Saturday | 30 August, 2008
Australian Biotechnology News

Agriculture: Interviews

Interviews
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    INTERVIEW: Turbocharging for growth 29/09/2005 11:14:36

    Cochlear boss Chris Roberts has spent 30 years at Australia's leading device companies -- but that doesn't mean he has stopped learning, as Helen Schuller discovers.
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    Why biotech companies don't work 17/08/2005 14:00:28

    Australian Biotechnology News editor-in-chief Iain Scott spoke with renowned industry analyst Cynthia Robbins-Roth about what it will take to keep biotech alive.
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    INTERVIEW: The innovation tug-of-war 05/11/2004 15:21:27

    Dr John Raff tells Graeme O'Neill why Australia's agbiotech industry is struggling.
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    Vintage research benefits wine industry 21/08/2003 14:48:40

    On a wall at CSIRO Plant Industry's Merbein laboratories, is an old photo-micrograph of a grapevine floral bud. Dr Nigel Steele Scott, head of Plant Industry's horticultural research laboratories in Glen Osmond, South Australia, says it's his favourite image -- a portent of a revolution in viticulture that is still having an enormous impact on the Australian wine industry today.
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    Nobel laureate Sulston critical of 'greedy' IP 24/04/2003 14:36:59

    History students and trivia buffs in the distant future time will be grateful for one of history's little coincidences -- the Human Genome Project will be completed this year, 2003, a neat half-century after the elucidation of the structure of DNA.
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    The value of good researchers 26/03/2003 15:05:17

    Nobel Laureate Prof Peter Doherty is lending his name to a new prize to be awarded at Australia's first Commercialisation Forum and Fair of Ideas, which started in Sydney today and runs to March 28.
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    How we won the Congress 26/03/2003 15:02:34

    Phil Batterham is a skilled and meticulous organiser, with an understanding of the value of theatre. When the University of Melbourne geneticist flew to Beijing in 1998 for the 18th International Congress of Genetics, he had already spent two years organising Australia's bid to bring the world's biggest genetics festival to Melbourne in 2003.
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    Funding the festival 05/12/2002 13:36:26

    The land of the red 'roo is a long hop from just about everywhere else in the world, so travel costs loomed large in Dr Phil Batterham's analysis of the cost of staging the world's largest genefest in Melbourne next year.
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    INTERVIEW: Seven days in July 14/11/2002 15:51:15

    Next year, 2003 marks the 50th anniversary of an epochal moment in human history: Watson and Crick's solving of the double-helix structure of the DNA molecule. It's also the year that will bring many of the biggest names in world genetics to Melbourne for the 19th International Genetics Congress, among them at least three Nobel laureates, including James Watson, co-discoverer of the immortal coil, and an immortal of modern science in his own lifetime.
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    Looking sharp in two hats 30/04/2002 15:23:42

    Scientist-turned-financier Dr Kevin Healey is one of an elite group which has used its life science credentials as a springboard to make a splash as venture capitalists.
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