Special Features:
MCNC TO PROVIDE YEAR OF FREE GRID SERVICES TO NEW BUSINESSES
MCNC Grid Computing & Networking Services announced that it will provide
advanced computing and data center services at no charge to start-up companies
at the Technology Incubator on the Centennial Campus at N.C. State University
as part of a new Start-Up Grid initiative.
The Start-Up Grid pilot program at Centennial Campus is being designed to
provide a novel set of resources to help fledgling companies grow, creating
new companies and jobs throughout North Carolina. The program will leverage
the state's existing resources in a new, collaborative and focused effort to
spur economic development.
The Start-Up Grid initiative will be presented Friday, Oct. 9, at the
Council
for Entrepreneurial Development's InfoTech conference.
Beginning with access to advanced networking, high-speed Internet, data
center
and Grid computing services at no charge during the first year for the initial
phases of development of new companies, MCNC and Centennial Campus leaders are
developing the Start-Up Grid's broad array of resources for entrepreneurs.
The N.C. State University Technology Incubator will provide office space at
a
competitive rate and supporting services to start-up companies, including
coordination of economic development activities from various university
departments and the surrounding business community.
"The Start-Up Grid is the type of government, industry and university
partnership that can fully leverage Centennial Campus and university resources
to foster economic development for North Carolina," said Dennis Kekas, interim
director of the Centennial Campus Partnership Office. "By coordinating efforts
with MCNC and other organizations devoted to economic development across the
state, we are enhancing the opportunity to cultivate entrepreneurship from
industry as well as our faculty and students."
MCNC Grid Services
MCNC will provide high-speed Internet service to start-up companies in the
incubator through its North Carolina Research & Education Network (NCREN). In
addition, NCREN will enable companies to use the computing resources of the
N.C. Statewide Grid being developed by MCNC, including free access to MCNC's
Enterprise Grid high-performance computing and data services. Through the
Grid, the companies may also have a Web site and provide digital services to
their partners and customers. With these services, the companies will avoid
the need to make costly investments in their own hardware and support
staff.
"The objective is to dramatically reduce the cost and risk associated with
starting a company, enhancing the chance for success that leads to more new
companies and jobs for North Carolina residents," said MCNC Grid Computing &
Networking Services Managing Director Wolfgang Gentzsch, who has founded
several successful start-up companies.
When entrepreneurs with a great idea start a new company to design, develop
and market a new product or service, they face common challenges such as
seeking funding, renting office space, purchasing equipment, incorporating the
company, developing a business plan, hiring employees, accounting and
protecting intellectual property.
"These tasks are critical and are tremendously time consuming, but they
don't
advance the core mission and key to success –- developing a product or
service, and bringing it to market in a timely manner," Gentzsch said. "The
Start-Up Grid creates an environment for entrepreneurs in North Carolina which
dramatically simplifies access to our Grid computing and data resources. This
will help entrepreneurs overcome some of the greater challenges and accelerate
the ability to bring their idea to market."
Statewide Grid Network Of Resources
MCNC will work with Centennial Campus and other organizations throughout
the
state to further enhance the services included in the Start-Up Grid and expand
incubator locations across the state, such as involving other university
research parks. In this way, the Start-Up Grid network of resources will
become an "assembly line" that provides the critical tools and expertise at
the right time for entrepreneurs to develop their ideas.
A Grid typically consists of multiple computers, data sources, applications
and scientific equipment that are linked by a network to operate as a single
computing system. Networked resources are shared for collaboration, efficiency
and cost savings. People using a Grid network can tap into resources anywhere
on the network. MCNC provides Grid computing services through its Enterprise
Grid on the MCNC campus and is working with public and private universities
across the state to build one of the nation's first statewide Grid computing
networks.
As with the Start-Up Grid, Grid resources are not exclusively associated
with
computing and data -– they may also include people working in collaborative
groups. The Start-Up Grid includes both physical resources and people with
expertise to help entrepreneurs.
"By uniting academia, government, industry and non-profit organizations to
drive economic development in North Carolina, the Start-Up Grid initiative
expects to provide novel, effective solutions to common challenges faced by
entrepreneurs," said Monica Doss, president of the Council for Entrepreneurial
Development, the nation's largest entrepreneurial support organization,
located in the Research Triangle Park.
"The Start-Up Grid fits our mission of economic development and supports
the
research and education community by providing a resource where people can come
with a drive to be an entrepreneur and a good idea," said David Rizzo, MCNC's
chief executive officer. "By working together, we are leveraging the wealth of
resources that already exist in North Carolina. This new model of economic
development can create high-paying jobs through an environment that fosters
innovation and entrepreneurial strength."
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