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Engineering Biology in Cambridge

 

We have worked with researchers and innovators to tell the stories of open technologies emerging from the University of Cambridge and the broader Cambridge tech ecosystem.

Open technologies present us with an opportunity to democratise technology, promote collaboration and generate intellectual, societal and economic value. Open technology has been fundamental for the growth of the digital economy, but can it also be applied to the bioeconomy?

Our newly published report and website explore sixteen stories of open technologies in the areas of biomedical sciences and agriculture and sustainability. These case studies examine the current uses and applications of these technologies, the challenges faced and lessons learned along the way, as well as their future potential.

Explore Open Technology Stories

 


Accelerating Research Impact with Open Technologies: Stories from University of Cambridge

Open technology, data and knowledge is open for anyone to use, reuse, modify and commercialise. In particular, open technology has been fundamental to the growth of the digital economy. For example, research suggests that 97% of applications leverage some aspect of open-source code, and 90% of companies are applying or using open source software in some way. OpenUK estimates that open data, software and hardware deliver an economic boost of between £29.5 billion and £43.2 billion to the UK. This points at the huge global community of contributors to open source software: GitHub alone had 413 million open-source software (OSS) contributions in 2022.

Open technologies therefore present us with an opportunity to democratise technology, promote collaboration and generate intellectual, societal and economic value. However, they often receive less attention than proprietary tools and technologies. In part this is because by their nature, their downstream use and impact is more challenging to track.The Engineering Biology Interdisciplinary Research Centre (EngBio IRC) has worked with researchers and innovators to tell the stories of open technologies emerging from the University of Cambridge and the broader Cambridge tech ecosystem, explore their current use and applications, the challenges faced and lessons learned, and their future potential.

The University of Cambridge has been sharing world-leading knowledge and innovations for over 800 years, and the contribution it can make to society through the dissemination and application of knowledge is core to its mission and values. Through the stories in this report, we see the role that collaborative development and open sharing of technology can play in forging innovative partnerships, growing inclusive innovation communities and accelerating the translation of research to impact. We hope that you find these technologies as inspiring, intriguing and impactful as the researchers who were motivated to both develop them and to share them with the world.

Dr Jenny Molloy

EngBio IRC Co-chair

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Collaborators

Centre for Global Equality

Connect Health Tech

Cambridge Zero

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