medical lab tech
> February 8th, 2010
Director of Biotechnology Would Compliment Tax Changes Implemented in
2009
BRISBANE, Calif. — Addressing the importance of job creation, BayBio and Assemblyman Jerry
Hill announced legislation to retain and attract Californias second
largest employing industry during a press conference at an RD lab in
Northern California.
“With a combined workforce of over 750,000, California’s biomedical
industry is a worldwide leader in life saving treatments and devices,”
said Assemblymember Jerry Hill. “As lawmakers we need to ensure that
California doesn’t become to biotechnology what Michigan has become to
the auto industry.”
Despite historic economic woes, California’s life sciences industry’s
output was greater than ever before. The number of treatments,
technologies and devices available to patients increased 35 percent in
2009 as compared to 2008.
Hill’s proposal would create a director of biotechnology in the
governor’s office. It would be another step to build on the momentum the
state has generated in the last several years. A key proposal passed in
2009 removed a penalty to build facilities in the state. The Single
Sales Factor tax apportionment formula removed state taxes on facilities
and payrolls of companies operating in California. I n 2008, the
legislature extended Net Operating Loss (NOL) carry forward from 10
years to 20 years.
Joint PSoC Lab Will Offer Hardware, Software, Training and Support
Services; Cypress to Donate Development Kits and Software
BANGLAORE, India — Cypress Semiconductor Corp. (NASDAQ:CY) and National Institute of
Technology (NIT) announced a partnership to set up a new lab at Calicut
based on the PSoC® programmable system-on-chip. The agreement was signed
at NIT Calicut, by NIT Department Head, Professor P.C Subramaniam and
Cypress Director of Engineering, Sunil Thamaran. The Lab was inaugurated
by Institute Director Dr. G.R.C. Reddy in December.
The new laboratory will expose the students to the PSoC platform, a
flexible family of devices with programmable analog and digital blocks
integrated with a microcontroller. With its unique architecture, PSoC
provides an unrivaled learning platform for embedded design students. As
part of the agreement, Cypress will provide hands-on training to the
faculty and students of NIT, along with free hardware kits and software
tools. NIT will provide the facilities for the laboratory.
NIT will use PSoC as a tool to teach students about embedded system
design through theory and lab experiments. It has already introduced the
PSoC in its Electronics and Communication Engineering curriculum and lab
sessions. PSoC will be taught as a part of an “Embedded System” course
offered at the undergraduate level in the December-June term.