Crafting the Jamie’s: where chemistry and art meet
Meet Terri Adams, the local glassblower designing the trophies for the upcoming Jamie Ferguson Chemistry Awards.
We publish news of technology innovations, investment opportunities, together with updates from spinout & startup companies and licensees
Meet Terri Adams, the local glassblower designing the trophies for the upcoming Jamie Ferguson Chemistry Awards.
The University of Oxford partners with top universities and investors to agree terms which will greatly increase the UK’s capacity to turn world-leading research into spinouts that will generate economic growth and societal impact.
A statistical analysis of 650 UK spinouts between 2010 and 2021 shows that the university proportion of equity share has a limited effect on multiple fundraising factors including the probability of spinouts raising equity, the amount of funding raised, and the market valuation of a spinout after it has received funding.
R21/Matrix-M shows high efficacy, is low-cost, and has strong potential to save children’s lives in Africa, marking a significant milestone in the fight against malaria.
At the Skoll World Forum this week? We showcased our fantastic social venture partners last night at an event together with the team at Enterprising Oxford. Discover five social ventures from Oxford University changing lives and impacting the environment.
FluoRok is revolutionising the production of fluorochemicals with their HF-free fluorination processes that are safer, more efficient, and environmentally conscious. Led by Moissan-prize winner Professor Véronique Gouverneur FRS and CEO Dr Gabriele Pupo, the team is building on over two decades of research to provide a solution to the challenges of the current production process.
Discover 10 Oxford University companies with their sights firmly set on defining the future.
Quantum Motion, an Oxford firm making quantum computers on silicon a reality, is riding high after a £42m funding round. To find out more, OUI's Gregg Bayes-Brown spoke with QM’s CEO James Palles-Dimmock.
Lumai, a spinout from the University of Oxford, has secured a £1.1m Innovate UK Smart Grant to develop all-optical neural networks for high-performance computing and machine vision. The grant will help Lumai develop its vision to build ONNs that could be the solution to the explosive increase in computational demand to support breakthrough AI models such as ChatGPT.
With companies created ranging from AI and quantum computing to vaccine developers and social ventures tackling poverty, Oxford University hits milestone in company creation, cementing its status as a leading institution in research commercialisation globally.