How can radically new technologies change the IT business
“What we intend to achieve – says Erich Prem, says Erich Prem, chief strategist of Eutema, an Austrian research consultancy coordinating the COFET project – is to bring stakeholders to express their views on how the economic impact of their research can be maximised. Whether by involving business at the start of projects, or by looking at the investment community or by other creative ways, we’ll get experts to throw new, and we hope also, provocative ideas on the table”.
The London conference will be structured in a plenary session for Day I and in parallel sessions on the morning of Day 2. “We thought that breaking down the audience in small groups – says Ian Morgan of Optimat, a Glasgow based market research firm partner of COFET - would bring us benefit in going deeper on given themes such as the type of support that FET research might get from investors, or on how to handle relations between researchers and industry. Hopefully we’ll get more concrete and innovative suggestions from those groups, to be shared at the end of the event”.
The conference will also provide the FET perspectives of different stakeholders, including those of Jani Kivioja, Nokia lead researcher working at the Graphene project, one of two FET flagships selected for massive funding by the European Commission in the years to come together with the Human Brain Project. Extracts from the conference will be made available shortly after the event on the FET 2020 website at www.fet2020.eu