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  1. Instrument Research, Tools, and the Knowledge Enterprise 1999-2009: Birth and Development of Dip-Pen Nanolithography. [REVIEW]Terry Shinn & Anne Marcovich - 2011 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 36 (6):864-896.
    This article retraces the trajectory of a start-up company NanoInk Inc. and its primary technology, the Dip-Pen, which it researches, manufactures, and commercializes. The case is of interest because it introduces a series of under elucidated questions concerning the relationships between “instrument” and “tool,” the birth of a new category of company, the “knowledge enterprise,” the dynamics of relations between complexity and simplicity related to tools “simplexity,” and the idea of “nanofication,” which refers to the spread of familiarity of a (...)
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  • The Training of “Triple Helix Workers”? Doctoral Students in University–Industry–Government Collaborations.Taran Thune - 2010 - Minerva 48 (4):463-483.
    Changes in knowledge production, increasing interaction between government, universities and industry, and changes in labor markets for doctoral degree holders are forces that have spurred a debate about the organization of doctoral education and the competencies graduates need to master to work as scientists and researchers in a triple helix research context. Recent policy also has supported a redefinition of researcher training with increasing focus on broader skills and relevance for careers outside the university sector. Consequently, it is pertinent to (...)
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