Category: San Antonio (Page 20 of 62)

Texas Approves Equity-Based Crowdfunding Rules

By LAURA LOREK
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

Crowdfunding conceptTexas companies will soon be able to raise money from the average investor.

The Texas State Securities Board voted 4-0 on Wednesday to approve new intrastate equity-based crowdfunding rules.

The rules are expected to go into effect in late November, said Bob Elder, the board’s spokesman.

“The board and the commissioner believe there is enough of a market in Texas for intrastate crowdfunding rules,” Elder said.

That makes Texas the 13th state, and the largest to date, to adopt its own equity-based crowdfunding rules in advance of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s expected national rules. The JOBS Act of 2012 authorized the SEC to create new crowdfunding rules for the country, but they have been delayed by more than a year. So several states have taken matters into their own hands and adopted their own.

“This gives Texas residents and companies an opportunity to participate in equity crowdfunding before what the SEC plans to do,” Elder said.

Texas’ rules allow a company to raise up to $1 million a year through an approved Texas crowdfunding portal. Any resident of Texas can invest up to $5,000 per company. But only accredited investors, high net worth individuals who have assets of more than $1 million excluding their home and net income annually of $200,000, may invest any amount.

And only Texas residents are able to invest in the deals. And only Texas crowdfunding portals are able to manage those investments.

The Texas State Securities Board must approve the Texas crowdfunding portals. That process is expected to begin in late November. It’s uncertain when the first portals will begin soliciting investment for companies, Elder said.

HiveEquity, an equity crowdfunding portal, plans to submit an application and plans to begin deals as soon as possible, said Roberto “R.C.” Rondero de Mosier, partner in the RAM Law Firm. He co-founded HiveEquity with his law firm partner Nathan Roach and they’ve lined up three deals seeking between $600,000 and $1 million that plan to raise funds on the site.

“The beauty of these types of rules is it’s very Texas centric,” Rondero de Mosier said. “It’s about Texas investing for Texas.”

HiveEquity focuses just on raising funds for real estate deals in Texas. The money will be used to pay for constructing a building or buying land and developing it, Rondero de Mosier said. The first three deals are in Austin and San Antonio, he said. But the portal expects to raise funds for real estate projects throughout Texas, he said.

The board first issued its proposed rules on May 9th and has been soliciting comment from the general public through August.

The private offerings are exempt from the usual level of oversight and regulations involved in raising capital through conventional means, Elder said.

Investors are required to be told these securities are inherently risky, because these are exempt offerings, Elder said.

“Investors must also be told the money they put in may be illiquid,” Elder said. “There’s no resale market for these securities. Once you put this money in these companies a lot of restrictions apply.”

Another key part of the process involves the portals establishing communications channels with investors, Elder said. The goal is to get a dialog going to help the investors make an informed decision, he said.

Hand and cap with moneyThe crowdfunding rules apply to all types of companies seeking funding from high-tech startups to mom and pop restaurants, hair salons and dog grooming businesses.

The equity-based crowdfunding rules are not to be confused with perk-based crowdfunding on sites like Rockethub, Kickstarter and IndieGoGo. Those sites allow individuals to crowdsource donations to a project or product in exchange for a reward. But the people donating to the site do not get any ownership of the company. Under the equity-based crowdfunding rules, investors do become owners of the company.

“This legitimizes friends and family money in a big way,” said Hall Martin, head of the Texas Entrepreneur Network.

Companies initially get their first few dollars of capital from friends and family, Martin said. And the Texas equity-based crowdfunding gives them a vehicle to take an equity stake in the company, he said.

Martin is putting in an application with the Texas State Securities Board to run an equity-based crowdfunding portal. He currently runs the Texas Entrepreneurs Network Funding Portal that allows companies to do rewards-based crowdfunding as well as raise money from accredited investors.

The companies are generally looking for $50,000 to $250,000 in funding, Martin said.

Martin charges companies $247 a month to run a campaign on his site. He uses Goldstar Bank in Amarillo to handle the transactions, he said. Companies must specify a minimum amount and a maximum amount they want to raise, he said.

“We have companies that want to use the intrastate campaign,” he said. “It probably will not be ready until the beginning of December.”

Accredited investors make up less than 5 percent of the population, Martin said. This provides a way for startups to tap into accredited investors and regular investors to finance a deal. They might get a check for $25,000 from accredited investors and the rest from regular investors in $5,000 individual investments, he said. Companies are going to need lawyers to get their documents together, he said.

These are the proposed rules, which are similar to the approved rules, which will be published next week.

TEDxSanAntonio Sparks a City of Ideas

By LAURA LOREK
Founder of Silicon Hills News

Graham Weston, chairman of Rackspace and Susan Price, founder of TEDxSanAntonio

Graham Weston, chairman of Rackspace and Susan Price, founder of TEDxSanAntonio

San Antonio has evolved into the City of Ideas, said Graham Weston, chairman of Rackspace.

“The whole genesis of TED is about sparking ideas and spreading ideas and that happens every year at TEDxSanAntonio,” Weston said

This is a culture Rackspace wants to be a part of, Weston said. Rackspace served as the main sponsor of the daylong TEDxSanAntonio event at its headquarters’ event center on Saturday.

“The speakers for TEDxSanAntonio share new ideas with us and also give us a glimpse of some of the cool stuff people are doing across the city that often is unknown,” Weston said. “Every year that I come to TEDxSanAntonio it makes me very proud of our city and our region about all of the interesting things that are happening here.”

This is the biggest TEDxSanAntonio ever, said Susan Price, the event’s organizer. The event, now in its fifth year, has a core organizing committee of seven people and 40 volunteers, Price said. While the first event held at Trinity University had just a few hundred people, this one attracted more than 650 people. TEDx is based on the TED conference, an annual event focused on spreading ideas about technology, entertainment and design, but TEDxSanAntonio is organized locally under a license from TED.

“We try to feature ideas that are springing up, and around and about San Antonio,” Price said. “We fly a few speakers in every year with ideas that are relevant to San Antonio.”

One of those speakers was Trevor Muir, a teacher at Kent Innovation High School in Grand Rapids, Michigan. He received a standing ovation following his talk on changing schools to an environment of engagement in which students tackle projects and solve problems in the real world.

His students learned about World War II by interviewing veterans in the community and creating film documentaries, which they later showed to the entire community. His students also created websites and projects for immigrants new to their area so they would know how to do simple things, most people take for granted, like take a public bus or turn on the lights.

Susan Price, founder of TEDxSanAntonio

Susan Price, founder of TEDxSanAntonio

This year’s TEDxSanAntonio theme, “Ideas in Action” means the community doesn’t just want to discuss ideas, but they want to put them into motion, Price said.
“We’re giving them a call to action,” she said.

Jorge Amodio, an engineer, attends TEDxSanAntonio every year.

“It’s always inspiring,” Amodio said. “It’s a great community to share what you know and to learn from others.”

The speakers evoke emotions from the audience ranging from laughter to tears. Molly Cox and Victor Landa served as the emcees for the event and provided light-hearted transitions between some difficult subjects.

Sarah-Jane Murray, a professor at Baylor University, opened TEDxSanAntonio with a talk on how people are hardwired for stories through neural coupling. She recalled a story from her childhood in Ireland about her Poodle, who yearned to be a sheepdog.

“If you tell a story well, and you’re not just talking about language, you’re causing your brain to fire on all of its cylinders,” Murray said.

The brain of someone listening to a great story mirrors the brain of the person telling the story, Murray said. Stories affect people because they alter their chemistry, she said. When a story is well told, two major chemicals are released into the brain like cortisol for stress and duress and oxytocin for empathy, Murray said.

“Stories are the great levelers of this world not because they eradicate our differences but because they transcend them,” Murray said.

People are 22 times more likely to remember a story than fact alone, she said.

That’s why people have to be careful about the stories they tell, Murray said.

“We need stories that inspire us to greatness,” she said.

Throughout the day, the TEDxSanAntonio speakers did just that.

John Lambert discussed lessons from improv and how the theater taught him how to deal with life’s unscripted twists, turns and tragedies like the death of his wife, Maria Ivania from cancer.

Leezia Dhalla told a story of her life as an undocumented American. She learned just before her 21st birthday that she didn’t have legal papers to stay in the U.S., where she had lived since the age of six. Her family moved from Canada.

Dhalla received a degree from Northwestern University and got a work permit in 2012 that allows her to stay in the U.S. for two more years.

“We try to stay positive but it’s hard to keep your head down and your chin up at the same time,” Dhalla said.

Today, 11 million people are living in the shadows with papers, Dhalla said. Half came here without authorization; the other half came here legally including Dhalla’s family. They waited for their applications for citizenship to process but a series of mistakes happened and the documents never got approved.

She’s hoping immigration reform will give her and her family an opportunity to legally stay in the U.S. permanently. She asked the audience to help make that a reality.

Kori Ashton, founder of WebTegrity, created a painting with the big, bold letters “Inspire,” on stage while she told stories about her family and her mother’s struggle and triumph over Polio. She encouraged the audience to live a great story and inspire someone.

Steve Vrooman, a professor of Communications Students at Texas Lutheran University, encouraged the audience to share more information about themselves with others. That creates a connection that is more than just transactional, he said.

Studies show on social media, followers of a person, brand or company, share just 3 percent to 15 percent of all the content posted. Vrooman contends if the content was about people and not information, they would share more.

“Share more,” he said.

Joshua Singer and Abhinav Suri, cofounders of Apps for Aptitude and School's Out Hackathon.

Joshua Singer and Abhinav Suri, cofounders of Apps for Aptitude and School’s Out Hackathon.


And Joshua Singer and Abhinav Suri, two high school seniors, encouraged the audience to hack or create something new. They want to create a hacker culture in San Antonio. They’ve launched a company, Apps for Aptitude to encourage others and they host an annual School’s Out Hackathon for high school students.

Luz Cristal Glangchai, an engineer, wants to encourage more girls to become engineers. She founded VentureLab in San Antonio. The nonprofit organization runs a series of programs geared at kids as young as five to high school age to get them interested in entrepreneurship and experiment in the science, technology, engineering and math fields. Three student-run companies from VentureLab have raised more than $240,000, according to Glangchai.

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TedXSanAntonio Takes Place Saturday at Rackspace

Ideas-In-Action-TEDxSanAntonio-280wFor five years, a group of San Antonio’s best and brightest have put on TedXSanAntonio and it’s quite a show.

This year, the theme is “Ideas in Action” and features a variety of speakers on diverse topics ranging from cultivating a hacker culture to nurturing girls in technology to how to tackle the growing epidemic of diabetes.

The event kicks off at 8:30 a.m. with breakfast and exhibits at Rackspace Hosting’s events center at its headquarters in the former Windsor Park Mall in San Antonio.

The talks begin at 10 a.m. and run until 5 p.m. with a break for lunch and an after party on site that runs until 8 p.m.

Online ticket sales ended Tuesday. If tickets are still available at the door, they will cost $100 each.

The speakers include: (description supplied by TedXSanAntonio)

Kori Ashton, Co-Owner of WebTegrity
Live a Great Story and Inspire Someone!

Clara Brenner, CEO, Tumml
Why social impact startups are set up to fail

Leezia Dhalla, Executive Communications Specialist, Rackspace
Hiding In Plain Sight: My Life As An Undocumented American

Eric Anthony Dorsa, Wine Steward
Dragged Out of the Closet

Pliny Fisk III, Founder and Co-Director, Center for Maximum Potential Building Systems
A Different Future for the Planet, Naturally

Luz Cristal S. Glangchai, Founder and CEO, VentureLab
From Stand-up to Start-up: Growing Girl Techies and Entrepreneurs

Laurie Ann Guerrero, Poet Laureate of San Antonio
What I Learned from My City

Mitch Hagney, Chief Executive Officer of LocalSprout
Distributed Urban Agriculture

John Lewis Lambert, Actor, Comedy Sportz
Strength in Surrender: Onstage and in Life

Leo Lopez III, Medical Student, University of Texas School of Medicine San Antonio
The New Drug Trade

Rhonda M. Martin, Ph.D.
Accomplished Program Manager, USAA
Destructive Leadership and the Millennial Workforce

Harry Max, VP Product & Design, Rackspace
The Problem is Not the Problem

Trevor Muir, Teacher, Kent Innovation High School (Grand Rapids, Michigan)
School Should Take Place in the Real World

Oscar J. Muñoz, Director, Texas A&M Colonias Program
Third World in Texas: Myths and Realities

Sarah-Jane “SJ” Murray, Story Rhetoric expert, Baylor University
Hardwired for Story

Dr. Thomas Schlenker, Director, San Antonio Metropolitan Health District
Getting Serious About Diabesity

Suzanne B. Scott, General Manager, San Antonio River Authority
Confessions of the San Antonio River

Cindy A. Sebek, Founder, Gracious Gift Wines
Facing Your Fears with a Purpose

Joshua Singer and Abhinav Suri, Co-founders, Apps for Aptitude
The Birth of a Hacker Culture

Steven S. Vrooman, Professor of Communication Studies, Texas Lutheran University
Our Brains are A’Twitter

Finale:
Chacho & Brance, The Borderland Blues Experience
Lorenzo “Chacho” Saldana – Vocals, Harmonica, Guitar
and Brance Arnold – Guitar, Vocals

South and Southeast Austin to Get Google 1 Gigabit Internet in December

By LAURA LOREK
Founder of Silicon Hills News

David Anthony, technical program manager, Mark Strama, city manager and Parisa Fatehi-Weeks, community impact manager with Google.

David Anthony, technical program manager, Mark Strama, city manager and Parisa Fatehi-Weeks, community impact manager with Google.

Google plans to launch its 1 Gigabit Fiber Internet service in South and Southeast Austin in December.

“I want to emphasis off the top, that is where we will start,” said Mark Strama, city manager for Google Fiber. “This is not where we will finish. We will be rolling this network out in segments throughout the entire city. But we have to start somewhere.”

“Because we are building it from the ground up we can’t deploy the whole city at once,” Strama said.

In April of 2013, Google announced Austin as the latest location for its Google Fiber. It planned to launch the service in mid-2014, but the project has taken longer than originally expected because of weather delays and other issues.

Since Google announced its plans, AT&T and Grande Communications have also begun to roll out their own 1 Gigabit Internet service in Austin.
In August, AT&T launched its 1 Gigabit per second Internet service to tens of thousands of its customers in Austin.

Google welcomes the competition, Strama said. Google wants everyone to have access to the fastest Internet possible, he said.

Fiber TruckHigh speed broadband Internet has a transformative effect on society, Strama said. Business models like Youtube and Netflix weren’t possible in a dial-up Internet world. But Google, by making the Internet 100 times faster, will create all kinds of new businesses and applications that entrepreneurs and inventors will dream up, he said.

Video conferencing applications will be some of the first real applications of Gigabit data, Strama said.

Installing Google fiber is a massive construction project, said David Anthony, technical program manager. The project involves planning, permitting and deploying fiber optic cable, he said.

Google is installing 20 Fiber huts, 1,000 telecommunications cabinets and 3,000 miles of fiber optic cable, Anthony said.

GoogleFiber_Austin_mapAustin is the third city to get Google’s 1 Gigabit network. In 2012, Google deployed a 1 Gigabit network in Kansas City, Kansas and Kansas City, Missouri. Google also provides a 1 Gigabit network in Provo, Utah.

In February, Google invited 34 cities nationwide including San Antonio to explore what it would take to bring Google Fiber to their city. Strama said he didn’t have any updates on San Antonio yet, but he expected to announce something soon.

The U.S. lags the rest of the world when it comes to providing high speed Internet. The U.S., which ranks 14th in the world in Internet speed, has average connection speed of 11.4 Mpbs. Only 13 percent of those connections are fiber, compared to 86 percent in Japan.

Google is providing free Gigabit Internet access to 100 nonprofit organizations in the city.

Silicon Hills News’ Latest Magazine on Tech Startups Taking Off

Farewell Atlantis
By LAURA LOREK
Founder of Silicon Hills News

Rockets launching are a symbol of Texas’ rich history in the space industry.

Although innovation has become a buzzword in many circles it still rings true in Texas and the neighboring states of Louisiana and Mississippi, which all have NASA facilities.

Space exploration is at that heart of innovation.

First, the nation raced to put astronauts on the Moon. Mission accomplished. Next, NASA built Skylab and then took 10 years and 30 missions to complete the International Space Station. In September, NASA announced a $6.2 billion contact with private companies SpaceX, a startup, and Boeing to shuttle astronauts to the ISS.

And now NASA has sets its sights on taking humans to Mars.

Talk about big ideas. Texas has ideas as big as the state. And that’s evident when you look at the tech startups coming out of Central Texas. They aim to tackle big problems and deliver clever solutions.

The ecosystem of investors, law firms, accountants, public relations firms, accelerators and incubators, banks, universities, government departments, chambers and support agencies all help to make this a strong region for technology and innovation. But it’s the people who make things happen. And in this issue, you’ll meet one of them, Jacqueline Hughes, creator of the Austin Startup Week. And we’ll introduce you to even more people who make up the great tech scene in our next issue.

For now, enjoy these stories of entrepreneurs creating something from nothing and pushing the envelope of innovation.

Without a doubt, the tech industry is white-hot and taking off in Austin and San Antonio. The sky is the limit.

Silicon Hills News Creates a Geek Calendar for 2015

What is the cost of customer acquisition?

That’s one metric a lot of entrepreneurs with the latest, greatest invention overlook. Just because you create a great website or product doesn’t mean people will use it. You’ve got to market it.

And Silicon Hills News, with a tech-savvy central Texas readership, is a great way to do that.

And here’s an excellent opportunity to put your Startup or established tech company front and center on the walls of central Texas’ tech community. Buy a spot on the first annual Silicon Hills News Geek calendar. If you don’t want to plop down $300 or $500 to be the featured company for a month, then you can pay as little as $75 to highlight a date on the calendar.

We’ll also take a professional shot of your company or founders in your offices or a location that you select.

We’ll be distributing 1,000 copies of the Calendar right before the holidays. So act now to ensure you get a spot!

This is going to be fun!

Ten Startups to Watch in Austin and San Antonio

orb of fireThe criteria for being a hot startup in Central Texas is the founders need to disrupt an existing industry and create something compelling enough that people want to open up their wallets and buy their product.
The following ten startups in Austin and San Antonio fit that bill.

In Austin

Makexyz – a 3-D printing marketplace that links people who need something made with 3-D printers to people who have 3-D printers in their neighborhoods. Received an undisclosed amount in an investment from Intel Ventures this year.

The Daily Dot – Aims to be the newspaper of the Internet. The startup media publication launched in 2011 with a $600,000 angel investment and has grown steadily. Earlier this year, the Daily Dot acquired The Kernel, a U.K.-based online publication covering the culture of the Internet.

Silvercar – Founded in 2013, this startup created an App that lets business travellers rent a car – an Audi 4 – without any hassle at the airport. The company has raised $31 million since launch. The service is available in Austin, Dallas, Los Angeles, Miami, Phoenix and Denver.

Clarify – has created an API media search platform. Its technology allows people to search through video and audio files easily using keywords. The startup is backed by Projector Capital and angel investment. It was formerly named OP3NVoice , an alumnus of the Techstars London program, Fintech Innovation lab and the BBC Media Lab.

TrustRadius – Founded in 2012, the startup has raised $5 million and has created a platform for software users to review business software products. TrustRadius is used by 100,000 software buyers each month to make more informed decisions. Its directory includes more than 6000 in-depth reviews across 1,635 software products.”‘

In San Antonio

Storific – the company, originally founded in Paris in 2009, has relocated to San Antonio and is based at Geekdom, the downtown coworking and tech incubator. Its app, which is available for download on both iPhone and Android devices, lets people order and pay for food and drinks on their mobile phone.

Codeup – Founded in 2012, Codeup, based at Geekdom, offers 12-week boot camps to teach technical skills to people. It also offers free teen workshops. The startup, founded by Michael Girdley, Chris Turner and Jason Straughan, won the 2014 InnoTech Beta Summit.

WellAware.us – This startup provides a remote monitoring and production management platform for the oilfield. It recently raised $37 million in funding from Billionaire Carlos Slim, Ed Whitacre Jr., former CEO of AT&T and Former Vice President Dick Cheney.

TrueAbility – A cloud-based technical assessment tool for Linux professionals. It’s also a job board for technical positions. The startup, founded in 2012 and based at Geekdom, participated in the Techstars Cloud program and has attracted more than $2 million in venture capital.

Soloshot – This startup, founded in 2012, has created a self-tracking robotic camera on a tripod that allows people to film themselves surfing, skateboarding, skiing, motor biking and more. Soloshot won the InnoTech Beta Summit in 2013. The company has 15 employees and its products are available in more than 200 stores.

Drink Up! It’s International Coffee Day

iStock_000017583538Medium

“We want to do a lot of stuff; we’re not in great shape. We didn’t get a good night’s sleep. We’re a little depressed. Coffee solves all these problems in one delightful little cup.” – Jerry Seinfeld

Today is International Coffee Day.

What does that mean? it’s a global marketing gimmick designed to get you to go out and celebrate with coffee. But seriously, coffee is one of civilization’s oldest and most revered drinks. In A History of the World in Six Glasses, Tom Standage writes: “Coffee also originated in the Arab world and went on to inspire scientific, financial and political revolutions in Europe during the Age of Reason, when coffeehouses became centres of intellectual exchange.”

In Austin, PayPal is also offering coffee drinkers a special today. “PayPal is inviting java lovers to enjoy a cup of coffee, without using cash of course, by using the PayPal app to “check in” to pay; no cash or swiping a card required. Joe-seekers will get $3.00 off which also allows these merchants to attract new customers and ensure repeat coffee drinkers.” You can use the PayPal app for the discount at Caffe Medici, Dominican Joe, Seventh Flag Coffee, Irie Bean Coffee and Mozarts Coffee Roasters. Also, PayPal is hosting an after hours coffee tasting with A Taste of Koko from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Seventh Flag Coffee Co., 1506 S. 1st St. on Oct. 1st.

So don’t feel guilty gulping down an extra cup of joe today. It’s a day to indulge. And here’s some of our top picks for places to grab a cup of fine coffee in Austin and San Antonio.

Juan Pelota – Lance Armstrong owns this coffee shop which shares a building with Mellow Johnny’s bicycle shop. Great coffee and a fun place to visit.
4th & Nueces Streets
Austin, TX 78701
512 – 473-0222

Caffe Medici – Three locations in Austin, and the downtown one is in the Austonian. It’s has a sleek, modern hip look to it but it’s atmosphere is laid back and it’s a great place for a meeting.
200 Congress Ave
Austin, TX 78701
512-827-2770

Jo’s Coffee – A great people watching place on Congress Ave. It’s outdoor café with spectacular coffee and good sandwiches too. It’s building sports some interesting graffiti too.
1300 S. Congress Ave.
Austin, TX 78704

Halcyon – Coffee, bar and lounge that serves chocolate espresso martinis, tableside s’mores, and grilled paninis.
218 W. 4th St.
Austin, TX 78701

Lola Savannah Coffee Lounge – This West Lake Hills coffee shop is a great place for meetings and serves up delicious coffee.
6317 Bee Caves Road
Austin, TX 78746

And in San Antonio:

Halcyon Southtown – This coffeehouse, lounge and bar is part of the same ownership as the Austin one. It serves chocolate espresso martinis, tableside s’mores, and grilled paninis.
1414 S. Alamo St. No. 101
San Antonio, TX 78210

Olmos Perk Coffee – Serves up great lattes and a good selection of pastries. It’s a comfortable place to hang out and work with a row of dedicated cubicles available on first come, first serve basis.
5223 N. McCullough Ave.
San Antonio, TX 78212
210-858-2956

Local Coffee – With locations in Stone Oak to the North and the Pearl Brewery closer to downtown and Alamo Heights, this locally owned coffee shop has become a locals favorite.
5903 Broadway
San Antonio, TX 78209
210-267-5494

Revolucion Coffee + Juice – Serving up a wide variety of coffee drinks as well as cold pressed juices.
7959 Broadway #507
San Antonio, TX 78209
210-701-0725

La Taza Coffee House – A favorite place for coworking and having meetings over a cup of excellent coffee. It’s located at the Brookhollow Shopping Center in North Central San Antonio.
15060 San Pedro
San Antonio, TX 78232
210-494-8292

Also, Krispy Kreme, McDonald’s and Dunkin Donuts are all offerings customers free coffee today.

YupiCall Wants to Connect People Internationally for Less Money

By JONATHAN GUTIERREZ
Reporter for Silicon Hills News

Julian Flore, founder of YupiCall

Julian Flore, founder of YupiCall

Much like social media sites Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, YupiCall aims to connect consumers with one another no matter where they are in the world.

YupiCall’s international calling services work with or without a smartphone and don’t require an Internet connection.

Julian Flores, a successful Mexican entrepreneur who founded SMS Gate, is the founder and CEO of YupiCall, a startup at Geekdom , a coworking and technology accelerator in San Antonio.

“It’s about bringing people together, allowing friends and families to talk to each other without worrying about a huge phone bill and Internet connectivity,” he said. “It doesn’t matter if you’re calling from a big metropolis like New York or San Francisco. Even calling from New Delhi to La Paz, you are able to connect. The only thing you need is a regular cell phone.”

Since incoming calls are free almost everywhere in the world, YupiCall is able to help people stay connected by simply having them text the phone number they want to call to YupiCall’s local number in any country. YupiCall then calls that person to initiate the call and connect him or her with the person in the country they are trying to contact. It sounds like it could potentially be a long process to connect with YupiCall, but the task is seamless and happens just as fast as a regular call.

YupiCall has put a lot of effort into helping the world use its service without being a huge financial burden. The first 30 minutes of YupiCall’s service is free, but after that, YupiCall charges its customers a competitive rate.

Any mobile phone can use YupiCall via its texting capabilities, so users are not forced to search for Wi-Fi or buy expensive international calling plans with their service providers to use YupiCall’s services.

ads_facebookFlores sought advice from James Brehm, a telecommunications and IT consultant, on how to improve YupiCall, and although Brehm was skeptical about YupiCall initially, after giving it a test run, he realized how intuitive and useful it could potentially be for people around the world.

“I’ve been doing this since 2002 and I’ve worked with over 100 different UIP services that are trying to differentiate themselves,” Brehm said. “It’s very rare that one catches my attention because many of them are similar. This is different, and I can see that this can be almost viral to people outside the U.S..”

Gloria Cecilia Morales-Fusco, a YupiCall customer, who also helped with product testing in the company’s early developmental stages, is a big fan of YupiCall’s service.

“First of all, YupiCall is really cheap,” Morales-Fusco said. “That’s what caught my attention first. It’s inexpensive and it’s really easy to use. I actually live in Spain. Right now, I’m visiting family in Mexico. I use it all the time to call my family back here in Mexico and it’s really great.”

Morales-Fusco had one word to describe her experiences with international calling before subscribing to YupiCall.

“Expensive,” she said. “I used to get with my mom, and I would tell her, ‘Mom, let’s Skype or FaceTime.’ We didn’t use international calling services because it was too expensive. Now, I can call her any time I want. That’s why I’m such a fan. My friends in Spain, I tell them all the time to use this because they have other friends in Europe. They use it all the time now, so I recommend it, 100 percent.”

YupiCall, with 8,000 customers, has recently released an application for Android users, and it is readily available on Google Play now. An iOS version of the application is soon to be released and can be downloaded in the iPhone online App Store.

The Central Texas Life Sciences Industry is Booming

By LAURA LOREK
Founder of Silicon Hills News

Scientific researchTeVido BioDevices, a startup in Austin, recreates nipples and other body parts with 3-D printers using human cells.

iTraumaCare in San Antonio has created a life-saving clamp that quickly and easily prevents blood loss.

WiseWear, based in both San Antonio and Austin, has created a patch-like fitness device to track vital signs and more while working out.

Those are just a few of the biotech startups you will read about in this first annual issue of Silicon Hills News focused on the life sciences industry in Central Texas. This is Silicon Hills News’ second print magazine. The first, a field guide to Silicon Hills, debuted at South by Southwest Interactive in March and our Kickstarter backers made it possible. This issue is possible thanks to our advertisers: BioMed SA, the Texas State University Small Business Development Center, bankSNB, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, the Greater Austin Chamber of Commerce, Texans for Economic Progress, the World Stem Cell Summit, Geekdom and the University of Texas at San Antonio. Our next issue is on technology startups and will be published in October.

And thank you to the writers for this issue: Susan Lahey, Jonathan Gutierrez. Tim Green and Leslie Anne Jones.

It’s an amazing time to be in the healthcare and biosciences industry with all the innovation going on in treatments, drug development, medical devices and more.

In Austin, the life sciences industry generates more than $1 billion in economic activity, according to a recent report from the Austin Technology Council. Its strengths are in pharmaceutical manufacturing, research and development in physical, engineering and life sciences, research and development in biotechnology, surgical appliance and supplies manufacturing and biological product manufacturing.

The industry is expected to grow with the new Dell Medical School at the University of Texas at Austin. The building is under construction now, and the school is expected to admit its first class in 2016.

A university-backed health science center can serve as a catalyst for a thriving healthcare and biotechnology industry in a city.

Look no further than San Antonio to see the impact of the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio on the city. The Health Science Center serves as one of the cornerstones and catalysts of San Antonio’s bustling biosciences and healthcare industry, which employs more than one in every six jobs in San Antonio and has an overall economic impact of more than $29 billion, according to BioMed SA.
The Health Science Center has more than 3,000 students enrolled in five schools, which award 69 health-related degree specialties and pre- and post-baccalaureate certification programs.

Research organizations, private sector companies and the U.S. military drive the bioscience industry growth in San Antonio, according to BioMed SA. In addition to the Health Science Center, other major contributors to San Antonio’s industry include the University of Texas at San Antonio, InCube Labs Texas, the Texas Biomedical Research Institute, the Texas Research Park, Barshop Institute for Longevity and Aging Studies, Cancer Therapy and Research Center, Southwest Research Institute, San Antonio Army Medical Center, South Texas Accelerated Research Therapeutics and the National Trauma Institute.
Central Texas is a powerful region. When both communities collaborate and cooperate the region grows stronger and even more powerful. Cities no longer compete against each other. Austin, San Antonio and San Marcos are all thriving. The region competes globally for the best talent, resources, companies and institutions. And it has become a global hotspot for innovation in the life sciences industry with a cluster of universities, research and development institutions, medical technology startups and established companies.

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