SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

                             Washington, D.C. 20549

                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

                Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(A) of the
                         Securities Exchange Act of 1934

Filed by the Registrant  |X|
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant |_|

Check the appropriate box:

|X|   Preliminary Proxy Statement
|_|   Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by
      Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
|_|   Definitive Proxy Statement
|_|   Definitive Additional Materials
|_|   Soliciting Material Pursuant to ss.240.14a-11(c) or ss.240.14a-12



                           HARRIS & HARRIS GROUP, INC.

                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                             TO BE HELD MAY 4, 2006

         To the Shareholders of Harris & Harris Group, Inc.:

      NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the 2006 Annual Meeting of the Shareholders of
Harris & Harris Group, Inc. (the "Company") will be held on May 4, 2006, at 3:00
p.m.,  local  time,  at The  Princeton  Club of New York,  15 West  43rd  Street
(between 5th and 6th Avenues),  New York, New York 10036.  This meeting has been
called by the Board of Directors of the Company, and this notice is being issued
at its direction. It has called this meeting for the following purposes:

      1.    To elect 10  directors  of the Company to hold office until the next
            annual meeting of shareholders or until their respective  successors
            have been duly elected and qualified;

      2.    To ratify,  confirm and approve the Audit  Committee's  selection of
            PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP as  the  independent  registered  public
            accountant for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2006;

      3.    To approve a proposal to  authorize  the Company to offer  long-term
            rights  to  purchase  shares  of the  Company's  common  stock at an
            exercise price that, at the time such rights are issued, will not be
            less than the greater of the market  value of the  Company's  common
            stock or the net asset value of the  Company's  common  stock.  Such
            rights  may be part of or  accompanied  by other  securities  of the
            Company (such as convertible preferred stock or convertible debt);

      4.    To approve the Company's Equity Incentive Plan;

      5.    To amend our Certificate of  Incorporation to increase the number of
            authorized shares of common stock from 30,000,000 to 45,000,000; and

      6.    To  transact  such other  business as may  properly  come before the
            meeting or any postponement or adjournments thereof.

      We encourage  you to contact us at 877-TINY  TECH,  from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00
p.m. EST, if you have any questions.

      Holders of common  stock of record at the close of  business  on March 14,
2006, will be entitled to vote at the meeting.

      Whether or not you expect to be present in person at the  meeting,  please
sign and date the  accompanying  proxy and return it  promptly  in the  enclosed
business  reply  envelope,  which  requires  no  postage if mailed in the United
States, so you will be represented at the Annual Meeting.

                                              By Order of the Board of Directors

April 3, 2006                                 /s/ Susan T. Harris
                                              ----------------------------------
New York, New York                            Susan T. Harris
                                              Secretary

      IMPORTANT: PLEASE MAIL YOUR PROXY PROMPTLY IN THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE.
                        THE MEETING DATE IS MAY 4, 2006.




                           Harris & Harris Group, Inc.
                              111 West 57th Street
                            New York, New York 10019
                                 (212) 582-0900

                                 PROXY STATEMENT
                                       FOR
                         ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                            TO BE HELD ON MAY 4, 2006
General Information

      This  proxy   statement  is  being   furnished  in  connection   with  the
solicitation of proxies by the Board of Directors of Harris & Harris Group, Inc.
(the  "Company,"  "us," "our," and "we"), to be voted at the 2006 Annual Meeting
of Shareholders  (the "Annual  Meeting"),  to be held on May 4, 2006, and at any
adjournment  thereof.  This document will give you the  information  you need to
vote on the  matters  listed in the  accompanying  Notice of Annual  Meeting  of
Shareholders.   Much  of  the  information  in  this  proxy  statement   ("Proxy
Statement") is required  under rules of the  Securities and Exchange  Commission
("SEC");  some of it is technical.  If there is anything you do not  understand,
please contact us at 877-TINY TECH.

      The Annual  Meeting will be held on Thursday,  May 4, 2006,  at 3:00 p.m.,
local time, at The Princeton Club of New York, 15 West 43rd Street  (between 5th
and 6th Avenues),  New York, New York. At the Annual Meeting,  our  shareholders
will be asked to elect 10  directors  to serve on the Board of  Directors of the
Company  and to hold  office  until the next  annual  meeting and to vote on the
other matters stated in the accompanying  Notice and described in more detail in
this proxy  statement.  If any other  matters  properly  come  before the Annual
Meeting, the persons named on the proxies will, unless the shareholder otherwise
specifies  in the proxy,  vote upon such matters in  accordance  with their best
judgment.  The enclosed proxy card and this Proxy Statement and Annual Report on
Form  10-K are  being  first  transmitted  on or about  April  3,  2006,  to our
shareholders.

      The Board of Directors  has fixed the close of business on March 14, 2006,
as the record date for the determination of our shareholders entitled to receive
notice of, and to vote at, the Annual  Meeting.  At the close of business on the
record date, an aggregate of  20,756,345  shares of common stock were issued and
outstanding.  Each such share will be  entitled to one vote on each matter to be
voted upon at the Annual  Meeting.  The presence,  in person or by proxy, of the
holders of a majority of such  outstanding  shares is necessary to  constitute a
quorum for the transaction of business at the Annual Meeting.

Solicitation and Revocation; Vote Required

      All properly executed proxies received prior to the Annual Meeting will be
voted at the  meeting in  accordance  with the  instructions  marked  thereon or
otherwise as provided therein.  Unless  instructions to the contrary are marked,
shares represented by the proxies will be voted "for" all the proposals.



      Any  proxy  given  pursuant  to  this  solicitation  may be  revoked  by a
shareholder  at any  time,  before  it is  exercised,  by  written  notification
delivered to our  Secretary,  by voting in person at the Annual  Meeting,  or by
executing  another  proxy bearing a later date. If your shares are held for your
account by a broker,  bank or other  institution  or nominee,  you may vote such
shares at the Annual Meeting only if you obtain proper written  authority,  from
your institution or nominee, that you present at the Annual Meeting.

      Approval of any of the matters submitted for stockholder approval requires
that a quorum be present.  The  presence,  in person or by proxy,  of at least a
majority of the total number of  outstanding  shares of common stock entitled to
vote is necessary to constitute a quorum.  Abstentions and broker non-votes will
be counted as shares  present at the Annual  Meeting for purposes of determining
the  existence of a quorum.  Broker  non-votes  are proxies  received by us from
brokers or nominees when the broker or nominee neither has received instructions
from  the  beneficial   owner  or  other  persons   entitled  to  vote  nor  has
discretionary power to vote on the particular  matter.If a quorum is present (in
person or by proxy),  (i) for  Proposal  1, the  directors  will be elected by a
plurality of the votes cast (i.e.,  the highest number of votes cast for each of
the 10 director slots); (ii) for Proposal 2, the proposal to ratify, confirm and
approve the Audit Committee's selection of the Company's independent  registered
public  accountants will be approved if a majority of the votes cast are cast in
favor;  (iii) for  Proposal  3, the  financing  proposal  will be  approved if a
majority of the votes cast are cast in favor;  (iv) for Proposal 4, the proposal
to approve the Company's equity incentive plan will be approved if a majority of
the votes cast are cast in favor; and (v) for Proposal 5, the proposed amendment
to the Certificate of Incorporation will be approved if a majority of the shares
outstanding  and  entitled to vote are cast in favor.  All other  matters  being
submitted to  shareholder  vote pursuant to the Notice of Annual Meeting will be
approved  if a quorum is  present  in person or by proxy and a  majority  of the
votes cast on a particular matter are cast in favor of that matter.

      For purposes of Proposals 1, 2, 4 and unspecified matters that come before
the meeting,  votes withheld or abstentions will not be counted as votes cast on
the  matter  and  will  have no  affect  on the  result  of the  vote.  A broker
"non-vote"  occurs when a broker holding shares for a beneficial  owner does not
vote on a  particular  proposal  because the broker does not have  discretionary
voting power for that particular item and has not received instructions from the
beneficial  owner.  If your broker holds your shares in its "street"  name,  the
broker may vote your shares on Proposal 1 (Election  of  Directors),  Proposal 2
(Ratification  of Auditor),  Proposal 4 (Approval of Equity  Incentive Plan) and
unspecified  matters  that come before the  meeting  even if it does not receive
instructions  from you.  For purposes of Proposal 3  (Financing)  and Proposal 5
(Amendment to the Certificate of Incorporation),  because abstentions and broker
non-votes  are treated as shares  present but not voting,  any  abstentions  and
broker non-votes will have the effect of votes against this proposal.

                                       2



      Proxies are being solicited by Innisfree M&A Incorporated, pursuant to its
standard contract as proxy solicitor,  the cost of which will be borne by us and
is estimated to be approximately $7,500.  Proxies will be solicited by telephone
or by mail.  All  expenses  of  preparing,  printing,  mailing,  and  delivering
proxies, and all materials used in the solicitation of proxies, will be borne by
us.  Proxies may also be  solicited  by officers  and regular  employees  of the
Company  personally,  by telephone or  otherwise,  but these persons will not be
specifically compensated for such services.  Banks, brokers,  nominees and other
custodians and fiduciaries will be reimbursed for their reasonable out-of-pocket
expenses in forwarding solicitation material to their principals, the beneficial
owners of our common stock. It is estimated that those costs will be nominal.

                                       3



                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

                                (Proposal No. 1)

      The 10 nominees  listed below,  all of whom currently  serve as directors,
have been  nominated to serve as our directors  until the next annual meeting or
until their respective successors are duly elected and qualified. Although it is
not  anticipated  that any of the nominees will be unable or unwilling to serve,
in the unexpected  event that any such nominees  should become unable or decline
to  serve,  it is  intended  that  votes  will be cast for  substitute  nominees
designated by our present Board of Directors.

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE "FOR" ALL THE NOMINEES.

Nominees

      Certain information,  as of March 14, 2006, with respect to each of the 10
nominees for election at the Annual Meeting is set forth below,  including their
names,  ages  and a brief  description  of  their  recent  business  experience,
including present occupations and employment, certain directorships held by each
and the year in which each became a director of the  Company.  All the  nominees
have agreed to serve if elected  and consent to being  referred to in this proxy
statement.  The  nominees  for  election as  directors  of the Company have been
divided  into two groups --  interested  directors  and  independent  directors.
Interested  directors  are  "interested  persons"  as defined in the 1940 Act or
persons who may be considered  "interested  persons"  because of consulting work
done for us. All 10 nominees are currently  directors of the Company.  We do not
have an advisory board.

                              Interested Directors

      Charles E. Harris.  Mr. Harris,  age 63, currently serves as our Chairman,
Chief Executive Officer and as a Managing  Director.  He has served as our Chief
Executive Officer since July 1984 and as a Managing Director since January 2004.
He has been a member of our Board of  Directors  and served as  Chairman  of the
Board since April 1984.  He also  served as our Chief  Compliance  Officer  from
February  1997 to February  2001. He is Chairman of the Board,  Chief  Executive
Officer and a Director of Harris & Harris Enterprises, a wholly owned subsidiary
of the Company. His wife serves as our Corporate Secretary.  He is a Director of
Mersana  Therapeutics,  Inc.,  a  privately  held  company  in  which we have an
investment.  He was a member of the Advisory Panel for the Congressional  Office
of  Technology  Assessment.  Prior  to  joining  us,  he was  Chairman  of Wood,
Struthers  and  Winthrop   Management   Corporation,   the  investment  advisory
subsidiary  of Donaldson,  Lufkin and Jenrette.  He is currently a member of the
New York Society of Security Analysts. He was, until 2004, a Trustee and head of
the  Audit  Committee  of  Cold  Spring  Harbor  Laboratory,   a  not-for-profit
institution  that  conducts  research  and  education  programs in the fields of
molecular  biology and genetics,  and he currently  serves as Co-Chairman of its
President's Council. He also serves as a Trustee and head of the Audit Committee
of the Nidus Center, a not-for-profit  life sciences  business  incubator in St.
Louis,  Missouri. He is a life-sustaining fellow of MIT and a shareholder of its
Entrepreneurship  Center.  He is an  "interested  person"  as defined in Section
2(a)(19) of the 1940 Act, as a beneficial owner of more than five percent of our
Common Stock,  as a control person and as one of our officers.  He was graduated
from Princeton  University (A.B.) and the Columbia University Graduate School of
Business (M.B.A.).

                                       4


      Kelly S. Kirkpatrick.  Ms. Kirkpatrick,  age 39, has served as a member of
our Board of Directors since March 2002. She has served as a consultant to us on
nanotechnology and in our due diligence work on certain prospective investments.
She is an independent business consultant assessing and advising on early stage,
technology  start-ups  for venture  capital  companies.  From 2000 to 2002,  she
served in the Office of the  Executive  Vice Provost of Columbia  University  as
Director of the Columbia  University  Nanotechnology  Initiative and as Director
for Research and  Technology  Initiatives.  From 1998 to 2000, she served in the
White House Office of Science and  Technology  Policy as a Senior Policy Analyst
involved in the National Nanotechnology Initiative. From 1997 to 1998, she was a
Science Policy Coordinator for Sandia National Laboratories.  From 1995 to 1996,
she served in the office of Senator Joseph  Lieberman as Legislative  Assistant,
Congressional  Science and Engineering Fellow. She was graduated from University
of Richmond (B.S., Chemistry with a business option) and Northwestern University
(Ph.D.,  Materials  Science and  Engineering).  She may be  considered  to be an
"interested  person" of the Company  because of the consulting work she does for
us.

      Lori D.  Pressman.  Ms.  Pressman,  age 48,  has served as a member of our
Board of Directors  since March 2002.  She has served as a  consultant  to us on
tiny technology,  intellectual property and in our due diligence work on certain
prospective  investments.  She also acts as an observer for us at Board meetings
of certain portfolio  companies in the Boston area. She is a business consultant
providing  advisory  services to start-ups and venture  capital  companies.  She
consults  internationally  on  technology  transfer  practices  and  metrics for
non-profit and government organizations. From 1999 to 2001, she was Chair of the
Survey  Statistics  and  Metrics  Committee  of the  Association  of  University
Technology  Managers.  From September 1989 to July 2000, she was employed by MIT
in its Technology Licensing Office. She served as a Technology Licensing Officer
from 1989 to 1995 and as Assistant  Director of the Technology  Licensing Office
from  1996 to 2000.  She was  graduated  from  the  Massachusetts  Institute  of
Technology (S.B.,  Physics) and the Columbia School of Engineering  (MSEE).  She
may be considered  to be an  "interested  person" of the Company  because of the
consulting work she does for us.

                              Independent Directors

      Dr. C. Wayne  Bardin.  Dr.  Bardin,  age 71, has served as a member of our
Board of  Directors  since  December  1994.  Since  1996,  he has  served as the
President of Bardin LLC, a consulting  firm to  pharmaceutical  companies.  From
1998 to 2003,  he served as  President  of  Thyreos  Corp.,  a  privately  held,
start-up  pharmaceutical  company. From 1978 through 1996, he was Vice President
of  The  Population  Council.  His  professional   appointments  have  included:
Professor of Medicine,  Chief of the  Division of  Endocrinology,  The Milton S.
Hershey Medical Center of Pennsylvania State University and Senior Investigator,
Endocrinology  Branch,  National  Cancer  Institute.  He has  also  served  as a
consultant to several  pharmaceutical  companies.  He has been  appointed to the
editorial   boards  of  15  journals.   He  has  also  served  on  national  and
international committees and boards for the National Institutes of Health, World
Health Organization,  The Ford Foundation and numerous scientific societies.  He
was graduated from Rice University (B.A.), Baylor University (M.S., M.D.) and he
received a Doctor  Honoris Causa from the  University of Caen, the University of
Paris and the University of Helsinki.

                                       5


      Dr. Phillip A. Bauman.  Dr. Bauman,  age 50, has served as a member of our
Board of  Directors  since  February  1998.  He has  been  Senior  Attending  in
Orthopedic  Surgery at St.  Luke's/Roosevelt  Hospital Center in Manhattan since
1999 and has  served as an  elected  member of the  Executive  Committee  of the
Medical  Board since 2000.  He has been on the Board of Managers  for the Hudson
Crossing  Surgery  Center  since  2005.  He  has  been  Assistant  Professor  of
Orthopedic  Surgery at Columbia  University  since 1997 and a Vice  President of
Orthopedic  Associates  of New York since  1994.  He was elected a fellow of the
American Academy of Orthopaedic  Surgeons in 1991. He is an active member of the
American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine,  the New York State Society of
Orthopaedic Surgeons and the American Medical Association. He was graduated from
Harvard College (B.A.),  Harvard  University (M.S.,  biology) and the College of
Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University (M.D).

      G. Morgan Browne.  Mr. Browne, age 71, has served as a member of our Board
of Directors  since June 1992.  He is President  since 2004 and a Trustee  since
2000 of Planting Fields  Foundation,  a historic estate arboretum.  From 2001 to
2003, he served as Chief Financial Officer of Cold Spring Harbor  Laboratory,  a
not-for-profit  institution that conducts research and education programs in the
fields  of  molecular  biology  and  genetics.  From  1985 to  2000,  he was the
Administrative Director of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. In prior years, he was
active in the  management  of  numerous  scientifically  based  companies  as an
officer,  as an individual  consultant and as an associate of Laurent  Oppenheim
Associates,   Industrial  Management  Consultants.  He  is  a  Director  of  OSI
Pharmaceuticals,  Inc.,  a publicly  held  company  principally  engaged in drug
discovery  based  on  gene  transcription.  He  is  also  a  Director  of  Evinu
Corporation,  a start-up company  developing  nutraceuticals.  He was a founding
director of the New York  Biotechnology  Association and a founding  Director of
the Long Island Research Institute. He was graduated from Yale University.

      Dugald A. Fletcher.  Mr.  Fletcher,  age 76, has served as a member of our
Board of  Directors  since May 1996.  He has served as  President  of Fletcher &
Company,  Inc., a management  consulting firm since 1984. Until the end of 1997,
he was  Chairman  of Binnings  Building  Products  Company,  Inc.  His  previous
business  appointments  include:  adviser to  Gabelli/Rosenthal  LP, a leveraged
buyout fund;  Chairman of Keller  Industries,  building  and consumer  products;
Senior  Vice  President  of  Booz-Allen  &  Hamilton;  President  of  Booz-Allen
Acquisition  Services;  Executive Vice President and a Director of Paine Webber,
Inc.;  and President of Baker,  Weeks and Co.,  Inc., a New York Stock  Exchange
member firm. He is currently a Trustee of the Gabelli Growth Fund and a Director
of the Gabelli  Convertible  and Income  Securities  Fund, Inc. He was graduated
from Harvard College and Harvard Business School (M.B.A.).

                                       6


      Mark A.  Parsells.  Mr.  Parsells,  age 46,  has served as a member of our
Board of Directors since November 2003. Since February 2004, he is the Chairman,
President  and Chief  Executive  Officer of  Montpelier  Ventures,  a management
consulting  firm.  From  2001 to 2003,  he was the  Chairman,  President,  Chief
Executive  Officer and a Director  of Fusura  LLC,  an AIG  company  that was an
Internet-based,  direct-to-consumer  auto insurance business. From 2000 to 2001,
he was President and Chief Operating Officer of Citibank Online.  Previously, he
worked in executive  positions  for Bank One and  American  Express and acted as
Special  Assistant to U.S. Senator John Heinz. He is a Director of Winterthur (a
former  DuPont  family  estate)  Business  Associates,  a  board  that  oversees
corporate  giving and events for  corporations.  He is an alumnus of The General
Manager  Program  at  Harvard  Business  School.  He was  graduated  from  Emory
University (B.A.),  Cornell University (M.B.A.) and Vlerick Leuven Gent Business
School (M.B.A.).

      Charles E. Ramsey. Mr. Ramsey, age 63, has served as a member of our Board
of Directors  since October  2002. He has been a consultant  since 1997. He is a
retired founder and principal of  Ramsey/Beirne  Associates,  Inc., an executive
search firm that  specialized  in  recruiting  top officers for high  technology
companies,   many  of  which  were  backed  by  venture  capital.  He  works  on
construction  projects in  Nicaragua  as a member of the  Nicaraguan  Initiative
Committee for the  Presbyterian  Churches of the Hudson River and as Chairman of
Bridges to Community, a non-governmental  organization dedicated to construction
projects in Nicaragua. He was graduated from Wittenberg University (B.A.).

      James E. Roberts. Mr. Roberts, age 60, has served as a member of our Board
of Directors  since June 1995.  Since  January  2006,  he has been  President of
AequiCap  Insurance  Company.  Mr.  Roberts is also a senior  officer of various
other AequiCap affiliated  entities.  From November 2002 to October 2005, he was
Executive  Vice  President  and Chief  Underwriting  Officer of the  Reinsurance
Division of Alea North America  Company and Senior Vice  President of Alea North
America Insurance  Company.  From October 1999 to November 2002, he was Chairman
and Chief  Executive  Officer of the Insurance  Corporation of New York,  Dakota
Specialty  Insurance  Company,  and Recor Insurance Company Inc., all members of
the Trenwick  Group,  Ltd.  From  October 1999 to March 2000,  he served as Vice
Chairman of Chartwell  Reinsurance  Company and from March 2000 to November 2002
as the  company's  Chairman and CEO. He was  graduated  from Cornell  University
(A.B.).

                                       7



      Set forth  below is the  dollar  range of equity  securities  beneficially
owned by each director or nominee as of March 14, 2005.

==================================== ===========================================
                                             Dollar Range of Equity Securities
Name of Director or Nominee                    Beneficially Owned (1)(2)(3)
------------------------------------ -------------------------------------------
Independent Directors
Dr. C. Wayne Bardin                                    Over $100,000
Dr. Phillip A Bauman                                   Over $100,000
G. Morgan Browne                                       Over $100,000
Dugald A. Fletcher                                     Over $100,000
Mark A. Parsells                                      $10,001-$50,000
Charles E. Ramsey                                      Over $100,000
James E. Roberts                                       Over $100,000

Interested Directors
Charles E. Harris (4)                                  Over $100,000
Kelly S. Kirkpatrick (5)                            $50,001 - $100,000
Lori D. Pressman (5)                                $50,001 - $100,000
==================================== ===========================================

(1)   Beneficial   ownership  has  been   determined  in  accordance  with  Rule
      16a-1(a)(2) of the 1934 Act.

(2)   The dollar ranges are: none, $1-$10,000, $10,001-$50,000, $50,001-$100,000
      and over $100,000.

(3)   The dollar  ranges are based on the price of the equity  securities  as of
      March 14, 2006.

(4)   Denotes an individual who is an "interested person" as defined in the 1940
      Act.

(5)   Denotes an individual who may be considered an "interested person" because
      of consulting work performed for us.

Board of Directors and Committees

      In 2005,  there  were  seven  meetings  of the Board of  Directors  of the
Company,  and the full Board acted 13 times by  unanimous  written  consent.  No
director  attended fewer than 75 percent of the aggregate of Board of Directors'
and  applicable  committee  meetings on which each director  served  (during the
periods that they so served).

      It is a policy of the Company that at least a portion of our directors are
encouraged to attend annual meetings of shareholders. In 2005, all the directors
attended the annual meeting.

      Shareholders  and other  interested  parties  may contact the Board or any
member of the Board by mail. To communicate  with the Board or any member of the
Board, correspondence should be addressed to the Board or the Board members with
whom you wish to  communicate by either name or title.  All such  correspondence
should be sent c/o Harris & Harris  Group,  Inc.,  111 West 57th  Street,  Suite
1100, New York,  New York 10019.  Such  correspondence  will be forwarded to the
appropriate  board member or members after screening to eliminate  marketing and
junk mail.

                                       8


      The Company's Board of Directors currently has six committees comprised of
the following members,  all of whom except Mr. Harris are independent both under
the rules of the NASD and for the purposes of the 1940 Act:

                                Board Committees

---------------------------- ------------------------- -------------------------

         Executive                    Audit                  Compensation
---------------------------- ------------------------- -------------------------

Charles E. Harris (1)        Dugald A. Fletcher (1)    James E. Roberts (1)
Dr. C. Wayne Bardin          Dr. Phillip A. Bauman     Dr. Phillip A. Bauman
G. Morgan Browne             G. Morgan Browne          Mark A. Parsells
James E. Roberts             James E. Roberts          Charles E. Ramsey
---------------------------- ------------------------- -------------------------

---------------------------- ------------------------ --------------------------
        Nominating                                      Independent Directors
                                    Valuation
---------------------------- ------------------------ --------------------------

Dr. C. Wayne Bardin (1)      Dugald A. Fletcher (1)   G. Morgan Browne (1)
Dr. Phillip A. Bauman        Dr. C. Wayne Bardin      Dr. C. Wayne Bardin
Mark A. Parsells             G. Morgan Browne         Dr. Phillip A. Bauman
Charles E. Ramsey            Mark A. Parsells         Dugald A. Fletcher
                             James E. Roberts         Mark A. Parsells
                                                      Charles E. Ramsey
                                                      James E. Roberts
---------------------------- ------------------------ --------------------------

(1) Denotes the Chairman of the Committee.

Executive Committee

      The Executive  Committee meets from time to time between regular  meetings
of the Board of Directors and exercises the authority of the Board to the extent
provided by law. The Executive  Committee  did not meet as a separate  committee
and did not act by unanimous written consent in 2005.

Audit Committee

      The Audit  Committee (i) oversees all material  aspects of our  accounting
and financial reporting  processes,  internal control and audit functions,  (ii)
monitors the independence and performance of our independent  registered  public
accountants, (iii) provides a means for open communication among our independent
registered  public  accountants,  financial and senior management and the Board,
and (iv) oversees compliance by us with legal and regulatory requirements.

      The Audit Committee operates pursuant to a written charter approved by our
Board of Directors,  which is attached hereto as Appendix A. The Audit Committee
Charter  sets  out the  responsibilities,  authority  and  duties  of the  Audit
Committee.  The Audit  Committee  met five  times  and did not act by  unanimous
written consent in 2005.

                                       9


Compensation Committee

      The  Compensation  Committee has the full power and authority of the Board
with respect to all matters  pertaining  to the  remuneration  of our  executive
officers.  The  Compensation  Committee  met two times  and  acted by  unanimous
written consent six times in 2005.

Nominating Committee

      The  Nominating  Committee  acts as an advisory  committee to the Board by
identifying  individuals  qualified  to serve on the Board as  directors  and on
committees  of the  Board,  and to  recommend  that the Board  select  the Board
nominees for the next annual meeting of shareholders.  The Nominating  Committee
met one time in 2005 and acted by unanimous written consent one time in 2005.

      The Nominating Committee will consider director candidates  recommended by
shareholders.   In  considering   candidates  submitted  by  shareholders,   the
Nominating Committee will take into consideration the needs of the Board and the
qualifications  of the candidate.  The  Nominating  Committee may also take into
consideration the number of shares held by the recommending  shareholder and the
length of time that such shares have been held.  To have a candidate  considered
by the Nominating  Committee,  a shareholder must submit the  recommendation  in
writing and must include:

      o     The name of the shareholder  and evidence of the person's  ownership
            of shares of the Company,  including  the number of shares owned and
            the length of time of ownership;

      o     The name of the candidate,  the  candidate's  resume or a listing of
            his or her  qualifications  to be a director  of the Company and the
            person's  consent  to be  named as a  director  if  selected  by the
            Nominating Committee and nominated by the Board; and

      o     If requested by the  Nominating  committee,  a completed  and signed
            director's questionnaire.

      The shareholder  recommendation  and  information  described above must be
sent to the Company's Corporate Secretary,  c/o Harris & Harris Group, Inc., 111
West 57th Street,  Suite 1100, New York, New York 10019, and must be received by
the Corporate  Secretary not less than 120 days prior to the anniversary date of
the Company's most recent annual meeting of shareholders  or, if the meeting has
moved by more than 30 days, a reasonable amount of time before the meeting.

      The  Nominating  Committee  believes that the minimum  qualifications  for
serving  as a  director  of the  Company  are  that a  nominee  demonstrate,  by
significant  accomplishment in his or her field, an ability to make a meaningful
contribution to the Board's oversight of the business and affairs of the Company
and  have a  reputation  for  honest  and  ethical  conduct.  In  addition,  the
Nominating  Committee  examines a candidate's  specific  experiences and skills,
time availability in light of other commitments, potential conflicts of interest
and independence from management and the Company.  The Nominating Committee also
seeks to have the Board  represent a diversity of experience.  We do not pay any
third  party a fee to  assist  in the  process  of  identifying  and  evaluating
candidates.  The  Nominating  Committee  evaluates all  candidates for the Board
based on the above  qualifications  regardless  of  whether  the  candidate  was
nominated by an officer, Board member or shareholder.

                                       10


      The Nominating  Committee  operates pursuant to a written charter approved
by our  Board  of  Directors.  The  Nominating  Committee  Charter  sets out the
responsibilities,  authority and duties of the Nominating  Committee.  A current
copy of the  Nominating  Committee  Charter of the Company is  available  on our
website
(www.tinytechvc.com/shareholder_information/Nominating_Committee_Charter.html).

Valuation Committee

      The  Valuation  Committee has the full power and authority of the Board in
reviewing and approving the valuation of our securities  for reporting  purposes
pursuant to our Valuation  Procedures that were  established and approved by the
Board of Directors. The Valuation Committee met five times in 2005.

Independent Directors Committee

      The Independent  Directors  Committee has the  responsibility of proposing
corporate  governance and long term planning  matters to the Board of Directors,
overseeing  compliance  and making the required  determinations  pursuant to the
1940 Act. All of the  independent  Directors are members of the  committee.  The
Independent Directors Committee met three times in 2005.

Audit Committee Report

      Our Audit Committee presents the following report:

            The Audit  Committee  of the Company  has  performed  the  following
      functions:  (i) the Audit  Committee  reviewed and  discussed  the audited
      financial  statements  of the  Company  with  management,  (ii) the  Audit
      Committee discussed with the independent  auditors the matters required to
      be discussed by the  Statements on Auditing  Standards No. 61, as amended,
      (iii) the Audit Committee received the written  disclosures and the letter
      from the independent  auditors required by ISB Standard No. 1, as amended,
      and has discussed  with the auditors the auditors'  independence  and (iv)
      the Audit  Committee  recommended to the Board of Directors of the Company
      that the audited financial  statements be included in the Company's Annual
      Report on Form 10-K for the past fiscal year.

          Dugald A. Fletcher (Chair)
          Dr. Phillip A. Bauman
          G. Morgan Browne
          James E. Roberts

                                       11



Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

      PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLC ("PwC") has been  selected as the  independent
registered  public  accounting  firm by our Audit  Committee  and  ratified by a
majority of our Board, including a majority of the Independent Directors by vote
cast in  person,  to audit  the  accounts  of the  Company  for and  during  the
Company's  fiscal  year  ending  December  31,  2006,   subject  to  shareholder
ratification. We do not know of any direct or indirect financial interest of PwC
in the Company.

      Representatives  of PwC will not attend  the Annual  Meeting in person but
will be available to respond to appropriate questions by telephone.

Audit Committee's Pre-Approval Policies

      Since March 2003, the Audit Committee of the Company has  pre-approved all
audit and  non-audit  services  provided  by PwC to us.  The  Audit  Committee's
Pre-Approval  Policies and Procedures  provide that the Audit  Committee (or the
Chairman pursuant to delegated authority) must pre-approve all auditing services
and permitted  non-audit services and that all such requests to provide services
must be submitted to the Audit Committee or the Chairman, as the case may be, by
both the independent auditor and the Chief Financial Officer.

Audit Fees

      The aggregate fees billed for  professional  services  rendered by PwC, in
connection  with  its  annual  audit  of the  Company's  consolidated  financial
statements,  reviews of the consolidated  financial  statements  included in the
Company's  quarterly reports on Form 10-Q for the fiscal year ended December 31,
2005,  including $45,324 for the review of documents and matters associated with
our 2005 public offering,  were approximately  $227,867; and for the fiscal year
ended December 31, 2004,  the aggregate  audit fees,  including  $23,500 for the
review of documents and matters  associated with our 2004 public offering,  were
approximately $268,500.

Tax Fees

      The aggregate fees billed for  professional  services  rendered by PwC for
tax services for the fiscal year ended  December  31, 2005,  were  approximately
$18,000;   and  for  the  fiscal  year  ended  December  31,  2004,   they  were
approximately $18,000. The nature of the services was tax return preparation.

All Other Fees

      There were no fees for professional  services  rendered by PwC, other than
the fees  described  above,  during the fiscal years ended December 31, 2004 and
December 31, 2005.  The Audit  Committee  has  determined  that the provision of
non-audit services that were provided during 2005 is compatible with maintaining
PwC's independence in performing audit services for the Company.


                                       12



Principal Shareholders and Ownership by Directors and Executive Officers

      Set forth below is information,  as of March 14, 2006, with respect to the
beneficial  ownership  of our common stock by (i) each person who is known by us
to be the beneficial  owner of more than five percent of the outstanding  shares
of the common  stock,  (ii) each of our directors and (iii) all of our directors
and  executive  officers  as a group.  Except  as  otherwise  indicated,  to our
knowledge,  all shares are beneficially owned and investment and voting power is
held by the persons named as owners.  The information in the table below is from
publicly  available  information  that may be as of dates earlier than March 14,
2006.  At this time,  we are unaware of any  shareholder  owning five percent or
more of the  outstanding  shares of common stock other than Charles E. and Susan
T. Harris. Unless otherwise provided, the address of each holder is c/o Harris &
Harris Group, Inc., 111 West 57th Street, Suite 1100, New York, New York 10019.



 Name of Beneficial Owner                    Amount and Nature of   Percentage of Outstanding Common
                                             Beneficial Ownership        Shares Owned

Independent Directors:
                                                 
  Dr. C. Wayne Bardin                               25,077(1)               *
  Dr. Phillip A. Bauman                             24,720(2)               *
  G. Morgan Browne                                  32,672                  *
  Dugald A. Fletcher                                17,654                  *
  Mark A. Parsells                                   2,413(3)               *
  Charles E. Ramsey                                 29,914                  *
  James E. Roberts                                  18,796                  *

Interested Directors:
  Charles E. and Susan T. Harris                 1,050,893(4)              5.1
  Kelly S. Kirkpatrick                               5,264                  *
  Lori D. Pressman                                   5,760                  *

Executive Officers:
  Alexei A. Andreev                                      0                  *
  Sandra M. Forman, Esq                                520(5)               *
  Douglas W. Jamison                                   645                  *
  Daniel V. Leff                                       300                  *

All directors and executive officers as
  a group (18 persons)                           1,213,415                5.85

----------------
* Less than 1%.

(1)   Includes   5,441   shares   owned  by  Bardin   LLC  for  the  Bardin  LLC
      Profit-Sharing Keogh.
(2)   Includes 9,081 shares owned jointly with Ms. Milbry C. Polk, Dr.  Bauman's
      wife;  5,637 shares owned by Milbry C. Polk;  100 shares owned by Adelaide
      Polk-Bauman,   Dr.   Bauman's   daughter;   100  shares  owned  by  Milbry
      Polk-Bauman,   Dr.  Bauman's  daughter;  and  100  shares  owned  by  Mary
      Polk-Bauman,  Dr. Bauman's  daughter.  Ms. Milbry C. Polk is the custodian
      for the accounts of the three children.
(3)   All shares are owned jointly with Mr. Parsells's wife.
(4)   Includes 1,039,559 shares owned by Mrs. Harris,  our Corporate  Secretary,
      and 11,334 shares owned by Mr.  Harris.
(5)   Includes 250 shares which are owned by Edward Forman, Ms. Forman's husband
      and 270 shares owned jointly with Edward Forman.


                                       13



Executive Officers

      Our  executive  officers  who  are not  directors  are  set  forth  below.
Information  relating to our  executive  officers who are directors is set forth
under "Election of Directors - Nominees." Our executive  officers are elected to
serve until they resign or are removed, or are otherwise  disqualified to serve,
or until their successors are elected and qualified.

      Douglas W. Jamison.  Mr. Jamison,  age 36, has served as President,  Chief
Financial Officer and Chief Operating  Officer since January 1, 2005,  Treasurer
since March 2005 and as a Managing  Director  since January 2004.  Since January
2005, he has been President and a Director of Harris & Harris Enterprises, Inc.,
a  wholly  owned  subsidiary  of  Harris & Harris  Group,  Inc.,  and was a Vice
President of the Company from  September  2002 through  December  2004.  He is a
director of  Chlorogen,  Inc,  Evolved  Nanomaterial  Sciences,  Inc.,  NanoOpto
Corporation   and  of  Nextreme   Thermal   Solutions,   Inc.,   privately  held
nanotechnology-enabled   companies  in  which  we  have  an  investment.  He  is
Co-Editor-in-Chief  of  "Nanotechnology  Law & Business."  He is Co-Chair of the
Advisory  Board,  Converging  Technology  Bar  Association,   a  member  of  the
University of Pennsylvania  Nano-Bio  Interface  Ethics  Advisory  Board,  and a
member  of  the   Advisory   Board,   Massachusetts   Technology   Collaborative
Nanotechnology Venture Forum. His professional societies include the Association
of University Technology Managers,  for which he serves on its Survey Statistics
and Metrics  Committee.  Prior to joining  us, he worked as a senior  technology
manager at the University of Utah Technology  Transfer Office,  where he managed
intellectual  property in physics,  chemistry and the engineering  sciences from
1997 to 2002. He was graduated from Dartmouth  College (B.A.) and the University
of Utah (M.S.).

      Daniel  V.  Leff.  Mr.  Leff,  age 37,  has  served as an  Executive  Vice
President and a Managing  Director  since January 2004.  Prior to joining us, he
was a Senior  Associate  with  Sevin  Rosen  Funds in the firm's  Dallas,  Texas
office,   where  he  focused  on   early-stage   investment   opportunities   in
semiconductors,  components,  and various emerging technology areas from 2001 to
2003.  Previously  he worked for  Redpoint  Ventures  in the firm's Los  Angeles
office from 2000 to 2001. In addition, he previously held engineering, marketing
and strategic  investment positions with Intel Corporation from 1997 to 2000. He
is  a  director  of  Nanomix,   Inc.,   and  CSwitch,   Inc.,   privately   held
nanotechnology-enabled companies in which we have an investment. He received his
Ph.D.  degree in Physical  Chemistry  from UCLA's  Department  of Chemistry  and
Biochemistry,  where his thesis advisor was Professor James R. Heath  (recipient
of the 2000  Feynman  Prize  in  Nanotechnology).  He also  received  a B.S.  in
Chemistry  from the University of  California,  Berkeley and an M.B.A.  from The
Anderson  School  at  UCLA,  where he was an  Anderson  Venture  Fellow.  He has
published  several  articles in peer-reviewed  scientific  journals and has been
awarded two patents in the field of  Nanotechnology.  He is also a member of the
advisory board of The NanoBusiness Alliance.

      Alexei A.  Andreev.  Mr.  Andreev,  age 34, joined us in March 2005, as an
Executive Vice President and as a Managing Director. From 2002 to March 2005, he
was an Associate with Draper Fisher Jurvetson,  a venture capital firm. In 2001,
he was a Summer Associate with TLcom Capital  Partners,  a London-based  venture
capital  fund backed by Morgan  Stanley.  From 1997 to 2000,  he was employed by
Renaissance  Capital  Group/Sputnik  Funds,  a private  equity  fund in  Moscow,
Russia.  Previously, he was a researcher at the Centre of Nanotechnology,  Isan,
in Troitsk,  Russia.  He is a director of the American  Business  Association of
Russian   Expatriates.   He  was   graduated   with  a  B.S.   with   honors  in
Engineering/Material  Sciences  and a Ph.D.  in Solid State  Physics from Moscow
Steel and Alloys Institute and with an M.B.A.  from the Stanford Graduate School
of Business.

                                       14


      Sandra  Matrick  Forman,  Esq. Ms.  Forman,  age 40, has served as General
Counsel,  Chief Compliance  Officer and Director of Human Resources since August
2004. Prior to joining us, she was an Associate at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher
& Flom LLP, in the Investment  Management  Group, from 2001 to 2004. From May to
August 2000, she was a summer  associate with Latham & Watkins LLP in its London
office.  Ms.  Forman  served as an intern from  August to  December  2000 in the
office of the General Counsel,  United States  Department of Defense,  Office of
the Secretary of Defense.  From June to August 1999, she served as an intern for
the Honorable  Ronald S. Lew,  United States  Federal  District  Court,  Central
District of California. She was graduated from New York University (B.A.), where
her honors included National  Journalism Honor Society,  and from the University
of California Los Angeles  (J.D.),  where her honors  included Order of the Coif
and membership on the Law Review.

      Daniel B. Wolfe.  Mr. Wolfe,  age 29, has served as a Vice President since
July  2004.  He has  served as Senior  Associate  since  January  2006.  He is a
director   of  Evolved   Nanomaterial   Sciences,   Inc.,   a   privately   held
nanotechnology-enabled  company in which we have an investment. Prior to joining
us, he served as a consultant  to Nanosys,  Inc.  (from 2002 to 2004),  CW Group
(from 2001 to 2004) and Bioscale,  Inc.  (from January 2004 to June 2004).  From
February 2000 to January 2002, he was the Co-founder and President of Scientific
Venture  Assessments,  Inc., a provider of  scientific  analysis of  prospective
investments  for venture  capital  placements  and of  scientific  expertise  to
high-technology  companies.  Mr. Wolfe was graduated from Rice University (B.A.,
Chemistry),  where his honors  included  the Zevi and Bertha  Salsburg  Memorial
Award in Chemistry and the Presidential  Honor Roll, and from Harvard University
(Ph.D., Chemistry), where he was an NSF Predoctoral Fellow.

      Patricia  N.  Egan.  Ms.  Egan,  age 31,  has  served as Chief  Accounting
Officer,  Vice  President,  Senior  Controller  since June  2005.  She served as
Assistant  Secretary from June 2005 to December  2005.  Prior to joining us, she
served as a Manager  at  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP in its  financial  services
group from 1996 to 2005.  Ms.  Egan was  graduated  from  Georgetown  University
(B.S.,  Accounting),  where her honors  included the Othmar F. Winkler Award for
Excellence in Community Service. She is a Certified Public Accountant.


                                       15



      Mary P. Brady. Ms. Brady, age 44, has served as Vice President, Controller
and Assistant  Secretary since December 2005. Prior to joining us, she served as
a senior  accountant at Clarendon  Insurance  Company in its program  accounting
group from 2003 through 2005. She served from 2000 to 2003 as a senior associate
at  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP in its financial  services group.  Ms. Brady was
graduated  Summa Cum Laude from  Lehman  College  (B.S.,  Accounting).  She is a
Certified Public Accountant.

      Susan T. Harris.  Ms.  Harris,  age 61, has served as our Secretary  since
July 2001.  She was employed by Harris & Harris  Enterprises,  Inc.,  our wholly
owned  subsidiary,  from July 1999 to July 2003,  working primarily in financial
public  relations,  and from July 2001 to July 2003, she served as its Secretary
and  Treasurer.  She has  been an  investor  relations  consultant  since  1972,
operating as a sole  proprietor  prior to 1999,  and again from July 2003 to the
present.  She was  graduated  from  Wellesley  College  (B.A.,  Economics).  Ms.
Harris's husband serves as the Chairman,  Chief Executive Officer and a Managing
Director of the Company.

                                       16



Remuneration of Chief Executive Officer and Other Executive Officers

         The following table sets forth a summary for the last fiscal year of
the cash and non-cash compensation awarded to, earned by, or paid to our Chief
Executive Officer and our four most highly compensated officers.



                                   ====================================================================================
                                                                       Annual Compensation
---------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            Name and                                                     Other Annual      All Other        Aggregate
       Principal Position               Year     Salary          Bonus   Compensation     Compensation     Compensation
                                                  ($)            ($)(1)    ($)(2)            ($)(3)           ($)
----------------------------------    -------   --------      ---------  ----------        ---------      -------------

                                                                                          
Charles E.  Harris                      2005     235,609      1,107,088      76,145          261,889        1,680,731
Chairman of the Board,                  2004     229,778              0      42,193          245,778          517,749
Chief Executive Officer(4)(5)           2003     224,567              0      43,006          318,296          585,869

Douglas W. Jamison                      2005     250,000        165,308           0           14,000          429,308
President, Chief Operating              2004     153,183              0           0           13,000          166,183
Officer & Chief Financial               2003     137,182              0           0           12,000          149,182
Officer, Former Vice President

Daniel V. Leff                          2005     250,000        153,514           0           14,000          417,514
Executive Vice President                2004     228,667              0           0           13,000          241,667

Alexei A. Andreev                       2005     187,500(6)     106,770           0           11,520          305,790
Executive Vice President

Sandra M. Forman, Esq                   2005     175,000         62,685           0           14,000          251,685
General Counsel & Chief                 2004      66,667(7)      16,500           0            7,587           90,754
Compliance Officer
==================================   =======   =========      =========   =========        =========        =========


(1)   These amounts  represent the actual amounts earned as a result of realized
      gains during the year ended December 31, 2005, and paid out in 2006, under
      the Harris & Harris Group Employee  Profit-Sharing Plan. You may find more
      information   on  our  Employee   Profit-Sharing   Plan  under   Incentive
      Compensation  Plans.  The amount shown for Mr. Andreev  includes a $35,000
      signing  bonus.  For 2004,  the amount shown for Ms.  Forman  represents a
      signing bonus.

(2)   Other than Mr. Harris,  amounts of "Other Annual  Compensation"  earned by
      the named  executive  officers for the periods  presented did not meet the
      threshold  reporting  requirements.  The amounts  reported for Mr.  Harris
      represent  benefits  including  personal use of an automobile  and garage,
      membership  in a private  club,  membership  in a health club and use of a
      trainer,  medical  care  reimbursement,   consultation  with  a  financial
      planner,  long-term  disability  insurance,  group term life insurance and
      long-term care insurance for him and his wife.

(3)   Except for Mr. Harris,  amounts  reported  represent our  contributions on
      behalf of the named  executive to the Harris & Harris Group,  Inc.  401(k)
      Plan. Mr.  Harris's "All Other  Compensation"  consists of: $18,000 401(k)
      Plan employer  contribution,  $235,609 for his 2005 SERP  contribution and
      $8,280  for a term  life  insurance  premium  paid.  In 2005,  Mr.  Harris
      received a $125,000 distribution from his SERP account.

(4)   Mr. Harris has an employment agreement with us.

(5)   In 2005 and 2004, Mr.  Harris's wife received  compensation of $19,000 and
      $17,000, respectively for serving as our Secretary.  Additionally, she was
      employed  by a  subsidiary  in  2003  and  earned  salary  and  all  other
      compensation of $9,522.

(6)   Commenced employment March 31, 2005.

(7)   Commenced employment August 1, 2004.


                                       17



Incentive Compensation Plans

      As of January 1, 2003,  we  implemented  an Amended and Restated  Harris &
Harris Group, Inc. Employee  Profit-Sharing  Plan, which we refer to as the 2002
Plan. This section  describes only the operation of the 2002 plan, which was the
plan in operation for 2005. On March 23 2006, our Board of Directors  terminated
the 2002 Plan and  established  the  Harris & Harris  Group,  Inc.  2006  Equity
Incentive Plan, both subject to shareholder approval of Proposal 4 in this Proxy
Statement.

      The 2002 Plan (and its  predecessor)  provides for profit  sharing for our
officers and employees equal to 20 percent of our  "qualifying  income" for that
plan year.  For the purposes of the 2002 Plan,  qualifying  income is defined as
net realized  income as reflected on our  consolidated  statements of operations
for that year (excluding the profit-sharing  expense), less nonqualifying gains,
if any.

      For purposes of the 2002 Plan, our net realized income includes investment
income,  realized gains and losses, and operating expenses (including taxes paid
or  payable  by us),  but is  calculated  without  including  dividends  paid or
distributions  made to shareholders,  payments under the Plan,  unrealized gains
and losses,  and loss carry-overs from other years, which net realized income we
refer to as qualifying  income.  The proportion of net after-tax  realized gains
attributable   to  asset  values  as  of  September   30,  1997,  is  considered
nonqualifying  gain,  which reduces  qualifying  income.  As soon as practicable
following the end of the year, the Compensation  Committee  determines  whether,
and if so how much,  qualifying income exists for a plan year. Ninety percent of
the amount  determined  by the  Compensation  Committee is then paid out to Plan
participants  pursuant  to the  distribution  percentages  set forth in the 2002
Plan.  The  remaining 10 percent is paid out after we have filed our federal tax
return for that plan year.

      On October 15, 2002, our shareholders approved the performance goals under
the 2002 Plan in  accordance  with Section  162(m) of the Code,  effective as of
January 1, 2003.  The Code  generally  provides that a public company such as we
are may not deduct compensation paid to its chief executive officer or to any of
its four most highly  compensated  officers to the extent that the  compensation
paid to the officer/employee  exceeds $1,000,000 in any tax year, unless payment
is made upon the attainment of objective  performance goals that are approved by
our shareholders.

      Under the 2002 Plan, awards previously granted to the four individuals who
were  participants at that time (Charles Harris,  Mel Melsheimer,  Helene Shavin
and Jacqueline Matthews, herein referred to as the "grandfathered participants")
were reduced by 10 percent with respect to "Non-Tiny Technology Investments" (as
defined  in the 2002 Plan) and by 25 percent  with  respect to "Tiny  Technology
Investments"  (as defined in the 2002 Plan),  and these  reduced  awards  became
permanent.  We refer to these reduced awards as "grandfathered  participations."
Grandfathered participations include only investments made prior to the time the
2002 Plan was adopted and do not affect awards relating to any investments  made
after  that  date.  The  amount  by  which  the  awards  of  the   grandfathered
participants  are  reduced  are  allocable  and  reallocable  each  year  by the
Compensation  Committee  among current and new  participants as awards under the
2002 Plan. The grandfathered participations will be honored by us whether or not
the grandfathered  participant is still employed by us or is still alive (in the
event  of  death,  the  grandfathered   participations   will  be  paid  to  the
grandfathered  participant's  estate),  unless the grandfathered  participant is
dismissed  for  cause,   in  which  case  all  future   awards,   including  the
grandfathered participations,  will be immediately cancelled and forfeited. With
regard to new investments and follow-on  investments made after January 1, 2003,
both current and new  participants  are required to be employed by us at the end
of a plan year in order to participate in profit-sharing on our investments with
respect to that year.

                                       18


      Notwithstanding  any  provisions  of the 2002  Plan,  in no event  may the
aggregate  amount of all awards payable for any Plan Year during which we remain
a "business  development  company" within the meaning of the 1940 Act be greater
than 20 percent of our "net income  after  taxes"  within the meaning of Section
57(n)(1)(B)  of the 1940 Act. In the event the awards as calculated  exceed that
amount, the 2002 Plan requires that the awards be reduced on a pro rata basis.

      The 2002 Plan may be modified,  amended or terminated by the  Compensation
Committee  at  any  time.   Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  the  grandfathered
participations may not be further modified or amended.  Nothing in the 2002 Plan
precludes the Compensation Committee from naming additional  participants in the
2002  Plan or,  except  for  grandfathered  participations,  changing  the Award
Percentage of any  Participant  (subject to the overall  percentage  limitations
contained in the 2002 Plan). In one case, for a former employee who left on July
27, 2001, any amount earned will be accrued and may  subsequently be paid to the
participant.

      At December 31, 2005,  under the 2002 Plan, the  distribution  amounts for
non-grandfathered  investments  for each officer and employee  were:  Charles E.
Harris,  8.43 percent;  Douglas W. Jamison,  4.06 percent;  Daniel V. Leff, 3.77
percent;  Sandra M. Forman,  1.62 percent;  Daniel B. Wolfe,  1.62 percent;  and
Jacqueline M. Matthews, 0.50 percent, which together equal 20 percent.

      The grandfathered participations are set forth below:

                                           Grandfathered Participations
                                  ----------------------------------------------
Name of Officer/Employee          Non-Tiny Technology (%)    Tiny Technology (%)
------------------------          -----------------------    -------------------
Charles E. Harris                        12.41100                   10.34250
Mel P. Melsheimer                         3.80970                    3.17475
Helene B. Shavin                          1.37160                    1.14300
Jacqueline M. Matthews                    0.40770                    0.33975
                                        ---------                  ---------
TOTAL                                    18.00000                   15.00000
                                         ========                   ========

                                       19



      Accordingly,  an additional two percent of qualifying  income with respect
to grandfathered  Non-Tiny  Technology  Investments,  five percent of qualifying
income with respect to grandfathered Tiny Technology Investments and the full 20
percent of qualifying  income with respect to  non-grandfathered  investments is
available for allocation and reallocation from year to year.

      At December 31, 2005, Douglas W. Jamison, Daniel V. Leff, Sandra M. Forman
and  Daniel B.  Wolfe  were  allocated  0.7329229  percent,  0.6807388  percent,
0.2931692  percent  and  0.2931692  percent,   respectively,   of  the  Non-Tiny
Technology Grandfathered Participations and 1.8323072 percent, 1.701847 percent,
0.7329229 percent and 0.7329229  percent,  respectively,  of the Tiny Technology
Grandfathered Participations.

      We  perform a  calculation  each  quarter to  determine  the  accrual  for
profit-sharing. We calculate 20 percent of qualifying income (i.e., net realized
income  after  taxes)  pursuant to the terms of the 2002 Plan and  estimate  the
amount of additional  qualifying  income, if any, that would result from selling
all the portfolio  investments that are valued above cost (i.e.,  that are in an
unrealized  appreciation  position).  Although the accrual  will  fluctuate as a
result of changes in qualifying  income and changes in unrealized  appreciation,
payments are only made to the extent that qualifying  income exists. At December
31, 2005, we had $2,107,858,  and at December 31, 2004, we had $311,594, accrued
for profit  sharing.  On March 1, 2006, the Company paid  $1,897,072 to the plan
participants  (employees and former  employees),  which represents 90 percent of
the total estimated  profit-sharing  payment. The balance is expected to be paid
in September 2006.

401(k) Plan

      As of January 1, 1989, we adopted an employee  benefits  program  covering
substantially  all of our employees under a 401(k) Plan and Trust Agreement.  As
of January 1, 1999,  we adopted the Harris & Harris  Pension  Plan and Trust,  a
money  purchase  plan that  would  allow us to stay  compliant  with the  401(k)
top-heavy  regulations and deduction limitation  regulations.  In 2001, Congress
enacted the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001, which has
increased  the  deduction  limits for plans such as the  401(k)  Plan.  This Act
eliminated the need for us to maintain two separate  plans.  Effective  December
31, 2001,  the Pension  Plan merged into the 401(k)  Plan,  with the 401(k) Plan
being  the  surviving  plan.  Matching  contributions  to  the  plan  are at the
discretion of the Compensation Committee. During 2005, matching contributions to
the plan charged to operations were approximately $119,360.

Retirement Healthcare Benefit Plan

      On June  30,  1994,  we  adopted  a plan to  provide  medical  and  dental
insurance for retirees,  their spouses and dependents  who, at the time of their
retirement,  have 10 years of service with us and have  attained 50 years of age
or have  attained  45 years of age and have 15  years  of  service  with us.  On
February 10, 1997,  we amended  this plan to include  employees  who "have seven
full years of service  and have  attained 58 years of age." On November 3, 2005,
we amended this plan to reverse the 1997  amendment  for future  retirees and to
remove dependants other than spouses from the plan. The coverage is secondary to
any government or subsequent  employer  provided  health  insurance  plans.  The
annual premium cost to us with respect to the entitled  retiree shall not exceed
$12,000,  subject to an index for inflation.  Based upon actuarial estimates, we
provided an original  reserve of $176,520 that was charged to operations for the
period  ending June 30,  1994.  As of  December  31,  2005,  we had a reserve of
$685,600 for the plan.

                                       20


Executive Mandatory Retirement Plan

On  March  20,  2003,  in  order  to  begin  planning  for  eventual  management
succession,  the Board of Directors  voted to establish the Executive  Mandatory
Retirement  Benefit Plan for  individuals  who are employed by us in a bona fide
executive  or high  policy  making  position.  There are  currently  three  such
individuals  that qualify  under the plan,  Charles E. Harris,  the Chairman and
Chief  Executive  Officer,  Douglas W. Jamison,  the President,  Chief Operating
Officer and Chief Financial Officer and Mel P. Melsheimer, the former President,
Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer.  Under this plan, mandatory
retirement  will  take  place  effective  December  31 of the year in which  the
eligible  individuals  attain the age of 65. On an annual basis beginning in the
year in which the  designated  individual  attains the age of 65, a committee of
the Board consisting of  non-interested  directors may determine to postpone the
mandatory  retirement  date for that  individual for one additional year for our
benefit.

      Under applicable law prohibiting discrimination in employment on the basis
of age, we can impose a mandatory  retirement  age of 65 for our  executives  or
employees in high  policy-making  positions only if each employee subject to the
mandatory  retirement  age is entitled  to an  immediate  retirement  benefit at
retirement age of at least $44,000 per year. The benefits  payable at retirement
to Mr.  Harris and Mr.  Melsheimer  under our existing  retirement  plans do not
equal this threshold.  A plan was established to provide the difference  between
the benefit required under the age  discrimination  laws and that provided under
our existing plans.  The total expense to us of providing the benefit under this
new plan is currently  estimated to be $50,547 as it relates to Mr. Harris,  and
$231,109 as it relates to Mr. Melsheimer. Currently, there is no accrual for Mr.
Jamison.  On December 31, 2004, Mr. Melsheimer retired pursuant to the mandatory
retirement plan. Under the mandatory  retirement plan, he will receive an annual
benefit of $22,915,  the difference  between the benefit  required under the age
discrimination  laws and that provided under our existing  plans.  The estimated
annual benefit for Mr. Harris upon his retirement is $11,543.

Employment Agreement

      On October 19, 1999, Charles E. Harris signed an Employment Agreement with
us (the "Employment  Agreement"),  which superseded an employment agreement that
was about to expire on December 31, 1999.  The Employment  Agreement  expires on
December  31,  2004  ("Term");  provided,  on  January  1,  2000 and on each day
thereafter,  the Term extends automatically by one day, unless at any time we or
Mr. Harris, by written notice,  decide not to extend the Term, in which case the
Term will expire five years from the date of the written notice.  On October 14,
2004, Mr. Harris entered into an Amended and Restated Employment  Agreement (the
"Amended Employment Agreement") for the purpose of changing the termination date
to be consistent  with the date in the Executive  Mandatory  Retirement  Benefit
Plan. The Amended  Employment  Agreement  provides that the Term of Mr. Harris's
employment  may  not  be  extended  beyond  December  31,  2008,  the  mandatory
retirement  date pursuant to the Executive  Mandatory  Retirement  Benefit Plan,
unless a committee of the Board consisting of  non-interested  Directors extends
the date by one year pursuant to the plan, and Mr. Harris agrees to serve beyond
December 31, 2008.

                                       21


      During the period of  employment,  Mr.  Harris shall serve as our Chairman
and Chief Executive  Officer;  be responsible for our general  management of the
affairs of the Company and all its subsidiaries, reporting directly to our Board
of  Directors;  serve as a member of the Board for the period of which he is and
shall from time to time be elected or reelected;  and serve,  if elected,  as an
officer and director of any subsidiary or affiliate of the Company.

      Mr. Harris is to receive  compensation  under his Employment  Agreement in
the form of base salary, with automatic yearly adjustments to reflect inflation,
which  amounted to $235,609 for 2005.  In addition,  the Board may increase such
salary,  and  consequently  decrease it, but not below the level provided for by
the automatic adjustments described above. For 2006, the Compensation  Committee
increased Mr.  Harris's base salary to $300,000.  Mr. Harris is also entitled to
participate  in our  Profit-Sharing  Plan  as  well  as in all  compensation  or
employee  benefit plans or programs,  and to receive all benefits,  perquisites,
and  emoluments  for which  salaried  employees are eligible.  Under the Amended
Employment  Agreement,  we furnish Mr.  Harris with  certain  perquisites  which
include a company car, a personal trainer, membership in certain clubs and up to
a $5,000 annual  reimbursement for personal,  financial or tax advice,  adjusted
for inflation.

      The Amended  Employment  Agreement provides Mr. Harris with life insurance
for the benefit of his  designated  beneficiaries  in the amount of  $2,000,000;
provides reimbursement for uninsured medical expenses, not to exceed $10,000 per
annum, adjusted for inflation, over the period of the contract; and provides Mr.
Harris  and his  spouse  with  long-term  care  insurance  and  with  disability
insurance  in the amount of 100 percent of his base salary.  These  benefits are
for the term of the Amended Employment Agreement.

      The Amended  Employment  Agreement  provides severance pay in the event of
termination  without  cause or by  constructive  discharge and also provides for
certain death benefits  payable to the surviving spouse equal to the executive's
base salary for a period of two years.

      In addition,  Mr. Harris is entitled to receive  severance pay pursuant to
the severance  compensation  agreement  that he entered into with us,  effective
August  15,  1990.  The  severance  compensation  agreement  provides  that  if,
following a change in our control,  as defined in the agreement,  his employment
is  terminated  by us without  cause or by him within one year of such change in
control,  he shall be  entitled  to receive  compensation  in a lump sum payment
equal to 2.99 times his  average  annualized  compensation  and payment of other
welfare  benefits.  If  Mr.  Harris's  termination  is  without  cause  or  is a
constructive  discharge,   the  amount  payable  under  the  Amended  Employment
Agreement  will  be  reduced  by the  amounts  paid  pursuant  to the  severance
compensation agreement.

                                       22


SERP

      The Amended  Employment  Agreement  provides that we adopt a  supplemental
executive  retirement plan (the "SERP") for the benefit of Mr. Harris. Under the
SERP, we will cause an amount equal to one-twelfth of Mr. Harris's  current base
salary to be  credited  each month (a  "Monthly  Credit")  to a special  account
maintained  for this  purpose on our books for the  benefit of Mr.  Harris  (the
"SERP  Account").  The  amounts  credited  to the SERP  Account  will be  deemed
invested or reinvested in such investments as determined by Mr. Harris. The SERP
Account is credited and debited to reflect the deemed investment returns, losses
and  expenses  attributed  to such deemed  investments  and  reinvestments.  Mr.
Harris's  benefit under the SERP equals the balance in the SERP Account and such
benefit will always be 100 percent vested (i.e., not forfeitable).  In 2005, Mr.
Harris received a $125,000  distribution  from the SERP Account.  The balance in
the SERP Account will be distributed to Mr. Harris in a lump sum on December 31,
2008;  provided,  however,  in the  event  of the  termination  of Mr.  Harris's
employment, the balance in the SERP Account will be distributed to Mr. Harris or
his  beneficiary,  as the case may be, in a lump-sum  payment  within 30 days of
such  termination.  We  have  established  a rabbi  trust  for  the  purpose  of
accumulating  funds to satisfy  the  obligations  incurred by us under the SERP,
which amounted to $1,730,434 at December 31. 2005. The restricted  funds for the
SERP Plan total $1,730,434 at December 31, 2005. Mr. Harris's rights to benefits
pursuant to this SERP will be no greater than those of a general creditor of the
Company.

                                       23



Remuneration of Directors

      The following table sets forth the compensation  paid by us for the fiscal
year ended  December 31, 2005,  to our  directors.  During the fiscal year ended
December  31,  2005,  we did not pay  any  pension  or  retirement  benefits  to
directors.

                                               Total Compensation Paid to
Name of Director                                    Directors ($)
----------------------                         ---------------------------
Independent Directors:
Dr. C. Wayne Bardin                                      28,500
Dr. Phillip A. Bauman                                    31,500
G. Morgan Browne(1)                                      40,941
Dugald A. Fletcher                                       40,500
Mark A. Parsells(2)                                      37,463
Charles E. Ramsey                                        28,500
James E. Roberts                                         39,000

Interested Directors:
Kelly S. Kirkpatrick(3)                                  29,278
Lori D. Pressman(4)                                      93,854
Charles E. Harris(5)                                          0

--------------------

(1)   Includes  $441 for  reimbursement  for  travel  expenses  to attend  board
      meetings.

(2)   Includes  $1,463 for  reimbursement  for travel  expenses to attend  board
      meetings.

(3)   Includes  $2,278 for  reimbursement  for travel  expenses to attend  board
      meetings and $0 for consulting services. Ms. Kirkpatrick may be considered
      an  "interested  person"  because of consulting  work  performed for us in
      previous years.

(4)   Includes  $2,192 for  reimbursement  for travel  expenses to attend  board
      meetings  and  $66,162  for  consulting  services.  Ms.  Pressman  may  be
      considered an "interested person" because of consulting work performed for
      us.

(5)   Mr. Harris is an "interested person" as defined in the 1940 Act. He is not
      compensated directly for his services as a director of the Company.

      In 2006,  the directors who are not officers will receive  $1,500 for each
meeting of the Board of  Directors  and $1,500 for each  committee  meeting they
attend,  in  addition  to a monthly  retainer  of $750.  We also  reimburse  our
directors for travel, lodging and related expenses they incur in attending board
and committee  meetings.  The total  compensation and reimbursement for expenses
paid to all directors in 2005 was $303,374.

      The  Board of  Directors  has  adopted  a policy  that 50  percent  of all
director fees must be used to purchase our common stock.  In 2005, the directors
bought 9,985 shares in the open market pursuant to this policy.

                                       24



Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance

      Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 requires our officers
and directors,  and persons who own more than 10 percent of our common stock, to
file reports (including a year-end report) of ownership and changes in ownership
with the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission  (the  "SEC") and to furnish the
Company with copies of all reports filed.

      Based  solely  on a  review  of the  forms  furnished  to us,  or  written
representations  from certain reporting persons, we believe that all persons who
were subject to Section 16(a) in 2005 complied with the filing requirements.

                                       25



              SELECTION OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT

                                (Proposal No. 2)

      PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP ("PwC") has been  selected as the  independent
registered  public  accounting  firm by our Audit  Committee  and  ratified by a
majority of our Board, including a majority of the independent directors by vote
cast in  person,  to audit  the  accounts  of the  Company  for and  during  the
Company's  fiscal year ending  December 31, 2006.  This  selection is subject to
ratification or rejection by the stockholders of the Company.  The Company knows
of no direct or indirect financial interest of PwC in the Company.

      Representatives  of PwC will not attend  the Annual  Meeting in person but
will be available to respond to appropriate questions by telephone.

      Unless  marked to the  contrary,  the shares  represented  by the enclosed
proxy   card   will  be  voted   for   ratification   of  the   appointment   of
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP as the independent registered public accounting firm
of the Company.

         THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE "FOR" THIS PROPOSAL.


                                       26



                  SALE OF RIGHTS TO PURCHASE COMMON STOCK AT NOT
                  LESS THAN THE GREATER OF THE MARKET VALUE OR THE
                  NET ASSET VALUE PER SHARE AT THE TIME OF ISSUANCE

                                (Proposal No. 3)

Proposal

      During the coming year, the Board of Directors believes it would be in our
best  interest  to have the  ability  to offer  long-term  rights  (which may be
accompanied  by or be  part of  other  securities  --  e.g.,  convertible  debt,
convertible preferred  securities,  warrants and debt securities or warrants and
preferred  securities)  to purchase  common stock at an exercise price that will
not be less than the  greater  of the  market  value or the net asset  value per
share at the time of issuance of such  long-term  rights.  For  example,  if the
securities  are  priced for  issuance  on June 30 and at that time the net asset
value per share is $5.00 and the market price is $10.00, the exercise price will
not be less than $10.00, subject to anti-dilution adjustments.  Section 61(a) of
the 1940 Act  permits a  business  development  company  such as us to sell such
securities  on such  terms  (and to issue  shares of  common  stock  upon  their
exercise) only if several conditions are satisfied.  Specifically, such proposal
must be approved by a majority of the Board of  Directors  who have no financial
interest in the  transaction and a majority of the  independent  directors,  and
shareholders  of the  issuer  within 12 months  prior to sale.  In  addition,  a
majority of the issuer's independent directors must determine in good faith that
the issuance of such  securities is in the best interests of the Company and our
shareholders  and that the price at which such rights or other securities are to
be sold (which refers to the exercise or conversion  price in the case of rights
such as warrants,  options or conversion  rights) is not less than a price which
closely  approximates the market value for the underlying shares of common stock
at the time of  issuance  of such  rights  or  other  securities.  Finally,  the
long-term rights or other securities  outstanding at any particular time may not
be exercisable or convertible for more than 25% of the common stock  outstanding
at that time.  The  subsequent  issuance  of shares  upon  exercise  of properly
authorized rights is permitted without regard to net asset value or market value
at the time of  exercise.  As our Board of  Directors  has done each year  since
2002, it has approved and  recommends to the  shareholders  for their approval a
proposal  authorizing  us,  over the next  year,  to issue  long-term  rights to
purchase  common stock (subject to the 25% limitation  stated above) at exercise
prices  that will not be less than the  greater of the  market  value or the net
asset value per share at the time of issuance of such rights. Upon obtaining the
requisite shareholder  approval, we will comply with the foregoing  requirements
in connection with any financing undertaken pursuant to this proposal. See below
for a discussion of the risks of dilution and leverage.

      We may  determine  to issue  such  rights  and/or  other  securities  in a
registered  public offering or may issue them in a private placement either with
or without an obligation to seek to register  their resale at the request of the
holders.  We may also  determine to use an  underwriter  or  placement  agent to
assist in selling such  securities  if we conclude that doing so would assist in
marketing such securities on favorable terms.

                                       27


Reasons for the Proposal

      Management  and the Board of Directors  have  determined  that it would be
advantageous  to us to have  the  ability  to sell,  either  alone or as part of
another  security,  warrants,  options  or rights to  purchase  common  stock in
connection with our financing and capital raising  activities.  This ability may
give us a  cost-effective  way to raise  capital.  Our  Board of  Directors  has
determined  that  it  would  be in the  best  interest  of the  Company  and our
shareholders  to be in a position to increase  our assets so that we may be in a
better position to be a lead investor more often, to make follow-on  investments
and  take  advantage  of  attractive  new  investment   opportunities   in  tiny
technology,  including nanotechnology,  microsystems and  microelectromechanical
systems (MEMS),  augment working capital,  increase the  diversification  of our
portfolio  and  achieve  other net  benefits  to us. We  believe  that our prior
investment  and  expertise in the tiny  technology  sector are likely to lead to
several  attractive  investment  opportunities  in the  tiny  technology  sector
becoming  available  to us over the next  one to two  years.  We do not have any
current plans to issue rights or other  securities and would  determine to do so
only after  reviewing  the pace at which we are  investing  the  proceeds of our
recent  stock  offerings  and  the  level  and   attractiveness   of  investment
opportunities becoming available.

      The Board also believes that  increasing our assets will lower our expense
ratio by  spreading  our fixed costs over a larger  asset base.  The issuance of
additional  common  stock  resulting  from the  exercise  might also enhance the
liquidity of our common stock on the Nasdaq National Market.

      Although we are permitted without shareholder approval to engage in rights
offerings to our existing  shareholders of short-term  rights to purchase common
stock at less than net asset  value per share,  these  offerings  must either be
non-transferable,  in which case shareholders who decide not to participate will
have no means of  capturing  any  portion  of the value of the right to  acquire
shares at a discount,  or, if they involve  transferable rights, must be limited
in frequency  and size in such a manner that we can increase our capital base in
any  particular  year by only  approximately  25 percent  less the effect of the
discount.  In addition,  offerings of transferable rights for which the exercise
price is at a  discount  to net asset  value may be made only once per year.  In
2002, we made such a transferable rights offering.

      We believe that the investment  opportunities  in tiny technology over the
coming year are likely to be sufficient  to justify  raising  capital  should we
choose to do so. Any such  decision  to raise  capital  would take into  account
likely investment  opportunities and liquid assets on hand,  including  possible
sale of  freely  marketable  corporate  securities.  Inasmuch  as the  Board  of
Directors  believes that it would not be in the best  interests of  shareholders
for us to engage in large scale nontransferable  rights offerings at a discount,
it  believes  that  the  proposal  is an  attractive  way to give us  additional
flexibility  over and above the  limited  amount  that can be raised in any year
without shareholder approval through short-term transferable rights offerings to
take advantage of investment  opportunities  that may arise over the next one or
two years.

                                       28


      The Board of Directors has approved and is seeking shareholder approval of
the  proposal  described  above to  sell,  either  alone  or as part of  another
security,  warrants, options or rights to purchase common stock. The final terms
of any such sale,  including price,  terms, and vesting  requirements,  would be
determined  by the Board of  Directors  at the time of  issuance  of the rights.
Also, the nature and amount of consideration that would be received by us at the
time of issuance and the use of any such  consideration  would be considered and
approved by the Board of Directors at the time of  issuance.  Any such  issuance
may be made  pursuant to either a  registered  or  non-registered  offering,  as
determined by the Board of Directors in an appropriate  manner prior to the time
of  issuance.  Any such sale  would be  anticipated  to  result  in a  potential
increase in the number of  outstanding  shares of common  stock.  The  long-term
rights  or  other  securities  outstanding  at any  particular  time  may not be
exercisable or convertible for more than 25% of the common stock  outstanding at
that time.

Dilution

      Any such sale, other than to existing  shareholders,  would be potentially
dilutive to the voting power of existing shareholders and could be dilutive with
regard to dividends and other economic aspects of the common stock.  Because the
number of shares of common  stock  that could be so issued and the timing of any
issuance is not currently known, the actual dilutive effect cannot be predicted.
In addition,  because the exercise price per share at the time of exercise could
well be less than the net asset  value  per  share at the time of  exercise  and
because we could well incur  expenses  in  connection  with any such sale,  such
exercise  could result in a dilution of net asset value per share at the time of
exercise for all  shareholders.  Such dilution would  disproportionately  affect
shareholders who own less than their proportional share of such rights.

Leverage

      Any  long-term  rights  issued may be  accompanied  by or be part of other
securities,  including convertible debt or convertible preferred securities.  If
we  issue  convertible  debt  or  convertible  preferred  securities  or debt or
preferred securities accompanied by long-term rights, such issuance would result
in the use of leverage by us and would require us to make  periodic  interest or
dividend  payments.  The use of  leverage  results in  additional  risks and can
magnify the effect of any losses.  If the income and gains earned on  securities
purchased with the proceeds of such convertible  securities are greater than the
cost of leverage,  our return on the shares will be greater than if leverage had
not been used. Conversely,  if the income or gains from the securities purchased
with such proceeds does not cover the cost of leverage, the return to us will be
less than if leverage had not been used. There is no assurance that a leveraging
strategy will be successful.  Also, the cost of interest or dividend payments on
any  debt  or  preferred   securities   issued  will  be  borne  by  the  common
shareholders.

      THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE "FOR" THIS PROPOSAL.

                                       29



                 APPROVAL OF THE COMPANY'S EQUITY INCENTIVE PLAN

                                (Proposal No. 4)

Proposal

      On March 23 2006, Board of Directors of the Company voted to terminate the
Profit Sharing Plan (see "Reasons for the Proposal"  below) and  established the
Harris & Harris Group, Inc. 2006 Equity Incentive Plan (the "Stock Plan"),  both
subject to shareholder  approval of this  Proposal.  The Stock Plan provides for
the grant of equity-based  awards,  including restricted stock and stock options
to our directors, officers and other employees, advisors and consultants who are
selected by our Compensation Committee for participation in the plan and subject
to  compliance  with the 1940 Act. If the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission
provides  exemptive relief to that effect,  our Compensation  Committee may also
authorize  awards  under the Stock  Plan to  selected  former  employees  of the
Company.

      The Stock Plan was adopted to encourage  stock ownership in the Company by
eligible participants,  thus giving them a proprietary interest in the Company's
performance,  to reward  performance,  to provide a means to attract  and retain
persons  of  outstanding  ability  to  the  service  of  the  Company,  to  more
successfully  compete  with private  sector  venture  capital  firms to hire and
retain  personnel  and to retain and add to the cash in the  Company.  The Stock
Plan is attached to this Proxy Statement as Appendix B.

      The Company's  Board of Directors and its  Compensation  Committee,  which
consists  entirely of directors  who are not  employees of the Company,  believe
that in light of the Company's development,  stock-based incentive compensation,
particularly  the award of stock options and  restricted  stock,  should be used
instead of our existing  profit-sharing plan. Stock-based  compensation advances
the interests of the Company by providing  substantial  motivation  for superior
performance and more fully aligning the interests of officers and directors with
the interests of the shareholders.

      Business development  companies that do not maintain a profit-sharing plan
are  permitted  under the 1940 Act to issue to officers  and  employees  (and to
non-officer/employee  directors,  with exemptive  relief)  options,  warrants or
rights to purchase voting securities pursuant to an executive compensation plan,
if:

      o     The  options,  warrants or rights  expire by their  terms  within 10
            years;
      o     The  options,  warrants  or rights are not  separately  transferable
            unless  no  class  of  such  options,  warrants  or  rights  and the
            securities that accompany them have been publicly distributed;
      o     The exercise or conversion price is not less than the current market
            value at the date of issuance  (or if no market  value  exists,  the
            current  net  asset  value  of  the  voting  securities);  and
      o     The proposal to issue the securities is approved by the shareholders
            of the business development company.

                                       30


      The Company intends to apply for exemptive  relief from the Securities and
Exchange Commission permitting the Company to issue restricted stock pursuant to
the Stock Plan,  to permit the  exercise  price of the options to be adjusted to
reflect  any  taxes  paid by the  Company  on  behalf  of  shareholders  when it
designates  deemed  dividends  of its  long-term  gains,  to be able to  include
certain former employees in the Stock Plan who were  grandfathered  participants
in the profit-sharing  plan before it was terminated and to permit  non-employee
directors to  participate in the plan.  Until such time as the Company  receives
such  exemptive  relief,  the  Company  will not issue any shares of  restricted
stock,  the exercise  price on options will not be adjusted to reflect any taxes
paid on  behalf of  shareholders;  and  former  employees  and our  non-employee
directors will not participate in the Option Plan.

      We are submitting the Stock Plan to our shareholders for approval in order
to comply with the 1940 Act and NASD listing  rules,  in order to exempt  grants
under the plan for  purposes  of Rule 16b under the  Exchange  Act,  and so that
awards under the plan intended to qualify as  "performance  based  compensation"
under Section 162(m) of the Code may so qualify.

      The plan will be administered by our Compensation Committee, which has the
authority,  among other things,  to determine who will be granted awards and all
of the terms and  conditions  of the  awards,  including  but not limited to the
effect of a change in control of the Company on those awards.  The  Compensation
Committee  is also  authorized  to  determine  to what  extent  an award  may be
settled,  cancelled,  forfeited or  surrendered,  to interpret  the plan and any
awards granted under the plan and to make all other determinations  necessary or
advisable for the administration of the plan. Where the vesting or payment of an
award under the plan is subject to the  attainment  of  performance  goals,  the
Compensation  Committee will be responsible for determining that the performance
goals have been attained.  Neither the  Compensation  Committee nor our Board of
Directors  has the  authority  under  the  plan to  reprice,  or to  cancel  and
re-grant,  any stock option  granted  under the plan, or to take any action that
would lower the exercise,  base or purchase price of any award granted under the
plan without first obtaining the approval of our shareholders.  In addition,  no
award may be granted  under the plan if the grant of the award  would  cause the
Company to fail to comply with the 1940 Act.

Reasons for the Proposal

      As of January 1, 2000, the Company  implemented the Harris & Harris Group,
Inc.  Employee  Profit-Sharing  Plan,  which  provides for profit sharing by its
officers and employees up to a maximum of 20 percent of the net realized  income
of the Company as reflected on the consolidated  statements of operations of the
Company for such year, less the nonqualifying gain, if any. Section 57(n) of the
1940 Act  prohibits  the Company  from paying  profit  sharing in an amount that
exceeds "net income after taxes."

                                       31


      Thus,  when the  Company  chooses  to retain  its net  realized  long-term
capital gains for reinvestment for growth and declares a deemed dividend, rather
than distribute such gains as a cash dividend,  the taxes paid by the Company on
behalf of  shareholders  (who  receive a tax credit for such  taxes)  reduce the
amount of profit  against  which the  profit  sharing  payable to  employees  is
calculated.  The  practical  effect of  deducting  the  taxes  paid on behalf of
shareholders in conjunction  with deemed dividends from "net income after taxes"
in any fiscal year is to reduce the maximum  payment under profit  sharing plans
governed  by  Section  57(n)(1)(B)  to less than 13  percent  (20% of 65% before
adjustment for state and local taxes) of our net income before these taxes.

      Because the Company must compete with private sector venture capital firms
to hire and retain personnel, and private sector venture capital firms typically
have a carried  interest of at least 20 percent of profits before any taxes, the
Company would be placed at a serious competitive disadvantage as a result of the
taxes as described above. Although the Company could avoid this result by paying
cash dividends in respect of its long-term  gains,  this would increase the cost
of  building  the  Company's  capital and would not, in the view of the Board of
Directors, be in the best interests of the Company and its shareholders if other
reasonably competitive  compensation  structures can be utilized. If the Company
were to distribute all of its net realized  long-term  capital  gains,  it would
have no  reinvestment  rate and therefore  could not generate  internal  growth.
Moreover,  profit-sharing  payments  in the form of cash  reduce  the  Company's
reinvestment  rate,  and  therefore its  potential  rate of growth,  whereas the
exercise of stock options would increase the Company's cash. In this regard, the
Board of Directors also noted that profit-sharing payments by the Company result
in  ordinary  income to the plan  participants,  whereas  employees  of  private
venture capital operations generally receive a carried interest characterized as
long-term  gain for  income  tax  purposes.  Although  the Stock Plan could also
result  eventually in ordinary income to  participants  with respect to all or a
portion of their awards under the Stock Plan,  long-term  options and restricted
stock provide forms of tax-free compounding until exercised or sold.

Description of the Option Plan

      Authorization.  A maximum of 4,000,000  shares of our common stock will be
available for awards under the plan,  subject to adjustment as described  below.
Shares issued under the plan may be authorized  but unissued  shares or treasury
shares.  If any shares subject to an award granted under the plan are forfeited,
cancelled, exchanged or surrendered or if an award terminates or expires without
a distribution  of shares,  or if shares of stock are surrendered or withheld as
payment of either the  exercise  price of an award and/or  withholding  taxes in
respect of an award,  those shares will again be available  for awards under the
plan.  Under the plan, no more than 4,000,000  shares of our common stock may be
made subject to stock options,  and no more than 1,000,000  shares of our common
stock may be made  subject  to  awards of  restricted  stock.  If any  shares of
restricted stock are awarded, such awards will reduce on a share-for-share basis
the total  number of shares of stock for which  options may be  awarded.  If the
Company  does not receive  exemptive  relief from the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission to issue  restricted  stock,  all 4,000,000  shares may be subject to
stock  options.  No more than  1,000,000  shares of our common stock may be made
subject to awards  under the plan to any  individual  in any year.  In the event
that the Compensation  Committee  determines that any corporate event, such as a
stock  split,  dividend  or other  distribution  (including  deemed  dividends),
reorganization, merger, consolidation, repurchase or share exchange, affects our
common stock such that an adjustment is appropriate in order to prevent dilution
or  enlargement  of the  rights  of plan  participants,  then  the  Compensation
Committee will make those  adjustments  as it deems  necessary or appropriate to
any or all of (i) the  number  and kind of  shares  or other  property  that may
thereafter be issued in connection with future awards,  (ii) the number and kind
of shares or other property that may be issued under outstanding  awards,  (iii)
the  exercise  price or  purchase  price of any  outstanding  award and (iv) the
performance goals applicable to outstanding awards.

                                       32


Terms of Awards.  The terms and  conditions of stock  options  granted under the
plan  will be  determined  by the  Compensation  Committee  and set  forth in an
agreement. Stock options granted under the plan may be "incentive stock options"
within the meaning of Section 422 of the Code, or  non-qualified  stock options.
The exercise price of an option granted under the plan will not be less than the
fair  market  value of our common  stock on the date of grant.  The vesting of a
stock option will be subject to such  conditions as the  Compensation  Committee
may determine.

The terms and  conditions of awards of  restricted  stock granted under the plan
will be  determined  by the  Compensation  Committee  and set  forth in an award
agreement.   The  Compensation  Committee  may  determine  that  the  holder  of
restricted stock may receive dividends,  including deemed dividends, that may be
deferred during the restricted period applicable to these awards.

Unless earlier terminated by our Board of Directors,  the Stock Plan will expire
on the 10th  anniversary of the date on which it was adopted.  The expiration of
the  Stock  Plan  will  not by  itself  adversely  affect  the  rights  of  plan
participants  under  awards  that are  outstanding  at the time the  Stock  Plan
expires. Our Board of Directors may terminate, modify or suspend the plan at any
time,  provided that no  modification  of the plan will be effective  unless and
until any required  shareholder  approval has been  obtained.  The  Compensation
Committee may terminate,  modify or amend any outstanding  award under the Stock
Plan at any time, provided that in such event, the award holder may exercise any
vested options prior to such termination of the Stock Plan or award.

Inasmuch  as  awards  under  the plan  will be  determined  by our  Compensation
Committee and may vary from year to year and from  participant  to  participant,
benefits to be paid under the plan are not determinable at this time.

      THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE "FOR" THIS PROPOSAL.

                                       33



                AMENDMENT OF THE CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION TO
            INCREASE THE NUMBER OF AUTHORIZED SHARES OF COMMON STOCK
                          FROM 30,000,000 TO 45,000,000

                                (Proposal No. 5)

Proposal

      We propose to amend  paragraph 4 of the  Certificate of  Incorporation  to
increase  the number of  authorized  shares of common stock from  30,000,000  to
45,000,000.

      Of the 30,000,000  shares authorized for issuance under our Certificate of
Incorporation,  there are only  approximately  7,414,915  shares  unissued.  Our
proposed  amendment  would  increase the number of  authorized  shares of common
stock by 15,000,000 shares.

      The rights of  additional  authorized  shares  would be  identical  to the
rights of the shares you now hold. The authorization  will not, in itself,  have
any  effect  on your  rights  as a  stockholder.  If the  Board  were  to  issue
additional  shares for other than a stock split or dividend,  however,  it could
have a dilutive effect on your voting power. This proposal is not in response to
any effort we know of to accumulate our common stock or to obtain control of the
Company. The Board of Directors has no present plans, agreements, commitments or
understandings for the issuance or use of these proposed additional shares.

Reason for the Proposal

      We believe  that the  proposed  increase is in the best  interests  of the
Company and our shareholders. It is important for the Board of Directors to have
the  flexibility  to act promptly to meet future  business  needs as they arise.
Sufficient  shares should be readily  available to maintain our capital  raising
flexibility and for employee benefit plan issuances. By having additional shares
readily  available  for  issuance,  the Board of  Directors  will be able to act
expeditiously  without spending the time and incurring the expense of soliciting
proxies and holding special meetings of shareholders.

      We do not have any current plans to issue any newly authorized  additional
shares of common stock if approved by shareholders, and would determine to do so
only after  reviewing  the pace at which we are  investing  the  proceeds of our
recent  stock   offerings  and  our  other  liquid  assets  and  the  level  and
attractiveness  of  investment  opportunities  becoming  available and likely to
become available.

      Issuance  of  new  shares  of  common   stock,   other  than  to  existing
shareholders,  would be  potentially  dilutive  to the voting  power of existing
shareholders  and could also be  dilutive  with  regard to  dividends  and other
economic  aspects  of the  common  stock.  Because  the number of shares and the
timing of any issuance is not currently known, the actual dilutive effect cannot
be predicted.  In addition,  we could incur expenses in connection with any such
sale of additional  shares,  which could result in a dilution of net asset value
per share at the time of sale for all shareholders.

      THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE "FOR" THIS PROPOSAL.


                                       34



Other Business

      The Board of Directors  does not intend to bring any other matters  before
the Annual Meeting and, at the date of mailing of this proxy statement,  has not
been  informed of any matter that  others may bring  before the Annual  Meeting.
However, if any other matters properly come before the Annual Meeting, it is the
intention of the persons named in the  accompanying  proxy to vote such proxy in
accordance with their judgment on such matters.

Annual Reports on Form 10-K

      Our Annual Report on Form 10-K, as filed with the SEC, is being  delivered
with this Proxy Statement.

      We undertake to provide,  without charge,  to each shareholder as of March
14, 2006,  upon the written  request of such  shareholder,  a copy of our Annual
Report on Form 10-K and/or our last Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, including the
financial statements and the financial statement schedules, required to be filed
with the SEC for our most recent fiscal year and/or quarter. Any shareholder who
would like to request a copy of our most  recent  Annual  Report on Form 10-K or
Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q may do so by calling toll-free  1-877-TINY-TECH or
submitting a written  request to the  following  address,  which shall contain a
representation in good faith that such shareholder was a beneficial owner, as of
March 14, 2006, of our securities, entitled to vote:

                               Investor Relations
                           Harris & Harris Group, Inc.
                        111 West 57th Street, Suite 1100
                               New York, NY 10019

Submission of Shareholder Proposals

      Any  shareholder  proposals  intended to be presented for inclusion in our
proxy statement and form of proxy for the next Annual Meeting of Shareholders to
be held in 2007 must be received in writing by the  Secretary  of the Company at
Harris & Harris Group,  Inc., 111 West 57th Street, New York, New York 10019, no
later than January 5, 2007,  in order for such  proposals to be  considered  for
inclusion in the proxy  statement and proxy  relating to the 2007 Annual Meeting
of  Shareholders.  Submission of a proposal does not guarantee  inclusion in the
proxy  statement,  as the  requirements  of certain federal laws and regulations
must be met by such proposals.

      Under our Bylaws,  nominations  for director may be made only by the Board
or by the  Nominating  Committee,  or by a shareholder  entitled to vote who has
delivered  written  notice  to our  Secretary  (containing  certain  information
specified  in the  Bylaws) not less than 90 days nor more than 120 days prior to
the  anniversary  of the date of the  immediately  preceding  Annual  Meeting of
Shareholders;  provided,  however,  that in the event that the Annual Meeting is
called  for a date that is not within 30 days  before or after such  anniversary
date,  notice by the  shareholder  in order to be timely must be so received not
later  than the close of  business  on the 10th day  following  the day on which
notice of the date of the Annual Meeting was mailed or such public disclosure of
the date of the Annual Meeting was made, whichever first occurs. The Bylaws also
provide  that no  business  may be  brought  before  an  Annual  Meeting  of the
Shareholders  except as  specified  in the Notice of the Meeting or as otherwise
properly  brought before the meeting by or at the direction of the Board or by a
shareholder  entitled to vote who has delivered  written notice to our Secretary
(containing certain  information  specified in the Bylaws) not less than 90 days
nor more than 120 days prior to the  anniversary of the date of the  immediately
preceding Annual Meeting of Shareholders;  provided,  however, that in the event
that the Annual  Meeting is called for a date that is not within 30 days  before
or after such anniversary  date, notice by the shareholder in order to be timely
must be so  received  not  later  than  the  close of  business  on the 10th day
following  the day on which notice of the date of the Annual  Meeting was mailed
or such public disclosure of the date of the Annual Meeting was made,  whichever
first occurs.

                                       35


      Rule 14a-4 of the Securities and Exchange  Commission's proxy rules allows
us to use  discretionary  voting  authority to vote on matters  coming before an
Annual Meeting of shareholders,  if we do not have notice of the matter at least
45 days before the  anniversary  of the date on which we first  mailed our proxy
materials  for the prior  year's  Annual  Meeting  of  shareholders  or the date
specified by the advance notice provision in our Bylaws. Our Bylaws contain such
an advance  notice  provision  as  described  above.  For our Annual  Meeting of
Shareholders  expected to be held on May 3, 2007,  shareholders must submit such
written notice to our Secretary in accordance with our advance notice provision,
as described above.

      A copy of the full text of the  Bylaw  provisions  discussed  above may be
obtained by writing to our Secretary.

                                              By Order of the Board of Directors

New York, New York                            /s/ Susan T. Harris
                                              ----------------------------------
April 3, 2006                                 Susan T. Harris
                                              Secretary

                                       36



                                   APPENDIX A

                         CHARTER OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE
                            OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
                                       of
                           Harris & Harris Group, Inc.

      The Board of Directors  (the "Board") of Harris & Harris Group,  Inc. (the
"Company") has determined that the Audit Committee of the Board shall assist the
Board in fulfilling certain of the Board's oversight responsibilities. The Board
hereby adopts this Charter to establish  the  governing  principles of the Audit
Committee  and shall  review and  reassess  the  adequacy of this  Charter on an
annual basis.

I. Role of the Audit Committee

      The  role of the  Audit  Committee  is to act on  behalf  of the  Board in
fulfilling the following responsibilities of the Board:

      A.    To oversee all  material  aspects of the  Company's  accounting  and
            financial reporting processes, internal control and audit functions,
            except those that are specifically  related to the  responsibilities
            of another committee of the Board;

      B.    To  monitor  the  independence  and  performance  of  the  Company's
            independent registered public accountants;

      C.    To  provide  a means  for open  communication  among  the  Company's
            independent  registered  public  accountants,  financial  and senior
            management and the Board; and

      D.    To oversee  compliance  by the  Company  with  legal and  regulatory
            requirements.

      While the Audit Committee has the responsibilities and powers set forth in
this  Charter,  it is not the duty of the  Audit  Committee  to plan or  conduct
financial  statement  audits  or  to  determine  that  the  Company's  financial
statements  are  complete  and  accurate  or are in  accordance  with  generally
accepted accounting principles. The responsibility to plan and conduct financial
statement  audits  is  that  of  the  Company's  independent  registered  public
accountants.  The Company's  management has the responsibility to determine that
the Company's  financial  statements are complete and accurate and in accordance
with generally accepted accounting  principles.  Nor is it the duty of the Audit
Committee to assure the  Company's  compliance  with laws and  regulations.  The
primary   responsibility  for  these  matters  also  rests  with  the  Company's
management.

                                      A-1


II.Composition of the Audit Committee

      A.    The Board shall  designate the members of the Audit Committee at the
            Board's annual  organizational  meeting and each member shall serve,
            subject to his or her earlier  resignation or removal from the Audit
            Committee  or his or her  ceasing to be a  director,  until the next
            such meeting and until their successors are designated by the Board.

      B.    The Audit Committee shall consist of at least three members,  but no
            more than six members. The members of the Audit Committee shall meet
            the  independence  and experience  requirements  of the rules of the
            principal  market  or  transaction  reporting  system  on which  the
            Company's  securities  are traded or quoted  (currently,  the Nasdaq
            National Market),  Section 10A(m)(3) of the Securities  Exchange Act
            of 1934 and the rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange
            Commission (the "SEC").

III. Meeting of the Audit Committee

      The Audit  Committee shall meet at least four (4) times each year and more
frequently  as  circumstances   may  require.   The  Audit  Committee  shall  be
responsible for meeting with the independent  registered  public  accountants at
their request to discuss the interim financial  statements.  The Audit Committee
shall meet privately with the independent registered public accountants at least
annually in a separate executive session.

IV. Responsibilities of the Audit Committee

      The Audit  Committee  shall assist the Board in  overseeing  the Company's
financial and operating  reporting  practices,  internal controls and compliance
with laws and regulations.

      Specifically,  the Audit  Committee  shall  have the  responsibility  with
respect to:

      A.    The Company's Risks and Control Environment:

            o     To  discuss  with the  Company's  management  and  independent
                  registered  public  accountants the integrity of the Company's
                  financial reporting  processes and controls,  particularly the
                  controls  in  areas  representing  significant  financial  and
                  business risks; and

                                      A-2


            o     To  investigate  and follow up on any  matters  brought to its
                  attention within the scope of its duties.

      B.    The Company's Independent Registered Public Accountants:

            o     The Audit  Committee  shall have the sole authority to appoint
                  or  replace  the  independent  registered  public  accountants
                  (subject,  to ratification by the independent directors of the
                  Board). The Audit Committee shall be directly  responsible for
                  the  compensation and oversight of the work of the independent
                  registered  public   accountants   (including   resolution  of
                  disagreements   between   management   and   the   independent
                  registered public accountants  regarding financial  reporting)
                  for the  purpose of  preparing  or issuing an audit  report or
                  related work. The independent  registered  public  accountants
                  shall report directly to the Audit Committee;

            o     To ensure that the Audit Committee  receives annually from the
                  Company's   independent   registered  public  accountants  the
                  information  about  all  of  the  relationships   between  the
                  independent registered public accountants and the Company that
                  the independent  registered public accountants are required to
                  provide  to the  Audit  Committee,  to  actively  engage  in a
                  dialogue with the independent  registered  public  accountants
                  about any  relationships  between the  independent  registered
                  public  accountants  and the Company or any services  that the
                  independent  registered public accountants  provide or propose
                  to provide that may affect the objectivity and independence of
                  the independent  registered public accountants and to take, or
                  recommend  that the  Board  take,  any  appropriate  action to
                  oversee the independence of the independent  registered public
                  accountants;

            o     The Audit  Committee  shall  establish  guidelines  similar to
                  those set forth in Annex A relating to the Company's hiring of
                  employees or former  employees of the  independent  registered
                  public  accountants  who  participated  in any capacity in the
                  audit of the Company;

            o     The Audit  Committee  shall  establish  policies or procedures
                  similar  to those  set  forth in  Annex B to  pre-approve  all
                  auditing services and permitted  non-audit services (including
                  fees  and  terms  thereof)  (the  "Covered  Services")  to  be
                  performed for the Company by its independent registered public
                  accountants.   The  Audit  Committee  may  form  and  delegate
                  authority   to  the   Chairman  of  the  Audit   Committee  or
                  subcommittees   consisting   of  one  or  more   members  when
                  appropriate, including the authority to grant pre-approvals of
                  audit  and  permitted   non-audit   services,   provided  that
                  decisions  of the  Chairman  or  such  subcommittee  to  grant
                  pre-approvals  shall be presented to the full Audit  Committee
                  at its next scheduled meeting;

            o     Obtain and  review a report  from the  independent  registered
                  public   accountant  at  least  annually   regarding  (a)  the
                  independent    registered   public    accountant's    internal
                  quality-control  procedures, (b) any material issues raised by
                  the  most  recent  internal  quality-control  review,  or peer
                  review,  of the firm,  or by any inquiry or  investigation  by
                  governmental or professional  authorities within the preceding
                  five years respecting one or more  independent  audits carried
                  out by the  firm,  (c) any  steps  taken to deal with any such
                  issues,  and (d) all  relationships  between  the  independent
                  registered  public  accountant  and the Company.  Evaluate the
                  qualification, performance and independence of the independent
                  registered public accountant,  including  considering  whether
                  the auditor's  quality  controls are adequate and provision of
                  permitted non-audit service is compatible with maintaining the
                  independent registered public accountant's  independence,  and
                  taking into account the opinions of management; and

                                      A-3


            o     To ensure the  rotation  of the lead (or  coordinating)  audit
                  partner (or, if required by the rules and  regulations  of the
                  SEC,  other  employees of the  independent  registered  public
                  accountants)  having primary  responsibility for the audit and
                  the  audit  partner  responsible  for  reviewing  the audit as
                  required by law.

      C.    The Company's Financial Reporting Process:

            o     To oversee the Company's selection of and major changes to its
                  accounting policies;

            o     To meet  with  the  Company's  independent  registered  public
                  accountants  and  financial  management  both to  discuss  the
                  proposed scope of the audit and to discuss the  conclusions of
                  the audit, including any items that the independent registered
                  public accountants are required by generally accepted auditing
                  standards  to discuss with the Audit  Committee,  such as, any
                  significant changes to the Company's accounting policies,  the
                  integrity of the Company's financial reporting process and any
                  proposed  changes or improvements in financial,  accounting or
                  auditing practices;

            o     To  discuss  with  the  Company's  financial   management  and
                  independent registered public accountants the Company's annual
                  results and, when appropriate, the interim results before they
                  are made public;

            o     To  review  with  management  and the  independent  registered
                  public  accountants,  prior to the  filing of an audit  report
                  with  the  SEC,  all   alternative   treatments  of  financial
                  information  within generally accepted  accounting  principles
                  that have been discussed with management, ramifications of the
                  use of such  alternative  disclosures and treatments,  and the
                  treatment   preferred   by   independent   registered   public
                  accountants;

            o     To  review  with  management  and the  independent  registered
                  public  accountants,  prior to the  filing of an audit  report
                  with the SEC,  material  written  communications  between  the
                  independent registered public accountants and management, such
                  as  any   management   letter  or   schedule   of   unadjusted
                  differences;

            o     To  review  disclosures  made to the  Audit  Committee  by the
                  Company's Chief Executive  Officer and Chief Financial Officer
                  during their certification  process for the Form 10-K and Form
                  10-Q  about  any  significant  deficiencies  in the  design or
                  operation of internal controls or material  weaknesses therein
                  and any fraud involving management or other employees who have
                  a significant role in the Company's internal controls;

                                      A-4


            o     To review with the independent  registered public accountants,
                  prior to the  filing  of an  audit  report  with the SEC,  all
                  critical accounting policies and practices to be used;

            o     To review and discuss with the Company's financial  management
                  and independent  registered  public  accountants the Company's
                  audited financial statements including qualitative  judgments,
                  appropriateness  of  accounting   principles  (old  and  new),
                  financial disclosure practices, and any observations regarding
                  the quality of accounting  principles and underlying estimates
                  and,  when   appropriate,   the  Company's  interim  financial
                  statements, before they are made public;

            o     To  recommend  to the  Board of  Directors  that  the  audited
                  financial  statements  be  included  in the  Company's  Annual
                  Report on Form 10-K;

            o     To issue for  public  disclosure  by the  Company  the  report
                  required by the rules of the SEC; and

            o     To  review  and  concur  in the  appointment,  replacement  or
                  dismissal of outside accounting firms.

      D.    Other Matters

            o     To review and  reassess  the  adequacy  of this  charter on an
                  annual basis;

            o     To review reports and any financial  information  submitted by
                  the Company to a government body or the public;

            o     To report to the Board the matters  discussed  at each meeting
                  of the Audit Committee;

            o     To administer  the procedures set forth in Annex C relating to
                  the receipt, retention and treatment of complaints received by
                  the Company regarding accounting, internal accounting controls
                  or  auditing   matters,   and  the   confidential,   anonymous
                  submission  by employees or any other  provider of  accounting
                  related services of concerns regarding questionable accounting
                  or auditing matters;

            o     To keep an open line of  communication  with the financial and
                  senior  management  and  the  independent   registered  public
                  accountants and the Board;

            o     To  review  in  advance  and  approve  any   "related   party"
                  transaction,  or series of similar transactions,  to which the
                  Company or any of its subsidiaries was or is to be a party, in
                  which the amount  involved  exceeds  $60,000 and in which such
                  related party had, or will have, a direct or indirect material
                  interest.  For  purposes  of  this  item,  a  "related  party"
                  includes any director or executive officer of the Company, any
                  nominee for election as a director, any security holder who is
                  known to the  Company  to own of record or  beneficially  more
                  than  five  percent  of  any  class  of the  Company's  voting
                  securities,  and any member of the immediate  family(1) of any
                  of the foregoing  persons.  The materiality of any interest is
                  to be  determined  on the  basis  of the  significance  of the
                  information to investors in light of all the  circumstances of
                  the particular case; and

(1)   A person's  immediate family shall include such person's spouse,  parents,
      children, siblings, mothers and fathers-in-law, sons and daughters-in-law,
      and brothers and sisters-in-law.

                                      A-5


            o     To perform other oversight functions as requested by the  full
                  Board.

V. Advisors/Funding

      In discharging  its duties  hereunder,  the Audit Committee shall have the
authority,  to  the  extent  it  deems  necessary  or  appropriate,   to  retain
independent legal,  accounting or other advisors.  The Company shall provide for
appropriate  funding, as determined by the Audit Committee,  for payment of such
compensation  as is  determined  by  the  Audit  Committee  to  the  independent
registered  public  accountants and to any other advisors  employed by the Audit
Committee.  The Company  shall also provide  funding for any other  functions or
initiatives undertaken by the Audit Committee.

                                      A-6


                                   APPENDIX B

                           HARRIS & HARRIS GROUP, INC.

                           2006 EQUITY INCENTIVE PLAN

         Section                                                            Page

1. Purpose; Types of Awards; Construction                                      1

2. Definitions                                                                 1

3. Administration                                                              4

4. Eligibility                                                                 5

5. Stock Subject to the Plan                                                   5

6. Terms of Awards                                                             6

7. General Provisions                                                          9




                           HARRIS & HARRIS GROUP, INC.

                           2006 EQUITY INCENTIVE PLAN

      1.    Purpose; Types of Awards; Construction.

      The purposes of the Harris & Harris Group, Inc. 2006 Equity Incentive Plan
(the "Plan") are to enable Harris & Harris Group, Inc. (the "Company") to afford
an incentive to non-employee and employee directors, selected officers and other
employees,  advisors and  consultants of the Company to continue as non-employee
directors,  officers, employees, advisors or consultants, as the case may be, to
increase  their  efforts on behalf of the  Company and its  subsidiaries  and to
promote the  success of the  Company's  business.  In the event that the Company
receives an exemptive  order from the U.S.  Securities  and Exchange  Commission
("SEC") to that  effect,  the Plan shall  provide for the  issuance of Awards to
former  employees of the Company,  as well.  The Plan  provides for the grant of
Options (including  "incentive stock options" and "nonqualified stock options"),
stock appreciation  rights,  restricted stock,  restricted stock units and other
equity-based  awards. The Plan is designed so that Awards granted hereunder that
are   intended  to  comply   with  the   requirements   for   "performance-based
compensation"   under   Section   162(m)  of  the  Code  may  comply  with  such
requirements. Various provisions of the Plan may require an exemptive order from
the  U.S.  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission  (the  "SEC")  prior  to  their
implementation  and accordingly,  Awards will be granted only after consultation
with the Company's general counsel.

      2.    Definitions.

      For  purposes  of the Plan,  the  following  terms shall be defined as set
forth below:

            (a) "Award" means any Option or Restricted Stock Award granted under
the Plan.

            (b) "Award Agreement" means any written agreement, contract or other
instrument or document evidencing an Award.

            (c) "Board" means the Board of Directors of the Company.

            (d)  "Change  in  Control"  means  the  occurrence  of  any  of  the
following:

                  (i) any Person is or becomes the  "beneficial  owner" (as such
            term is used in Rule 13d-3 and Rule 13d-5 under the  Exchange  Act),
            directly or indirectly,  of securities of the Company (not including
            in the securities  beneficially  owned by such Person any securities
            acquired  directly from the Company or its affiliates)  representing
            40% or more of the  combined  voting  power  of the  Company's  then
            outstanding  securities,  excluding  any Person who  becomes  such a
            Beneficial  Owner in  connection  with a  transaction  described  in
            clause (i) of paragraph (iii) below; or

                                      B-1


                  (ii)  the  following  individuals  cease  for  any  reason  to
            constitute  a majority  of the  number of  directors  then  serving:
            individuals who, on the Effective Date, constitute the Board and any
            new director  (other than a director  whose  initial  assumption  of
            office  is in  connection  with an  actual  or  threatened  election
            contest,  including  but  not  limited  to a  consent  solicitation,
            relating  to  the  election  of  directors  of  the  Company)  whose
            appointment  or election by the Board or nomination  for election by
            the Company's  stockholders was approved or recommended by a vote of
            at least  two-thirds (2/3) of the directors then still in office who
            either  were  directors  on the date  hereof  or whose  appointment,
            election or  nomination  for election was  previously so approved or
            recommended; or

                  (iii) there is  consummated a merger or  consolidation  of the
            Company or any direct or indirect subsidiary of the Company with any
            other corporation,  other than a merger or consolidation immediately
            following which the  individuals who comprise the Board  immediately
            prior  thereto  constitute  at  least a  majority  of the  board  of
            directors  of (A) any parent of the Company or the entity  surviving
            such merger or consolidation  (B) if there is no such parent, of the
            Company or such surviving entity; or

                  (iv)  the  stockholders  of the  Company  approve  a  plan  of
            complete  liquidation  or  dissolution  of the  Company  or there is
            consummated  an agreement for the sale or disposition by the Company
            of all or substantially  all of the Company's  assets,  other than a
            sale or  disposition by the Company of all or  substantially  all of
            the  Company's  assets to an  entity,  at least 60% of the  combined
            voting  power  of the  voting  securities  of  which  are  owned  by
            stockholders of the Company in substantially the same proportions as
            their ownership of the Company immediately prior to such sale.

Notwithstanding the foregoing, a "Change in Control" shall not be deemed to have
occurred  by  virtue  of  the  consummation  of any  transaction  or  series  of
integrated  transactions  immediately  following which the record holders of the
common stock of the Company  immediately  prior to such transaction or series of
transactions continue to have substantially the same proportionate  ownership in
an entity  which  owns all or  substantially  all of the  assets of the  Company
immediately following such transaction or series of transactions.

            (e) "Code" means the Internal  Revenue Code of 1986, as amended from
time to time, and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder.

            (f)  "Committee"  means the  committee  established  by the Board to
administer  the Plan,  the  composition  of which shall at all times  consist of
"non-employee  directors"  within  the  meaning  of  Rule  16b-3,  and  "outside
directors" within the meaning of Section 162(m) of the Code.

            (g)  "Company"  means Harris & Harris  Group,  Inc.,  a  corporation
organized under the laws of the State of New York, or any successor corporation.

            (h)  "Effective  Date" means March 23,  2006,  the date on which the
Plan was adopted by the Board.

                                      B-2


            (i)  "Exchange  Act" means the  Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended from time to time, and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder.

            (j)  "Fair  Market  Value"  means,  with  respect  to Stock or other
property,  the fair market value of such Stock or other  property  determined by
such  methods or  procedures  as shall be  established  from time to time by the
Board.  Unless  otherwise  determined by the Board in good faith,  the per share
Fair Market  Value of Stock as of a  particular  date shall mean (i) the closing
sales price per share of Stock on the national  securities exchange on which the
Stock is  principally  traded,  for the last preceding date on which there was a
sale of such Stock on such exchange; (ii) if the shares of Stock are then traded
in an  over-the-counter  market, the average of the closing bid and asked prices
for the shares of Stock in such  over-the-counter  market for the last preceding
date on which  there was a sale of such  Stock in such  market;  or (iii) if the
shares of Stock are not then listed on a national  securities exchange or traded
in an over-the-counter  market, such value as the Board, in its sole discretion,
shall determine.

            (k) "ISO"  means any  Option  intended  to be and  designated  as an
incentive stock option within the meaning of Section 422 of the Code.

            (l) "NQSO" means any Option that is not designated as an ISO.

            (m) "Option" means a right,  granted to a Participant  under Section
6(b)(i), to purchase shares of Stock. An Option may be either an ISO or an NQSO,
provided  that  ISOs  may be  granted  only to  employees  of the  Company  or a
"subsidiary corporation" of the Company (within the meaning of Section 424(f) of
the Code).

            (n)  "Participant"  means a person who, as a non-employee  director,
employee  director,  officer or other  employee,  advisor or  consultant  to the
Company or a subsidiary of the Company (or, if the SEC provides exemptive relief
to that effect,  a former  employee of the  Company),  has been granted an Award
under the Plan.

            (o) "Performance Goals" means performance goals based on one or more
of the following  criteria,  determined in accordance  with  generally  accepted
accounting principles, where applicable: (i) pre-tax income or after-tax income;
(ii) cumulative  realized and unrealized net appreciation;  (iii) stock price or
total stockholder return; (iv) strategic business criteria, consisting of one or
more objectives based on meeting  specified market  penetration or market share,
geographic business expansion,  customer  satisfaction,  employee  satisfaction,
human resources management,  supervision of litigation,  information technology,
or goals relating to divestitures,  joint ventures or similar  transactions;  or
(v)  any  other  criteria  determined  by the  Board  to be  appropriate.  Where
applicable,  the  Performance  Goals may be  expressed  in terms of  attaining a
specified  level of the  particular  criterion or the attainment of a percentage
increase or decrease in the particular  criterion,  and may be applied to one or
more of the Company or a subsidiary  of the Company,  or a division or strategic
business unit of the Company,  all as determined by the Board.  The  Performance
Goals may include a threshold  level of performance  below which no payment will
be made (or no vesting will occur),  levels of  performance  at which  specified
payments will be paid (or  specified  vesting will occur) and a maximum level of
performance  above which no  additional  payment  will be made (or at which full
vesting will occur). Each of the foregoing  Performance Goals shall be evaluated
in accordance with generally accepted accounting  principles,  where applicable,
and shall be subject to  certification  by the Board.  The Board  shall have the
authority to make equitable  adjustments to the Performance Goals in recognition
of unusual or  non-recurring  events  affecting the Company or any subsidiary of
the Company or the financial  statements of the Company or any subsidiary of the
Company,  in response to changes in applicable laws or regulations or to account
for items of gain, loss or expense  determined to be extraordinary or unusual in
nature or  infrequent in occurrence or related to the disposal of a segment of a
business or related to a change in accounting principles.

                                      B-3


            (p) "Person" shall have the meaning given in Section  3(a)(9) of the
Exchange Act, as modified and used in Sections 13(d) and 14(d)  thereof,  except
that such term shall not  include  (i) the  Company or any of its  subsidiaries,
(ii) a trustee or other fiduciary  holding  securities under an employee benefit
plan of the Company or any of its affiliates,  (iii) an underwriter  temporarily
holding  securities  pursuant  to an  offering  of  such  securities,  or (iv) a
corporation owned, directly or indirectly, by the stockholders of the Company in
substantially the same proportions as their ownership of stock of the Company.

            (q) "Plan"  means  this  Harris & Harris  Group,  Inc.  2006  Equity
Incentive Plan, as amended from time to time.

            (r)  "Restricted  Stock"  means  an Award  of  shares  of Stock to a
Participant  under Section 6(b)(ii) that may be subject to certain  restrictions
and to a risk of forfeiture.

            (s) "Rule  16b-3"  means Rule 16b-3,  as from time to time in effect
promulgated  by the SEC under  Section 16 of the  Exchange  Act,  including  any
successor to such Rule.

            (t) "SEC" means the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

            (u)  "Securities  Act" means the  Securities Act of 1933, as amended
from time to time, and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder.

            (v) "Stock"  means shares of the common  stock,  par value $0.01 per
share, of the Company.

      3.    Administration.

      The Plan  shall be  administered  by the  Board.  The Board may  appoint a
Committee to administer all or a portion of the Plan and to make recommendations
to the Board  with  respect to the Plan and any  Award.  To the extent  that the
Board  appoints  a  Committee  to  administer  all or a  portion  of  the  Plan,
references in the Plan to "the Board" shall be  references  to "the  Committee."
The Board may  delegate to one or more agents such  administrative  duties as it
may deem advisable,  and the Committee or any other person to whom the Board has
delegated  duties as aforesaid  may employ one or more persons to render  advice
with  respect to any  responsibility  the Board or such  Committee or person may
have under the Plan.

                                      B-4


      The Board shall have the authority in its  discretion,  subject to and not
inconsistent with the express provisions of the Plan, to administer the Plan and
to exercise all the powers and  authorities  either  specifically  granted to it
under the Plan or  necessary or  advisable  in the  administration  of the Plan,
including,  without  limitation,  the  authority  to:  (i)  grant  Awards;  (ii)
determine  the  persons to whom and the time or times at which  Awards  shall be
granted; (iii) determine the type and number of Awards to be granted, the number
of shares  of Stock to which an Award  may  relate  and the  terms,  conditions,
restrictions and performance  criteria relating to any Award,  including but not
limited  to the  effect  of a Change in  Control  on an  Award;  (iv)  determine
Performance  Goals no  later  than  such  time as  required  to  ensure  that an
underlying  Award that is intended to comply  with the  requirements  of Section
162(m) of the Code so complies; (v) determine whether, to what extent, and under
what circumstances an Award may be settled, cancelled,  forfeited, exchanged, or
surrendered;  (vi) make  adjustments  in the terms and  conditions  of,  and the
Performance Goals (if any) included in, Awards; (vii) construe and interpret the
Plan and any Award;  (viii)  prescribe,  amend and rescind rules and regulations
relating  to the Plan;  (ix)  determine  the terms and  provisions  of the Award
Agreements (which need not be identical for each Participant);  and (x) make all
other determinations deemed necessary or advisable for the administration of the
Plan.  Notwithstanding  any other provision of the Plan or any Award  Agreement,
the Board shall not take any action  that would have the effect of reducing  the
exercise  or  purchase  price of any  Award,  whether by means of  repricing  or
cancellation  and  regrant of the  Award,  without  having  first  obtained  the
approval of the Company's stockholders.

      All decisions,  determinations  and  interpretations of the Board shall be
final and binding on all persons,  including but not limited to the Company, any
subsidiary of the Company,  any  Participant  (or any person claiming any rights
under the Plan from or through any Participant)  and any stockholder.  No member
of the Board or Committee shall be liable for any action taken or  determination
made in good faith with respect to the Plan or any Award granted hereunder.

      4.    Eligibility.

      Awards  may be granted  to  Persons  who at the time of grant are  natural
persons who are non-employee directors,  employee directors,  officers and other
employees,  advisors or  consultants  of the Company,  in the  discretion of the
Board. In the event that the SEC provides  exemptive relief to that effect,  the
Board may also  grant  Awards  to  Persons  who at the time of grant are  former
employees of the  Company.  In  determining  the persons to whom Awards shall be
granted and the type of any Award  (including the number of shares to be covered
by such  Award),  the Board shall take into  account  such  factors as the Board
shall deem relevant in connection with accomplishing the purposes of the Plan.

      5.    Stock Subject to the Plan.

      The  maximum  number of shares of Stock  reserved  for the grant of Awards
under the Plan shall be 4,000,000, subject to adjustment as provided herein. All
shares of Stock  reserved  for the  grant of  Awards  under the Plan may be made
subject to Options granted under the Plan; provided,  however, that in the event
that  the SEC  issues  an  exemptive  order  with  respect  to the  issuance  of
Restricted Stock Awards under the Plan, up to 1,000,000 shares of Stock reserved
for the grant of Awards under the Plan may be made subject to  Restricted  Stock
Awards,  subject to adjustment as provided herein. No more than 1,000,000 shares
of Stock may be made subject to Awards  granted to any  Participant in any year.
Determinations  made in respect of the  limitations set forth in the immediately
preceding  sentence shall be made in a manner  consistent with Section 162(m) of
the Code.  Such shares  may, in whole or in part,  be  authorized  but  unissued
shares or shares that shall have been or may be reacquired by the Company in the
open market, in private  transactions or otherwise.  If any shares subject to an
Award  are  forfeited,  cancelled,  exchanged  or  surrendered  or if  an  Award
terminates or expires without a distribution of shares to the Participant, or if
shares of Stock are  surrendered  or withheld as payment of either the  exercise
price of an Award and/or withholding taxes in respect of an Award, the shares of
Stock with  respect to such Award shall,  to the extent of any such  forfeiture,
cancellation, exchange, surrender, withholding, termination or expiration, again
be available  for Awards under the Plan.  Upon the exercise of any Award granted
in tandem with any other  Award,  such  related  Award shall be cancelled to the
extent of the number of shares of Stock as to which the Award is exercised  and,
notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  such  number  of  shares  shall no  longer  be
available for Awards under the Plan.

                                      B-5


      In the event that the Board  shall  determine  that any  dividend or other
distribution  (whether in the form of cash,  Stock,  deemed  dividends  or other
property), recapitalization, Stock split, reverse split, reorganization, merger,
consolidation,  spin-off,  combination,  repurchase, or share exchange, or other
similar  corporate  transaction  or  event,  affects  the  Stock  such  that  an
adjustment is  appropriate  in order to prevent  dilution or  enlargement of the
rights of Participants  under the Plan, then the Board shall make such equitable
changes or  adjustments  as it deems  necessary or appropriate to any or all of:
(i) the number and kind of shares of Stock or other  property  (including  cash)
that may  thereafter  be issued in connection  with Awards;  (ii) the number and
kind of shares of Stock or other property (including cash) issued or issuable in
respect of outstanding Awards; (iii) the exercise price, grant price or purchase
price  relating  to any  Award;  provided,  that,  with  respect  to ISOs,  such
adjustment shall be made in accordance with Section 424(h) of the Code; and (iv)
the Performance Goals applicable to outstanding  Awards. In addition,  the Board
may determine that any such equitable adjustment may be accomplished by making a
payment to the Award holder,  in the form of cash or other  property  (including
but not limited to shares of Stock).

      6.    Terms of Awards.

            (a) General.  The term of each Award shall be for such period as may
be determined by the Board.  Subject to the terms of the Plan and any applicable
Award  Agreement,  payments to be made by the Company  upon the grant,  vesting,
maturation  or exercise of an Award may be made in such forms as the Board shall
determine at the date of grant or  thereafter,  including,  without  limitation,
cash, Stock or other property,  and may be made in a single payment or transfer,
in  installments  or on a deferred  basis.  The Board may make rules relating to
installment or deferred  payments with respect to Awards,  including the rate of
interest  to be  credited  with  respect to such  payments.  In  addition to the
foregoing,  the Board may impose on any Award or the  exercise  thereof,  at the
date  of  grant  or  thereafter,  such  additional  terms  and  conditions,  not
inconsistent with the provisions of the Plan, as the Board shall determine.

                                      B-6


            (b) Terms of Specified Awards.  The Board is authorized to grant the
Awards described in this Section 6(b), under such terms and conditions as deemed
by the Board to be consistent  with the purposes of the Plan. Such Awards may be
granted  with  vesting,   value  and/or  and  payment  thereof  contingent  upon
Performance Goals.  Except as otherwise set forth herein or as may be determined
by the Board,  each Award  granted under the Plan shall be evidenced by an Award
Agreement  containing such terms and conditions  applicable to such Award as the
Board shall determine at the date of grant or thereafter,  including the effect,
if any, of a Change in Control on such Award.

                  (i)  Options.  The Board is  authorized  to grant  Options  to
            Participants on the following terms and conditions:

                        (A) Type of Award.  The Award  Agreement  evidencing the
                  grant of an Option under the Plan shall  designate  the Option
                  as an ISO or an NQSO.

                        (B)  Exercise  Price.  The  exercise  price per share of
                  Stock  purchasable  under an Option shall be determined by the
                  Board,  but in no event shall the per share  exercise price of
                  any  Option be less than the Fair  Market  Value of a share of
                  Stock on the date of grant of such Option.  The exercise price
                  for Stock subject to an Option may be paid in cash,  through a
                  "broker cashless exercise" procedure approved by the Board (to
                  the extent permitted by law) or a combination of the above, in
                  any case in an amount  having a combined  value  equal to such
                  exercise   price.  An  Award  Agreement  may  provide  that  a
                  Participant may pay all or a portion of the aggregate exercise
                  price by having  shares of Stock with a Fair  Market  Value on
                  the date of exercise  equal to the  aggregate  exercise  price
                  withheld by the Company.

                        (C) Term and Exercisability of Options. Options shall be
                  exercisable  over the exercise  period (which shall not exceed
                  ten years from the date of grant), at such times and upon such
                  conditions  as the Board may  determine,  as  reflected in the
                  Award  Agreement;  provided,  that the  Board  shall  have the
                  authority to accelerate the  exercisability of any outstanding
                  Option at such time and under such circumstances as it, in its
                  sole discretion, deems appropriate. An Option may be exercised
                  to the  extent of any or all full  shares of Stock as to which
                  the Option has become exercisable, by giving written notice of
                  such exercise to the Board or its designated agent.

                        (D)  Termination  of  Employment.  An Option  may not be
                  exercised  unless:  (1) the Participant is then a director of,
                  in the employ of, or providing  services to the  Company;  and
                  (2) the Participant has remained  continuously so employed, or
                  continuously  maintained such relationship,  since the date of
                  grant of the Option;  provided,  that the Award  Agreement may
                  contain or be amended to contain provisions  providing for the
                  exercisability   of  any  Option  until  not  later  than  the
                  expiration date of such Option.

                                      B-7


                        (E) Other  Provisions.  Options  may be  subject to such
                  other conditions  including,  but not limited to, restrictions
                  on  transferability  of the shares  acquired  upon exercise of
                  such Options,  as the Board may prescribe in its discretion or
                  as may be required by applicable law.

                  (ii)  Restricted  Stock.  The  Board  is  authorized  to grant
            Restricted   Stock  to  Participants  on  the  following  terms  and
            conditions:

                        (A) Issuance and Restrictions. Restricted Stock shall be
                  subject  to such  restrictions  on  transferability  and other
                  restrictions,  if any,  as the Board may impose at the date of
                  grant or thereafter,  which  restrictions may lapse separately
                  or in combination at such times, under such circumstances,  in
                  such installments,  or otherwise,  as the Board may determine.
                  The Board may place  restrictions  on  Restricted  Stock  that
                  shall lapse,  in whole or in part, only upon the attainment of
                  Performance Goals. Unless otherwise determined by the Board, a
                  Participant  granted  Restricted  Stock  shall have all of the
                  rights of a stockholder  including,  without  limitation,  the
                  right  to vote  Restricted  Stock  and the  right  to  receive
                  dividends, including deemed dividends, thereon.

                        (B) Forfeiture.  Upon  termination of employment with or
                  service  to the  Company  during  the  applicable  restriction
                  period,  Restricted Stock and any accrued but unpaid dividends
                  that are then  subject  to  restrictions  shall be  forfeited;
                  provided, that the Board may provide, by rule or regulation or
                  in any Award  Agreement,  or may  determine in any  individual
                  case, that restrictions or forfeiture  conditions  relating to
                  Restricted  Stock  will be  waived  in whole or in part in the
                  event of terminations  resulting from any cause, and the Board
                  may in other cases waive in whole or in part the forfeiture of
                  Restricted Stock.

                        (C)  Certificates  for Stock.  Restricted  Stock granted
                  under the Plan may be  evidenced  in such  manner as the Board
                  shall determine. If certificates representing Restricted Stock
                  are   registered  in  the  name  of  the   Participant,   such
                  certificates shall bear an appropriate legend referring to the
                  terms,   conditions  and   restrictions   applicable  to  such
                  Restricted  Stock,  and  the  Company  shall  retain  physical
                  possession of the certificate.

                        (D) Dividends.  Dividends,  including deemed  dividends,
                  paid on Restricted  Stock shall be either paid at the dividend
                  payment  date,  or  deferred  for  payment  to  such  date  as
                  determined by the Board,  in cash or in shares of Stock having
                  a Fair  Market  Value  equal to the amount of such  dividends.
                  Unless otherwise determined by the Board, Stock distributed in
                  connection  with a stock  split or stock  dividend,  and other
                  property  distributed  as a  dividend,  shall  be  subject  to
                  restrictions  and a risk of  forfeiture  to the same extent as
                  the Restricted Stock with respect to which such Stock or other
                  property has been distributed.

                                      B-8


      7.    General Provisions.

            (a)  Nontransferability.  Unless  otherwise  provided  in  an  Award
Agreement,  Awards shall not be transferable by a Participant  except by will or
the laws of  descent  and  distribution  and  shall be  exercisable  during  the
lifetime of a  Participant  only by such  Participant  or his  guardian or legal
representative.

            (b) No Right to Continued Employment.  Nothing in the Plan or in any
Award, any Award Agreement or other agreement entered into pursuant hereto shall
confer  upon any  Participant  the right to  continue  in the  employ  of, or to
continue as a director of, or to continue to provide services to, the Company or
to be entitled to any remuneration or benefits not set forth in the Plan or such
Award  Agreement or other agreement or to interfere with or limit in any way the
right of the Company to terminate such  Participant's  employment or director or
independent contractor relationship.

            (c) Taxes.  The Company is  authorized  to  withhold  from any Award
granted,  any  payment  relating to an Award  under the Plan,  including  from a
distribution  of Stock,  or any  other  payment  to a  Participant,  amounts  of
withholding and other taxes due in connection with any transaction  involving an
Award,  and to take such other action as the Board may deem  advisable to enable
the  Company  and  Participants  to  satisfy  obligations  for  the  payment  of
withholding  taxes  and  other  tax  obligations  relating  to any  Award.  This
authority shall include authority to withhold or receive Stock or other property
and to make cash payments in respect  thereof in satisfaction of a Participant's
tax obligations.  The Board may provide in the Award Agreement that in the event
that a  Participant  is required to pay any amount to be withheld in  connection
with the issuance of shares of Stock in settlement or exercise of an Award,  the
Participant  may satisfy  such  obligation  (in whole or in part) by electing to
have the Company  withhold a portion of the shares of Stock to be received  upon
settlement  or  exercise  of such  Award  that is  equal to the  minimum  amount
required to be withheld.

            (d) Stockholder Approval; Amendment and Termination.

                  (i) The Plan shall take effect upon its  adoption by the Board
      but the Plan  (and any  grants  of Awards  made  prior to the  stockholder
      approval  mentioned herein) shall be subject to the requisite  approval of
      the stockholders of the Company.

                  (ii) The Board  may at any time and from  time to time  alter,
      amend,  suspend  or  terminate  the Plan in  whole  or in part;  provided,
      however,  that unless otherwise determined by the Board, an amendment that
      requires  stockholder approval in order for the Plan to continue to comply
      with  Section  162(m)  or any  other  law,  regulation  or stock  exchange
      requirement  shall not be effective  unless approved by the requisite vote
      of  stockholders.  The Board may at any time and from time to time  alter,
      amend,  suspend or  terminate  an  outstanding  Award in whole or in part;
      provided,  that in the event an  outstanding  Option  is to be  terminated
      pursuant to this clause (ii),  the Option  holder may be given  sufficient
      notice of such  termination  to permit  the  exercise  of the  then-vested
      portion of such Option prior to such Award termination.

                                      B-9


            (e)  Expiration  of Plan.  Unless  earlier  terminated  by the Board
pursuant  to the  provisions  of the Plan,  the Plan  shall  expire on the tenth
anniversary  of the  Effective  Date.  No Awards shall be granted under the Plan
after such  expiration  date.  Without  prejudice to the  authority of the Board
under Section  7(d)(ii),  the expiration of the Plan shall not affect  adversely
any of the rights of any Participant,  without such Participant's consent, under
any Award theretofore granted.

            (f) Deferrals.  The Board shall have the authority to establish such
procedures and programs that it deems  appropriate to provide  Participants with
the  ability to defer  receipt of cash,  Stock or other  property  payable  with
respect to Awards granted under the Plan.

            (g) No Rights to Awards; No Stockholder Rights. No Participant shall
have any claim to be granted  any Award under the Plan.  There is no  obligation
for uniformity of treatment among Participants.  Except as provided specifically
herein,  a  Participant  or a  transferee  of an Award shall have no rights as a
stockholder  with  respect to any shares  covered by the Award until the date of
the issuance of a stock certificate to him for such shares.

            (h) Unfunded Status of Awards. The Plan is intended to constitute an
"unfunded"  plan for  incentive and deferred  compensation.  With respect to any
payments not yet made to a Participant  pursuant to an Award,  nothing contained
in the Plan or any Award  shall give any such  Participant  any rights  that are
greater than those of a general creditor of the Company.

            (i) No Fractional  Shares.  No  fractional  shares of Stock shall be
issued or delivered pursuant to the Plan or any Award. The Board shall determine
whether cash,  other Awards or other property shall be issued or paid in lieu of
such fractional  shares or whether such fractional  shares or any rights thereto
shall be forfeited or otherwise eliminated.

            (j) Regulations and Other Approvals.

                  (i) The  obligation  of the  Company to sell or deliver  Stock
      with respect to any Award  granted  under the Plan shall be subject to all
      applicable laws, rules and regulations,  including all applicable  federal
      and state  securities  laws,  and the  obtaining of all such  approvals by
      governmental  agencies as may be deemed  necessary or  appropriate  by the
      Board.

                  (ii)  Notwithstanding  any other  provision of the Plan or any
      Award  Agreement,  no Award shall be granted to any  Participant or become
      vested or exercisable,  be exercised or settled, to the extent such grant,
      vesting,  exercise  or other  settlement  of such  Award  would  cause the
      Company to not be in  compliance  with the  applicable  provisions  of the
      Investment  Company  Act  of  1940.  It is  acknowledged  that  as of  the
      Effective Date various provisions  permissible under the Plan may require,
      prior to their  implementation,  an  exemptive  order  from the SEC  after
      taking into account any exemptive relief received by the Company.

                                      B-10


                  (iii) Each Award is subject to the requirement that, if at any
      time the Board determines,  in its absolute discretion,  that the listing,
      registration or  qualification  of Stock issuable  pursuant to the Plan is
      required by any securities  exchange or under any state or federal law, or
      the consent or approval of any  governmental  regulatory body is necessary
      or desirable as a condition  of, or in  connection  with,  the grant of an
      Award or the issuance of Stock,  no such Award shall be granted or payment
      made or Stock issued, in whole or in part,  unless listing,  registration,
      qualification,  consent or approval has been  effected or obtained free of
      any conditions not acceptable to the Board.

                  (iv) In the  event  that the  disposition  of  Stock  acquired
      pursuant  to  the  Plan  is not  covered  by a  then-current  registration
      statement  under the Securities Act and is not otherwise  exempt from such
      registration,  such Stock  shall be  restricted  against  transfer  to the
      extent required by the Securities Act or regulations  thereunder,  and the
      Board may require a Participant receiving Stock pursuant to the Plan, as a
      condition  precedent to receipt of such Stock, to represent to the Company
      in writing  that the Stock  acquired by such  Participant  is acquired for
      investment only and not with a view to distribution.

                  (v) The  Board  may  require  a  Participant  receiving  Stock
      pursuant to the Plan,  as a condition  precedent to receipt of such Stock,
      to enter into a stockholder  agreement or "lock-up" agreement in such form
      as the Board shall  determine  is  necessary  or  desirable to further the
      Company's interests.

            (k) Governing Law. The Plan and all determinations  made and actions
taken  pursuant  hereto  shall be  governed by the laws of the State of New York
without giving effect to the conflict of laws principles thereof.

                                      B-11





-------------------------------------------------------------------------

         Sign, Date and Return the
         Proxy Card Promptly Using                  [  x  ]
         the Enclosed Envelope.             Votes must be indicated
                                            (x) in Black or Blue ink.

1. Election of Directors

FOR all nominees [  ]    WITHHOLD AUTHORITY to vote  [  ]  *EXCEPTIONS   [  ]
listed below             for all nominees listed
                         below

Nominees:   DR. C. WAYNE BARDIN, DR. PHILLIP A. BAUMAN, G. MORGAN BROWNE,
            DUGALD A. FLETCHER, CHARLES E. HARRIS, DR. KELLY S. KIRKPATRICK,
            MARK A. PARSELLS, LORI D. PRESSMAN, CHARLES E. RAMSEY,
            JAMES E. ROBERTS.



(INSTRUCTIONS: To withhold authority to vote for any individual nominee,
mark the "Exceptions" box and write that nominee's name in the space
provided below.)

*Exceptions_____________________________________________________________________

          FOR  AGAINST  ABSTAIN

2         [  ]  [  ]     [   ]

3         [  ]  [  ]     [   ]

4         [  ]  [  ]     [   ]

5         [  ]  [  ]     [   ]




2 To ratify, confirm and approve the Audit Committee's selection of
  PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as the independent registered public accountant for
  the fiscal year ending December 31, 2006.


3 To approve a proposal to authorize the Company to offer long-term rights,
  including warrants and options, to purchase common stock at an exercise price
  that will not be less than the greater of the market value or net asset value
  per share at the time of issuance of the rights.

4 To approve the Company's Equity Incentive Plan.


5 To amend our Certificate of Incorporation to increase the number of authorized
  shares of common stock from 30,000,000 to 45,000,000.



At their discretion, the Proxies are authorized to vote upon such other
business, including adjournment, as may properly come before the meeting or any
adjournment or adjournments thereof.


SCAN LINE


Please sign exactly as name appears to the left. When shares are held by joint
tenants, both should sign. When signing as attorney, executor, administrator,
trustee or guardian, please give full title as such. If a corporation, please
sign in full corporation name by President or other authorized officer. If a
partnership, please sign in partnership name by authorized person.


-----------------------------------------   ------------------------------
Date      Share Owner sign here             Co-Owner sign here



--------------------------------------------------------------------------

                  HARRIS & HARRIS GROUP, INC.
                    111 West 57th Street
                    New York, NY 10019

       THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
       -----------------------------------------------------------
The undersigned hereby appoints CHARLES E. HARRIS and MARY P. BRADY and each of
them, with full power of substitution, proxies to vote at the annual meeting of
shareholders to be held on May 4, 2006 or an adjournment thereof, to represent
and to vote all the shares of common stock of Harris & Harris Group, Inc. that
the undersigned is entitled to vote with all powers the undersigned would have
if personally present, on the following matters as designated on the reverse
side and in their discretion with respect to such other business as may properly
come before the meeting or any adjournment thereof.

The Board of Directors recommends a vote "FOR" all the nominees listed in item 1
and "FOR" items 2, 3, 4 and 5.

When properly executed, this proxy will be voted as specified and in accordance
with the accompanying proxy statement. If no instruction is indicated, this
proxy will be voted "FOR" items 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5.



                                   (Continued and to be dated and signed
                                    on the reverse side.)
To change your address,
please mark this box.    [    ]


To include any comments,             HARRIS & HARRIS GROUP, INC.
please mark this box.    [    ]      P.O. BOX 11469
                                     NEW YORK, N.Y. 10203-0469