Note: this op-ed was first published in the Hill Times’ Policy Briefing edition on October 17, 2023.Gone are the days when international delegations and venture capital tours skip over the National Capital region en route from Montreal to Toronto. These days, for anyone probing Canada’s innovation agenda, the capital city and the University of Ottawa a...
Note: this op-ed was first published in the Hill Times’ Policy Briefing edition on October 17, 2023.Gone are the days when international delegations and venture capital tours skip over the National Capital region en route from Montreal to Toronto. These ...
It’s a typical Tuesday morning. As you read through your emails and sip your coffee, your work phone rings. It’s the IT manager calling about a worrisome network incident: employees are reporting strange anomalies when signing into their accounts — important files are inaccessible and sketchy errors keep popping up. You suddenly recall recent news reports about a wave of cyberattacks targeting yo...
It’s a typical Tuesday morning. As you read through your emails and sip your coffee, your work phone rings. It’s the IT manager calling about a worrisome network incident: employees are reporting strange anomalies when signing into their accounts — important files are inaccessible and sketchy error...
The unique academia / industry partnership will offer immersive cybersecurity response training through highly realistic, simulated cyberattack and cyber threat simulations.
The unique academia / industry partnership will offer immersive cybersecurity response training through highly realistic, simulated cyberattack and cyber threat simulations.
The Pleodendron costaricense is an ancient tree on the verge of extinction. Only nine specimens are known to exist. Found in Costa Rica, in the mountains near the Pacific Ocean and in the Osa Peninsula, the tree is referred to by botanists as a “living fossil” because of its historic lineage.
The Pleodendron costaricense is an ancient tree on the verge of extinction. Only nine specimens are known to exist. Found in Costa Rica, in the mountains near the Pacific Ocean and in the Osa Peninsula, the tree is referred to by botanists as a “living fossil” because of its historic lineage.
For decades, the University of Ottawa has played a leading role in research, innovation, and skills development in the city – working closely with industry partners to find solutions to challenges and train the next generation of talent.
For decades, the University of Ottawa has played a leading role in research, innovation, and skills development in the city – working closely with industry partners to find solutions to challenges and train the next generation of talent.
Research from the Faculty of Medicine suggests immune and non-immune cells can be reprogrammed by changing how nutrients are used. These insights may prove to have ramifications for battling cancer.
Research from the Faculty of Medicine suggests immune and non-immune cells can be reprogrammed by changing how nutrients are used. These insights may prove to have ramifications for battling cancer.
Research from the Faculty of Medicine suggests immune and non-immune cells can be reprogrammed by changing how nutrients are used. These insights may prove to have ramifications for battling cancer.
Research from the Faculty of Medicine suggests immune and non-immune cells can be reprogrammed by changing how nutrients are used. These insights may prove to have ramifications for battling cancer.
Three uOttawa Faculty of Engineering research projects have received JELF program funding. The projects seek to mitigate the environmental impact of the construction industry, make exercise more accessible for people with low mobility, and quickly detect pathogens in food.
Three uOttawa Faculty of Engineering research projects have received JELF program funding. The projects seek to mitigate the environmental impact of the construction industry, make exercise more accessible for people with low mobility, and quickly detect pathogens in food.
uOttawa’s newest building, with its up-to-date teaching, learning and research spaces, will give Canada’s future health leaders the hands on, job-ready skills they need to help solve Canada's ailing health system.
uOttawa’s newest building, with its up-to-date teaching, learning and research spaces, will give Canada’s future health leaders the hands on, job-ready skills they need to help solve Canada's ailing health system.