Category: San Antonio (Page 6 of 62)

San Antonio-based Xenex Raises $38 Million More

Xenex robot, courtesy photo

Xenex Disinfection Services, which makes a germ zapping robot for hospitals, just announced it has raised an additional $38 million.

The San Antonio-based company, founded in 2009, has raised $94 million to date.

Originally founded in Austin by Brain Cruver, Julie Stachowiak and Mark Stibich, the company moved its headquarters and manufacturing operations to San Antonio in 2012. That’s when Morris Miller, former Rackspace co-founder and executive, took over as Chief Executive Officer. Xenex has about 120 employees.

Essex Woodlands led the latest funding round which includes new participation from Piper Jaffray Merchant Banking and continued investment from existing investors Malin Corp. and Tectonic Ventures.

Xenex plans to use the money to grow its sales force for product development, scientific research and international expansion.

The problem the Xenex robot addresses is a deadly one. Every day, nearly 300 people die in the U.S. from a hospital acquired infection. Infections result from microorganisms such as Clostridium difficille, known as C.diff, Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, known as MRSA and carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae, known as CRE.

Xenex has created Xenex LightStrike Germ-Zapping robots that can eradicate those germs in a hospital room or surgery center easily and in less than five minutes. The robot uses pulsed xenon ultraviolet or UV light rays to disinfect and destroy deadly viruses, bacteria and spores before they pose a threat to patients and healthcare workers. The robots cost about $105,000 each.

Studies have shown that hospitals using the Xenex robots have decreased their C.diff, MRSA and Surgical Site Infection rates by 50 percent to 100 percent.

Today, about 400 hospitals, Veterans Affairs and Department of Defense facilities in the U.S., Canada, Europe, Africa and Japan use the Xenex robots.

Silicon Hills News did this profile on the company in 2015 for our annual Life Sciences 32-page print magazine.

Mailgun Raises $50 Million and Spins Out From Rackspace

Mailgun, an email startup, spins out of San Antonio-based Rackspace and announces it has raised $50 million.

Mailgun, based in San Antonio has offices in Austin and San Francisco.

Turn/River Capital led the investment round with participation from Scaleworks and Rackspace. The company plans to use the money to accelerate product development and expand customer support.

Mailgun, which is built for developers, lets them send, receive and track email easily from within their applications without managing an email server. Customers include development teams at Slack, GitHub, Stripe, Lyft, OfferUp, Zapier and Cinemark.

William Conway will lead the new startup, Mailgun, as CEO. He previously served as general manager of Mailgun inside Rackspace.

“Developers are at the heart of everything we do. We are focused on solving the daily problems developers face when integrating and managing email inside of their applications. Our independence and influx of growth capital will allow Mailgun to drive a product vision that will thrill developers when they see what is coming down the pipe,” Conway said in a news release. “Turn/River Capital’s experience growing similar developer tools makes them a perfect match to help drive Mailgun’s continued growth.”

Rackspace acquired Mailgun in 2012. The company was part of San Francisco-based Y Combinator’s 2011 accelerator program.

Tech Events to Attend in San Antonio This Week

It’s a busy week for tech events in San Antonio with Startup Weekend kicking off Friday and running through the weekend.

And the following week is the second annual San Antonio Startup Week.

MONDAY – Feb. 20 – 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Southwest Research Institute – Southwest Research Institute Annual Meeting featuring presentations and demonstrations.

WEDNESDAY– Feb. 22 – 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. at Geekdom – Pre Pitching 101: A Startup Weekend Pre-Event

THURSDAY – Feb. 23rd – 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at Geekdom – Friends of Cast Tech: Call for Mentors & Volunteers

FRIDAY – Feb. 24th – 6:30 p.m. at Geekdom – the kickoff of Startup Weekend

SATURDAY – Feb, 25th – Startup Weekend at Geekdom

Feb. 25th – 3 p.m. to 10 p.m. at Geekdom events center – Dinner & Code

SUNDAY – Feb. 26th -Startup Weekend Demo Day pitch event at 5 p.m. at Geekdom

Upcoming Events:

Feb. 27th – March 3rd – San Antonio Startup Week

Rackspace Lays Off 6 Percent of its U.S. Workers

Three months after its $4.3 billion acquisition by Apollo Global, Rackspace Tuesday announced it is cutting 6 percent of its U.S. workers.

Founded in 1998, Rackspace is one of San Antonio’s largest technology companies with about 5,000 employees worldwide. It has about 3,700 employees based at its headquarters at the former Windsor Park Mall in Windcrest, a suburb of San Antonio, and another 500 employees in Austin. That would mean the loss of about 222 jobs in San Antonio and 30 in Austin.

“We are proposing somewhat smaller reductions in our offices in other countries, through consultative processes governed by local laws,” Taylor Rhodes, Rackspace’s CEO, wrote in a blog post on the company’s website.
The news began to leak out Tuesday morning when someone posted about layoffs on the news site Reddit.

“The U.S. layoffs and proposed international reductions are personally painful, but they are necessary and manageable,” Rhodes wrote. “We’re confident we can accomplish these reductions without any effect on the expertise and exceptional customer service we provide to our customers. We have targeted these cuts primarily toward our corporate administrative expenses and management layers, while striving to create the least impact to our frontline Fanatical Support and product teams.”

In the U.S. Rackspace is cutting jobs in areas where “our workforce has grown more rapidly than our revenue,” Rhodes wrote.

Rackspace, which calls its workers “Rackers,” reports that each person laid off will receive a severance package and outplacement services and support.

“Those services will include an innovative new Community Link program we’ve created in partnership LinkedIn, other tech employers and governments in cities where we do business, and with tech advocacy groups such as Tech Bloc in San Antonio,” according to Rhodes.

ConfirmX Launches Urgent Care Check-In Service

Dr. Sherard Houston, founder of ConfirmX, courtesy photo.

Austin-based ConfirmX has launched its Urgent Care Check-In Service in Austin, San Antonio, Dallas, Houston and Phoenix, Arizona.

The company, founded by Dr. Sherard Houston, an emergency room physician, makes online search and check-in for emergency rooms and urgent care facilities easier for patients. And the company drives more business to the healthcare facilities.

Dr. Houston previously owned an urgent care center and he saw the need firsthand for a service like ConfirmX.

“I founded ConfirmX to help fellow physician-entrepreneurs reach their target patients,” Houston said. “This technology allows us to reach patients faster and offer a better overall experience through a network of providers.”

Every year, people in the U.S. make nearly 300 million visits to ERs and urgent care centers. Only 21 percent of those visits are scheduled online, but 77 percent of consumers would like to make appointments online, according to an Accenture study. That’s the need ConfirmX seeks to fill. Through its websites, consumers can find ERs and urgent care facilities that meet their needs.

A year ago, Dr. Houston moved to Austin from Plantation, Florida to launch ConfirmX, a software as a service company. Blanca Lesmes is the company’s chief commercial officer. Dr. Houston recently completed the accelerator program at DivInc, which is focused on promoting and supporting diversity in entrepreneurship.

Texas Program to Test Driverless Vehicles in Austin, San Antonio and Other Cities

Image Courtesy of Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT)

Institutions in Austin and San Antonio are collaborating on a ground breaking new pilot program in Texas to test driverless vehicles.

The alliance of organizations helped land a U.S. Department of Transportation designation for Texas as a national proving ground for testing connected and automated vehicle technologies.

The Texas Automated Vehicle Proving Ground includes Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio, the Texas Department of Transportation, Texas A&M Transportation Institute in College Station, The University of Texas at Austin’s Center for Transportation Research in Austin and 32 municipal and regional partners.

“We fully expect to see more automated driving capabilities on Texas roads in the next few years,” Steve Dellenback, vice president of SwRI’s Intelligent Systems Division, said in a news release.

Ten groups out of 60 were selected to participate in the national program to develop guidelines for developing autonomous vehicles.

“With five of the nation’s 15 fastest-growing cities in Texas and our population expected to potentially double by the year 2050, Texas must be a leader in new technology that addresses transportation challenges,” Texas Department of Transportation Deputy Executive Director Marc Williams said in a news release. “This partnership puts Texas at the forefront of automated vehicle technologies that likely will shape the future of transportation around the world.”

The Texas group will offer a variety of testing environments from high-speed barrier-separated managed lanes to low-speed urban environments such as university campuses, medical districts and transit bus corridors.

The autonomous vehicles will be tested in the following areas:

Austin Area – Austin-Bergstrom International Airport and Riverside Drive corridor

Houston Area – Texas Medical Center, Houston METRO HOV lanes, and Port of Houston

Dallas/Fort Worth/Arlington Area – UTA campus, Arlington streets, I-30 corridor and managed lanes

San Antonio Area – Fredericksburg Road/Medical Drive corridor and VIA Metropolitan Transit system

El Paso Area – Tornillo/Guadalupe Port of Entry

RealCo, a Startup Accelerator, Plans to Launch at Geekdom in San Antonio

RealCo, a startup accelerator, plans to launch in San Antonio at Geekdom next month.

The new program is aimed at business to business startups. The 15-month long program focuses on providing networking, capital, mentors and other resources to early stage startups. The program expects to have up to ten startups with rolling admissions on a quarterly cycle. It is currently accepting applications.

Startups in the program have the ability to receive up to $125,000 in funding, co-working space at Geekdom, access to investors, mentorship and other training.

Michael Girdley, co-founder of Codeup and co-founder of Geekdom Fund, is heading up the RealCo team along with Teresa Evans, co-founder of San Antonio Science and associate director of the San Antonio Angel Network and Chris Saum, co-founder and director of business development of MUD Geochemical.

“RealCo will work immediately to support entrepreneurs and collaborate with community leaders,” Saum said in a news release. “We’re looking for early stage Internet- and tech-related seed startups with high growth business models, large target markets, and business-to-business direct sales models.”

The accelerator is also seeking business or community leaders interested in mentoring in the program. The accelerator is set to launch with a party on February 20, at the Geekdom Event Centre.

Talking Australia and Texas Technology Collaboration on Australia Day

Nicola Watkinson, head of Austrade North America, Graham Weston, cofounder of Rackspace, Bob Metcalfe, inventor of Ethernet and Professor of Innovation at UT Austin and Steve Goldsmith, general manager of HipChat software for Atlassian in Austin.

By LAURA LOREK
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

Steven Ciobo, the minister for trade, tourism and investment for Australia, spent Australia Day, the day Australians celebrate the founding of its nation, in Austin promoting trade with Texas.

“There is a strong focus in continuing to diversify the Texas economy and therein lays the opportunity as I see it,” Ciobo said.

Australia and Austin have strong ties in the technology industry, Ciobo said. Australia needs to continue to look at opportunities for collaboration with Austin and Texas, he said. In Australia, the country has a strong agenda around innovation, he said. Capital, labor and commerce are global today and countries must be able to engage with one another to build successful modern businesses, Ciobo said.

Steven Ciobo, Australian Minister for Trade, Tourism and Investment

Ciobo spoke at a G’Day USA hosted luncheon Thursday afternoon at the South Congress Hotel. The event featured a panel of technology leaders including Graham Weston, co-founder of Rackspace, Bob Metcalfe, inventor of Ethernet and Professor of Innovation at the University of Texas at Austin and Steve Goldsmith, general manager of HipChat software development at Atlassian in Austin.

About a year ago, the Australian government opened an Australia Consulate-General office in Houston. The office also plans to host several events around South by Southwest.

On Wednesday night, the Australian government met with Gov. Greg Abbott for a barbecue at the Governor’s Mansion to honor “Australia Day.” The Australian Counsel-General to Texas Alastair Walton also attended the event and the luncheon.

At the luncheon, Nicola Watkinson, head of Austrade North America, the Australian government trade commission, moderated the panel discussion. She asked Goldsmith about his experience with growing Atlassian’s business in Austin.

Texans and Australians turn out to be quite similar on how they approach things, but it takes a little while to figure that out, said Goldsmith. The company’s customer support, marketing and sales is based in the U.S. and the company’s research and development operations used to be exclusively based in Sydney, but in the last few years it has become more globally distributed, he said.

Rackspace, with 4,000 employees in San Antonio and 600 employees in Austin, opened an office in Australia a few years ago, said Weston. The company has 6,000 employees altogether and $2 billion in revenue and it just recently went private, Weston said. The company also has an office in London with 1,200 employees.

If a company is thinking about expanding to another country, the U.K. is an easy one but Australia should be on very high on the list, Weston said.

“The culture between Texas and Australia is very similar,” he said. “Among the countries in the world to expand to it is certainly one of the easiest to do. And I wish we had done it years and years earlier.”

Rackspace had a very significant customer base in Australia long before the company arrived there, Weston said.

The panelists also talked about the San Antonio and Austin region and how it is developing as a powerhouse technology region in the country.

“I think of Austin as being the hotbed of innovation,” Graham said. “And I think of San Antonio as being the hotbed of execution.”

There are a handful of Austin companies that have opened offices in San Antonio when they look to scale their operations, Weston said.

Metcalfe said it’s good that all the big cities in Texas want to be innovation hubs. Creating an ecosystem for startups is a mystery and no one really knows how to do it but a research university is at the core of tech ecosystems, Metcalfe said. He not only jokes that San Antonio is a suburb of Austin, but he also jokes that Dallas-Fort Worth and Houston are suburbs.

“One element is getting critical mass,” Metcalfe said. Companies like IBM, Apple, Intel, AMD, Dell and others create a technology culture and critical mass in Austin that feeds the startup ecosystem, he said.

San Antonio is building its tech startup ecosystem through Geekdom, Metcalfe said.

Weston, who co-founded Geekdom, said the purpose of the technology focused co-working space and technology incubator, is to help spawn the next big technology company in San Antonio.

“I think it’s very important that every city create fertile soil for new companies to grow in,” Weston said.

A successful tech startup ecosystem has a research university with professors and students starting ventures, venture capital, entrepreneurs, strategic partners, early adopting customers and a vibrant tech media, Metcalfe said.

Watkinson with Austrade asked the panelists if there was an opportunity to create an even larger global virtual technology ecosystem using technology tools.
Weston said there was.

“I think there really is an opportunity for Texas to be the most Australia friendly state where we can be the launching off point,” Weston said. “I think there is an opportunity for Texas and Australia to be special partners.”

Already, Austin has a daily nonstop flight on British Airways from Austin to London, Metcalfe said. There is an opportunity to have a daily nonstop flight on Quantas Airlines from Austin to Sydney, Australia, he said.

There is already a direct flight from Dallas to Sydney, Watkinson said. Goldsmith said he takes that flight a lot.

Atlassian’s HipChat solves the problem of global communication, Goldsmith said. Its product works to break down communication barriers between geography and make it feel like a conversation even if you’re not in the same room, he said.

“Location, culture and geography are a distant second to the ability to communicate and network effectively,” Goldsmith said.

Shark Tank is Looking for Startups

Want to take a roadtrip to potentially pitch at Shark Tank?

Shark Tank, the Emmy winning entrepreneurial pitch show, is holding a casting call at the Small Business Expo in Dallas on Wednesday. The show is searching for the best entrepreneurs with the brightest ideas.

“If you’ve got a great business, product or idea and need an investment to propel you forward, then we want to meet you,” according to a promotional flyer.

The audition takes place at the Small Business Expo being held at the Dallas Convention Center, Hall A. The show will distribute numbered wristbrands between 9 a.m. and 11 a.m. Interviews begin at 10 a.m. For more information visit the Shark Tank website.

And the latest Austin-based startup to be on the show is PopUp Play, which makes an app that lets kids and families create custom playhouse designs that PopUp Play then delivers to their home. It won the 2016 SXSW Accelerator Pitch Competition and it is a Techstars company. The founders will appear on Shark Tank on Jan. 27th.

Infocyte Receives $3.4 Million in Funding

San Antonio-based Infocyte, a cybersecurity startup, received $3.4 million in Series A funding led by Austin-based LiveOak Venture Partners.

Other investors included Feik Enterprsies and Hollis Family Partnership. As part of the deal, Live Oak General Manager Venu Shamapant and Nicolas Hollis, CEO of Coherent Cyber, will join the Infocyte board of directors.

“The Infocyte team has leveraged deep domain expertise gained from years in national cyber defense to develop an innovative and proven solution that automates threat hunting,” Venu Shamapant, General Partner, LiveOak Venture Partners said in a news release. “We are excited to partner with Infocyte to bring threat hunting to a wider enterprise audience.”

Infocyte specializes in creating software that helps companies hunt for malicious software and hidden users on their networks.

“The truth is many companies are hacked and don’t even know it,” Chris Gerritz, Founder of Infocyte, said in a news release. “Investors recognize that our progressive approach to automated enterprise threat hunting empowers organizations to be proactive in discovering and dealing with security breaches.”

Infocyte’s platform seeks to automate processes that once required a lot of manpower. The software also reduces the time to detect a breach in the system and fix it.

In November of 2014, Infocyte received a $500,000 seed stage investment from LiveOak Venture Partners. The company, founded in May of 2014, also received $200,000 in initial funding from an undisclosed angel investor. Infocyte is based at Geekdom, a co-working and technology accelerator based in the Rand Building in downtown San Antonio.

Gerritz and Ryan Morris, co-founder, both formerly worked as officers in the U.S. Air Force on Security Hill at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio in cyber security roles.

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