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Mass. startups are plotting how to counter Trump cuts, grow local tech economy

Mass. startups are plotting how to counter Trump cuts, grow local tech economy

Boston Globe17-06-2025
Tufts president Sunil Kumar recalled the region's success building tech and biotech startups around Route 128, but warned that many other states are trying to copy that model. To succeed now, innovators need to look more broadly and include more people from other parts of the state.
'It would be a shame if we recreated Route 128, which is literally a moat,' he said. Excluding some people from new economic opportunities 'eventually catches up with you ... as we are finding out the hard way.'
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Like other speakers at both conferences, Kumar never mentioned President Trump by name, only alluding to the damage done by the new administration's
For the combination of 'blue' and 'green' tech startups, which Kumar dubbed the 'teal economy,' he recommended looking to pockets of strength in other areas beyond Greater Boston. New Bedford has a thriving fishing port, he noted.
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Andrew Hargens, chief development officer at Massport, made the point that the region needs to better educate the startup community about strengths and opportunities right in their backyard.
A local startup making robots for processing seafood needed to partner with a distributor and ended up connecting with one in far away Alaska, he said. 'We have 200 companies within 600 yards,' he said at the Tufts event. 'They just didn't know.'
Though the state's famed academic institutions will continue to feed the talent base for tech startups, the high cost of living and doing business in Massachusetts remains an impediment to building big companies
here, Jay Ash, chief executive of the Massachusetts Competitive Partnership, said at the Engine event.
Advocates of Massachusetts 'can't just show up anymore with Harvard and MIT behind you and [tell founders] you ought to be here,' Ash said. He praised recent state legislative efforts to speed up permitting for commercial development. 'We're starting to be more aggressive,' he said.
Joe Rodden, cofounder and chief executive of sustainable aviation fuel startup Lydian Labs, said the company built its pilot plant in North Carolina due to the lengthy permitting process and high cost of electricity in Massachusetts. That meant engineers had to waste time flying back and forth from Lydian's Cambridge headquarters.
'We will add 40 to 50 jobs in Massachusetts, but want to create thousands in the future,' Rodden said.
Despite the challenges, the state's successes have generated powerful resources to keep the innovation sector growing. Both recent meetings took place within modern, airy facilities funded with the fruits of prior tech booms.
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'This place in many ways is an optimism battery where you can come to get recharged,' Ben Downing, chief growth officer at The Engine, said. 'If you invent something in Massachusetts, you ought to be able to make it in Massachusetts.'
Aaron Pressman can be reached at
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John Paulson's Strategic Moves: A Closer Look at Perpetua Resources Corp

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The app will see you now: New AI scans faces to predict diseases, disorders, and early death

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time8 hours ago

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The app will see you now: New AI scans faces to predict diseases, disorders, and early death

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3 AI Prompts That Turn ChatGPT Into Your Friend And Therapist
3 AI Prompts That Turn ChatGPT Into Your Friend And Therapist

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time11 hours ago

  • Forbes

3 AI Prompts That Turn ChatGPT Into Your Friend And Therapist

A Harvard Business Review study recently revealed that the most popular use for generative AI is therapy and companionship, not coding or content creation. This underscores AI's emerging role as a primary emotional support tool. On the face of it, this makes perfect sense. Most people have an instinctive need to speak about their problems to a friendly listener. Chatbots such as ChatGPT, or any of the many therapy or companionship-specific platforms, are always available, instantly accessible and ready to offer a non-judgmental ear. Of course, this gives rise to some very important questions: What are the implications for privacy when so many of us are ready to share our deepest thoughts with AI companies? And can AI be trusted to act in the ethical way we would expect of a human therapist or friend? But with loneliness endemic in many societies, and the challenges that often block access to professional mental health services, there are clearly opportunities to use AI here. 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