Walton Institute
The Walton Institute, formerly the Telecommunications Software & Systems Group, is a large Irish information and communications technologies research institute in the Waterford Institute of Technology. It is based in the South East Technological University Waterford Carriganore Campus|SETU West Campus, having brought in the funding for the two research buildings located there: ArcLabs Research and Innovation Centre, combining the TSSG with incubation and innovation space, formally opened by the Taoiseach in October 2006, and NetLabs, formally opened by Minister of Education in March 2014.
History
The TSSG was established in 1996 by Willie Donnelly and Eamonn de Leastar. They were joined later by Mícheál Ó Foghlú and Barry Downes to form the executive team. Initially the group was focused on applied research funded by a series of EU Framework Programmes for Research and Technological Development projects. The first project was DIFFERENCE. The TSSG has retained this emphasis on EU funding, engaging in large number of projects in FP5, FP6, and FP7, the most recent large EU project led by the TSSG is SOCIETIES. The group built on this foundation to address basic research, funded by Higher Education Authority PRTLI programme projects M-Zones and FutureComm, and by a series of Science Foundation Ireland projects including FAME. In parallel, the TSSG strengthened its focus on industry, particularly through commercialisation activity funded by Enterprise Ireland. As well as licensing technology to existing companies the TSSG has been actively engaged in the creation or attraction of over 17 start-up companies from 2000 to 2017, such as FeedHenry and Zolk C creating over 100 additional jobs directly in the region.The TSSG has grown in size since it was established, and has employed over 100 staff and students from 2004 onwards, funded by an active portfolio of between 30 and 40 research projects at any one time. In its history, it has brought in €65 million of funding from over 160 individual projects.
In 2010 Mícheál Ó Foghlú took a leave of absence from the TSSG to join the TSSG spinout FeedHenry Ltd. and in 2014 published his personal perspective on the history of the TSSG. In total TSSG has created 15 start-ups since its inception and 12 since 2006. The TSSG also provides a wide range of innovation services to start-ups and multinationals, particularly those based in Ireland, and as of 2014 completes around 40 or more direct industry innovation projects a year.
In 2011 the TSSG restructured into a series of Research Units that each have active basic, applied and commercial activity. More narrowly focused units are called groups rather than units, usually driven by a single funding source rather than the full mix.
- Mobile Services
- 3MT – Full lifecycle of integrated services, Inter-discipline service management research, cognitive mechanisms, federation, virtual infrastructure and cloud computing
- Data Mining and Social Computing
- Design and Usability
- ENL
In 2012, the TSSG restructured its management team and appointed Prof. Willie Donnelly as Director and Barry Downes as CEO, supported by a senior management team.
In March 2014, Ruairi Quinn, Minister for Education, officially opened NetLabs, as part of the Research and Innovation cluster of WIT's West Campus.
In September 2019 Dr. Sasitharan Balasubramaniam was appointed as Director of Research to join Kevin Doolin, Director of Innovation to drive the research centre towards investigating futuristic next-generation technologies, to verify their capabilities and applicability for today's society, and to work in collaboration with industry to ensure their commercialisation.
In March 2021 the TSSG was renamed the Walton Institute.
In May 2022 WIT merged with IT Carlow to form SETU.
Ethos
The Walton Institute is actively engaged in standards groups in general, and has been a member of the W3C and the Telemanagement Forum, and is helping to steer the Future Internet agenda in Europe as a partner and member of a number of European Technology Platforms and strategic groups of Industry collaborators including the Future Internet Assembly and ETSI.The Walton Institute ethos continues to be an attempt to straddle all of these types of activity, each with its own priorities, to ensure the continued relevance of its research and development activities. This Innovation Model was formally documented in a submission to the Irish Innovation Task Force in 2009, but draws on its much longer history of innovation.