Portrait de Mikel Orobengoa

Organización: 

ISEA

Fatxada Aireztatuak Brasileko Bahiako Estatuko Justizia Auzitegian.

Proiektu honen bidez Bahiako Estatuko Justizia Auzitegia dagoen eraikina birgaitu da.

Auzitegia Bahiako Estatuko Botere Judizialeko organo gorena da, egoitza Salvador hirian eta jurisdikzioa Bahiako estatuan dituena. duena

Birgaitzea 6 hilabetean egin da ULMAko instalatzaile taldearen eskutik. Kokapen horizontaleko sistema eta Terra testurak P03 kolorean (beltz-grisaxka) erabili dira, Vanguard gamakoak.

MuleSoft raises $50M to connect every business app to every other business app.

Most businesses use more than one piece of software. If they want to send data from one application to another, they could take time to write custom code, or they could use services designed for that purpose.

The thing is, multiple application-connecting services exist. MuleSoft, one of the more popular ones, wants to fend off competitors and keep adding customers. Today the company announced a new $50 million in funding, which should help it keep growing despite the competition from new and existing competition.

Just a Month After Google Capital Funding, Renaissance Learning Sells for $1.1 Billion.

Google Capital valued Renaissance Learning at $1 billion when it put $40 million into the educational assessment company in mid-February. Just a month later, Renaissance Learning is worth $1.1 billion — to new owner Hellman & Friedman, which bought the company on Monday and is announcing the deal today.

Essentially, Renaissance is being traded from one private equity firm to another.

Previously, Permira had taken the 30-year-old ed-tech player off of the public markets in 2011 by buying it for $455 million.

Cooking Up a Business: Local Motors Made the World’s 1st Open-Source Car. It’s Now Bringing Co-creation to GE.

Jay Rogers, a former marine with an MBA from Harvard, and his friend Jeff Jones were still in business school when they hit upon an idea that could one day remake American manufacturing. In 2008, they started an online car company where people could collaborate on design and build their vehicles in a network of local “microfactories.” They called it Local Motors.

The next year, Local Motors produced the world’s first open-source car, the Rally Fighter. The business has since evolved into a “vehicle” company and developed a motorbike, skateboards, motorcycle helmets and other products.

Un Smart Grid pour une flotte de véhicules électriques.

Pour pouvoir recharger 30 voitures électriques simultanément, une gestion sophistiquée de l'énergie est nécessaire. Des chercheurs de l'Institut Fraunhofer d'ingénierie industrielle (IAO) de Stuttgart (Bade-Wurtemberg) mettent au point un réseau intelligent pour la plus grande station de recharge allemande. L'électricité chargée y sera de sources renouvelables.

10 Harvard Business School Startups You Should Know.

You may not need a degree to start a great company, but many founders have degrees — advanced degrees — from top business schools. One such school producing tech startup founders is Harvard Business School — some of the most successful startups that came out of it include Gilt Groupe, Rent the Runway and Birchbox.

At Harvard Business School, student ambitions aren't what they used to be. In the old days, the top program pumped out management consultants and investment bankers. Today, entrepreneur in residence Jules Pieri says she has to counsel students to not feel guilty if they don't start a business on the side while in school.

FDA approves first medical device to prevent migraines.

Today, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration allowed marketing of the first device as a preventative treatment for migraine headaches. This is also the first transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) device specifically authorized for use prior to the onset of pain.

“Cefaly provides an alternative to medication for migraine prevention,” said Christy Foreman, director of the Office of Device Evaluation at the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health.

Heart Implants, 3-D-Printed to Order.

Tailor-made medical devices could give a more detailed picture of cardiac health and may be better at predicting and preventing problems.

It’s a poetic fact of biology that everyone’s heart is a slightly different size and shape. And yet today’s cardiac implants—medical devices like pacemakers and defibrillators—are basically one size fits all. Among other things, this means these devices, though lifesaving for many patients, are limited in the information they can gather.

Chronic kidney disease set for jump in next decade.

Although 10% of the population has some degree of chronic kidney disease, the condition is overlooked, and the numbers are set to rise over the coming decade, health experts warned on World Kidney Day.

Around 600 million people worldwide have some form of kidney damage. While chronic kidney disease can occur at any time of life, it becomes more common with age, according to the International Society of Nephrology (ISN) and the International Federation of Kidney Foundations (IFKF).

Many conditions affecting the kidneys are more common in older people, including diabetes, high blood pressure and heart disease.

Building efficiency sector: "The 2030 debate was a set-up!"

The EU’s climate establishment rigged the debate on 2030 targets with stacked projections for energy efficiency savings discounts, and wildly optimistic assumptions about the carbon market, according to buildings efficiency industry and NGO sources.

EurActiv understands that officials from the European Commission's energy directorate are attempting to upend some of the most contested efficiency assumptions in the 2030 models, but are facing fierce resistance from the climate directorate, which is heavily invested in a sole 40% greenhouse gas target.

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