was organised in Barcelona in which the local IT companies, chambers of commerce, etc participated. Since the Barcelona meeting gathered relevant audience for INCITE, it was presented at the forum.

Source: INCITE Project

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Bringing ICT benefits to the market


Better disseminating the results of information and communication technologies (ICT) research was the subject of a CORDIS workshop that took place at IST2006 on 23 November.

The workshop, which brought together project coordinators, business people and policy makers, explored the complex nature of communicating ICT research, highlighting in particular the difficulties encountered by journalists writing about the matter, and those of project consortia when trying to select the right media channel to spread the word about their work. It also suggested a number of possible media solutions that could be used in this communication process.
                     
Looking at the problem from the perspective of the media, panellist Bernd Hartmann of MFG Baden-Württemberg presented some of the key findings of a recent survey of some 350 journalists and public relations officers in Germany. One of the main problems identified by those interviewed was the high-level of jargon and acronyms employed in press releases and other media material sent to them. 'ICT is flooded by terms which makes it very hard for a normal guy to understand,' noted Mr Hartmann.

Journalists also said that they were generally wary about information they received about new products, seeing it sometimes as mere publicity for the businesses which were involved in the development process. Asked what helps them to better report on ICT, journalists underlined the importance of personal relationships: 'They want to talk to the scientists themselves in order to form their own opinion,' said Mr Hartmann, who added that journalists also like talking to third party scientific experts.

Panellist Mario Martinoli, Director of YourIS.com, agreed, adding: 'general media do not want to be fed press releases, it is better to provide resources from which journalists can build their own report.' He noted that the focus of any press tools should be on what the product is and not who is developing it. However, according to one member of the audience from a UK-based university, the exact opposite is also true. He found from his own experience that a press release was more likely to get picked up by the media if the sender was a university, not a small and medium-sized enterprise (SME). This was because the SME was perceived as advertising a product, while the university was showing how their research could be practically applied, he said. The participant also noted that a news item sent out in the UK has a greater uptake when it describes the research within a UK context.

Meanwhile, panellist David Kennedy of the NEM Technology Platform spoke of the unreasonable pressure placed on those participating in ICT research projects in the Sixth Framework Programme (FP6) to disseminate their results. 'I am not sure this is always 100% right, since these projects are started in a pre-competitive stages,' he said. By the time the project ends, the consortia may only have a 'rough diamond', meaning a product that requires further development. So 'we [consortia] are not always in a hurry to share these results yet: we want to continue the development and have the product out first,' he said.

Mr Kennedy believes that there is a contradiction between the FP6 project criteria, which obliges consortia to communicate their work, and in the evaluation process, which he says, contains no metric to assess the effectiveness of this strategy. While recognising the need for some kind of dissemination of results, for the purpose of accountability, Mr Kennedy suggested that different communication criteria should be set depending on the type of research undertaken. 'For a project which is trying to obtain consensus of opinion within a European framework, there should be a lot of discussions and dissemination of ideas. But if it's a project trying to achieve a solution in a technical area...then we are probably not going to be quite so willing to put the results in such a public domain, 'he said.

As much as the workshop highlighted the problems encountered in disseminating and communicating ICT results, participants also heard of some successful experiences. Panellist Uli Bockholt of the MATRIS IST project explained how his project consortium designed its communication strategy at a very early stage, defining exactly what it would try to patent and publish, and what research and development should be kept under wraps.

The consortium also worked closely with students European business schools, who were asked to read the project proposal, and make business plans about the potential market and application for their products. 'This helped our developers figure out possibilities for further development,' explained Mr Bockholt. It also helped the consortium translate the scientific point of view into a common point of view.

Another success story is YourIS.com project, which produces short videos on EU funded IST projects. 'The angle of the videos we make are very social,' explained Mr Martinoli. 'The focus is not so much on what the researchers do, but how people can benefit from the research in their everyday lives.' The project has broadcast a total of 300 films across 29 European countries. Having studied some 9,000 IST projects, Mr Martinoli believes that some are more telegenic than others. 'Intrinsic technologies like that in Grids are very hard to communicate,' he said.

The human angle has also been the focus of IST Results, according to its Editor-in-Chief Philip Hunt. Funded by the Commission, the portal offers a whole range of media services, including feature articles on specific projects or IST market application areas. It also features stories on new prototypes, emerging results, and research that is setting future standards. The portal is regarded as a media success, welcoming more than 150,000 visitors per month. Key to its popularity is its journalistic approach and avoidance of jargon, believes Mr Hunt.

For more information, please visit:
http://cordis.europa.eu/guidance/past-events2006.htm
http://www.youris.com
http://istresults.cordis.lu/index.cfm?section=home&tpl=home
http://www.ist-matris.org/
http://www.nem-initiative.org/
http://www.mfg.de/innovation/

Source: INCITE Project
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NCP And Its Network Formed In India.

 

The IST NCP in India becomes reality. The International Co-operation Division of the Ministry of Information Technology (MIT) has been chosen by the Indian government as reference body for IST co-operation with the European Union. MIT will be supported, in its quality of NCP for the IST programme, by the "Indian Research Support Network", composed by 3 Indian organisations, ITSMA (InteractiveTechnology Software & Media Association), IIIT-b (International Institute of Information Technology, Bangalore) and C-DAC (Centre for Development of Advanced Computing, Pune).

Following the decision taken by the Indian government at the end of June, the European Commission acknowledged in early October this year the Ministry of Information Technology of India as its Contact Point for the IST programme in India. MIT will therefore be associated to the network of third countries contact points for the definition and implementation of IT research co-operation policies with Europe. Being the largest country in the world to run an IST NCP, India will opt for a decentralized structure, likely to meet the expectations and needs of different typologies of organisations. To do so, MIT has decided to extend the NCP mission to a network (the IRSN) of 3 organisations meant to follow up Euro-Indian co-operation in IT research with different categories of stakeholders. C-DAC will be in charge of liaising with public and private research centres, IIIT-b with universities and large companies, whereas Bangalore based ITSMA will focus on small and medium sized enterprises. MIT and the ISRN will be in charge of disseminating information and facilitate the participation of Indian organisations in the ICT funding scheme under the 7th Framework Programme for Research and Technological Development, to start in January 2007. In order to acquire the necessary know-how and NCP working methodology, staff from MIT will undergo two training modules in the framework of the INCITE project.

Source: INCITE Project