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Authority record- CA QUA02621
- Person
- n.d.
Dr. David P. Rutenberg studied Engineering Physics at the University of Toronto, then moved to San Francisco to work for Chevron Oil in the early days of big computers. He studied for an MBA and then PhD at the University of California (Berkeley), and became an Assistant, then Associate, Professor at Carnegie-Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
After 16 years in the US, he returned to live in Canada in 1977. Queens University hired him to create courses in international business. He had been asked to be visiting professor of international business at Stanfords Graduate School of Business in 1982. So he wanted to get ready for this Silicon Valley experience by auditing a course in Electrical Engineering at Queens. His EE colleagues got him into an experimental seminar in which each student would actually design an integrated circuit chip, and have it manufactured for them at Nortel. That seminar became the nucleus for the Canadian Microelectronics Corporation (CMC), which for almost 20 years has assured that every university in Canada has commercial quality design equipment and software, and that the chip designs are manufactured at the best quality fabs in the world. David, in his involvement with CMC, tries to assure that intellectual-property practices that help academics make prototypes do not impede their subsequent commercialization. In 2001 he wrote a study for the Law Reform Commission of Canada on the possibility of banks making loans that would be secured by intellectual property.
Dr. Rutenberg retired from Queens in 2001.
- CA QUA01023
- Corporate body
- n.d.
Following the early period of Russian exploration of North America, the imperial government was initially content to leave further development of Alaska in the hands of private traders or promyshlenniki. Attracted by the fur-bearing animals of the Aleutian Islands, the promyshlenniki did not settle in the new territory but only hunted seasonally. In 1784, however, Grigorii Shelikhov established the first permanent Russian outpost on Kodiak Island at Three Saints Bay. Eager to eliminate rival Russian companies and gain control of the entire North Pacific fur trade, Shelikhov expanded the sphere of Russian influence along the Alaskan coast and petitioned Empress Catherine the Great to grant him a monopoly. Shelikhov did not live to see his plans implemented, but in December 1799 Catherine's successor, Paul I, decided to issue a charter creating the Russian-American Company. Although its board of directors met in St. Petersburg, the company's business was conducted from the capital of Russian America, New Archangel (founded on Sitka Island in 1804). Despite falling revenues and a changing world order in the Pacific, the Russian-American Company provided Alaska and the Aleutians with a commercial and civil administration until 1867.