In a fortnightly, English-language newsletter, the Netherlands Enterprise Agency (RvO) informs organisations and individuals interested in and/or involved in the European digital transition. The newsletter is called 'Europe's Digital Transformation', comes from Team IRIS (International Research and Innovation Cooperation) and contains a wealth of valuable information, such as news updates, events, workshops, training courses and important changes within specific (work) programmes.
For whom?
Above all, we like to make innovative SMEs aware of the newsletter, because cooperation in international consortia can have a great positive impact on business, and such cooperation also saves a lot of time and investment.
But the newsletter is interesting for all organisations involved in innovation in ICT, innovation with ICT (such as in the energy transition or healthcare, security and agriculture) and related to ICT, as described in the Digitalisation Knowledge and Innovation Agenda (KIA).
You can subscribe to the newsletter using the link below. Click on all the boxes that concern Digitalisation and you will receive valuable information every fortnight on international grants and collaborations in the fields of AI, data, digital connectivity technologies, cybersecurity, digital twinning and immersive technologies, neuromorphic technologies and software technologies and computing.
In a fortnightly, English-language newsletter, the Netherlands Enterprise Agency (RvO) informs organisations and individuals interested in and/or involved in the European digital transition. The newsletter is called 'Europe's digital transformation', comes from Team IRIS (International Research and Innovation Cooperation) and contains a wealth of valuable information. This includes news updates, events, workshops, training courses and important changes within specific (work) programmes.
Sign up for fortnightly IRIS newsletter
Additionally
Last April, we published a study that Top Sector ICT commissioned on multi-year strategic cooperation on Digitalisation in Europe, which showed:
- That Dutch knowledge institutions are generally good at finding their way around Brussels;
- That on the business side, however, participation in the Netherlands is a lot lower. This is true for R&D in general, as well as for the 7 key technologies;
- That the Netherlands is an attractive partner in European consortia from a strategic point of view.
Three excellent reasons to explore the possibilities.