- Microsoft Windows chief decries standards grandstanding
- The 5 best, and 5 worst, features of Google Chrome OS
- Federal government using PS3 to crack pedophile passwords
- 10G Ethernet cheat sheet
- Top 10 free Windows tools for IT pros, at a glance
Linda Musthaler's CIO-level look at the latest networking technologies and their benefits and pitfalls.
In a campus computer science lab, students are doing research and development on advanced cybersecurity technologies. Professors and technical advisors are helping to commercialize the results of the R&D, intent on creating viable digital security products. Experienced business leaders are nurturing the budding companies that will bring the new solutions to market. Venture capitalists and angel investors are sniffing around for their next big opportunity. And the state government and the U.S. Department of Defense are solidly behind the efforts to make this new incubator, and the Institute for Cyber Security (ICS) as a whole, successful.
If this sounds like your typical Silicon Valley university research center and technology incubator, think again. This isn’t Stanford University, or University of California at Santa Cruz, or any of the other schools in the shadows of the tech giants. In fact, this brand new cybersecurity center isn’t in Silicon Valley at all. Instead, it’s deep in the heart of …Texas.
In November, the University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA) launched its new Internet security incubator at the Institute for Cyber Security. The incubator was developed to commercialize promising technologies that address major cybersecurity and privacy issues—perhaps issues that your organization struggles with daily.
Now you might not think of Texas as a hotbed for technology development. (I didn’t, and I’ve lived in Texas for nearly three decades.) But I’ve come to learn that Texas is the ideal climate for new tech ventures. Consider this:
* In 2005, the Texas legislature authorized $200 million for the Texas Emerging Technology Fund, a pool of funds set aside
for investment in promising technology companies.
* Because of their vast array of high tech companies, the Austin area is nicknamed the “Silicon Hills” and the north Dallas
area is the “Silicon Prairie.”
* If Texas were an independent nation, it would have the 12th largest economy in the world.
* Despite our poor economy (or perhaps because of it), Texas leads the country in job creation, gross state product, a low
unemployment rate, and foreign direct investment.
* CNBC has proclaimed that Texas is America's Top State for Business and Chief Executive Officer magazine recently named Texas
the Best State to Do Business for the third year in a row.
Linda Musthaler is a principal analyst with Essential Solutions Corporation.
Comment