Page 171 of 351

Innovation is Key to the Future of Austin’s Healthcare Industry

By LAURA LOREK
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

Panelists Nancy Harvey, entrepreneur in residence at the University of Chicago School of Medicine, Lanham Napier, former CEO at Rackspace and now a partner at BuildGroup, a growth stage VC firm, Mike Millard, executive director of innovation and commercialization at Seton Healthcare Family and Bob Metcalfe, inventor of Ethernet, co-founder at 3Com, partner emeritus at Polaris Partners and now professor of innovation at the University of Texas at Austin.

Panelists Nancy Harvey, entrepreneur in residence at the University of Chicago School of Medicine, Lanham Napier, former CEO at Rackspace and now a partner at BuildGroup, a growth stage VC firm, Mike Millard, executive director of innovation and commercialization at Seton Healthcare Family and Bob Metcalfe, inventor of Ethernet, co-founder at 3Com, partner emeritus at Polaris Partners and now professor of innovation at the University of Texas at Austin.

Austin’s healthcare landscape is poised to change dramatically with the new Dell Seton Medical Center at the University of Texas, said Josh Jones-Dilworth.

Dilworth is a member of The Fifty, a group of Austin residents who have committed to raise $50 million to help finance the new hospital. It is scheduled to open in 2017 and will be across Red River Street from the new Dell Medical School at UT.

The Fifty hosted a panel on “The Future of Care” focused on the venture capital industry, innovation and startups Tuesday afternoon at Athenahealth offices at the Seaholm Power Plant.

“This new ecosystem, if we do it right, is going to throw off a lot of new, interesting, world changing companies,” Dilworth said. “It will create a lot of jobs. It will make Austin a better place to live and do business.”

The new Dell Seton Medical Center at UT, courtesy photo

The new Dell Seton Medical Center at UT, courtesy photo

Seton, part of Ascension, the nation’s largest Catholic and nonprofit hospital system, is investing $245 million to build the Dell Seton Medical Center. The Fifty has pledged to raise another $25 million from the community to match a $25 million donation by the Michael and Susan Dell Foundation.

The goal is to keep healthcare accessible to everyone in Austin no matter what his or her walk of life, Dilworth said.

At the event, Nancy Harvey, entrepreneur in residence at the University of Chicago School of Medicine, served as moderator. The panelists included Mike Millard, executive director of innovation and commercialization at Seton Healthcare Family, Lanham Napier, former CEO at Rackspace and now a partner at BuildGroup, a growth-stage VC fund and Bob Metcalfe, inventor of Ethernet, co-founder at 3Com, partner emeritus at Polaris Partners and now professor of innovation at the University of Texas at Austin.

To start off, Harvey asked the panelists to mention one thing they would like to have in Austin healthcare today.

“I think I would just want one bill,” Millard said. “That’s where my bar is now, just one bill, not 30 pieces of paper every time when you go to the doctor.”

Napier said he wanted to see the doctor within one day of calling for an appointment.

“I would like to find a doctor who thinks his time is less valuable than mine,” Metcalfe said.

The panelists also want the healthcare industry to focus on big problems like prevention and to find cures for cancer, obesity, and diabetes and to focus treatments on personalized medicine tailored to a person’s genome.

“I would like to challenge the Dell Medical School to lower the BMI of the population of Travis County by 10 points to 20 points and that would do a world of good,” Metcalfe said.

The healthcare industry should also make sure it is building innovation into the new system, Metcalfe said.

To encourage innovation, Napier recommended that the artificial intelligence group at UT link to the medical school to use cognitive technologies around diagnostics.

“So much of medicine is diagnostic,” Napier said.

The healthcare industry is slow to change, decision-making is difficult and the major players have a lack of competitive understanding, Millard said.

“So even when you bring in innovation, they are incentivized to do exactly what they have been doing,” he said. “They are not incentivized to compete.”

The progress of science is slow in healthcare and it’s often entangled in bureaucracy, Metcalfe said. But he is optimistic.

“It appears to me that healthcare is about to go through the same transition that information technology went through in the early ’80s,” Metcalfe said.

Medical devices and drugs take a long time to develop because they go through an arduous trial and error process. But that is becoming easier through engineering, Metcalfe said.

“Science is becoming less trial and error and more engineering and I think that is going to compress the development times considerably,” he said.

Another solution to better healthcare is to have more corporations partner with the healthcare system to understand the customer better and how to get things done, Millard said.

“A lot of healthcare systems don’t know their customer,” he said.

The panelists talked about the need for cultural change within the healthcare system. For example, instead of spending millions of dollars to create a really nice waiting room, the hospital should be tackling the problem of why it has waiting rooms at all, Millard said.

“You cannot change culture,” Metcalfe said.

“You have to create a separate thing. Leave the old thing over there and eventually they will all die,” Metcalfe said. “And over here is the new thing. This is what happened in the Internet.”

In the ’80s, IBM and AT&T dominated the world with their monopolies. Metcalfe said he had to wait for IBM customers to die because they would not switch over and buy his products as CEO of 3Com.

“I tend to agree,” Millard said. “I often ask people should we just start over. I don’t think you can take these behemoth institutions and make them nimble.”

The other thing that needs to change to encourage innovation in the healthcare industry is to eliminate government regulation, Metcalfe said.

“The Internet developed in a space with a lack of regulations and fierce competition,” he said.

GTT Acquires One Source Networks in Austin for $175 million

imgres-2GTT Communications Tuesday announced it entered into an agreement to acquire One Source Networks, an Austin-based telecommunications company, for $175 million.

GTT reports the acquisition extends its worldwide network, expands its cloud networking services and increases its multinational client base and adds talent to its sales force.

The deal involves GTT paying $175 million including $165 million in cash and $10 million in GTT common stock.

One Source Networks is profitable. For the quarter ending June 30th, the company reported revenue of $20.5 million and a profit of $9.1 million. For the 12 months ended June 30th, the company had revenues of $74.6 million and a gross profit of $31 million.

The deal is expected to close in late October subject to regulatory approval.

“This transaction accelerates our growth strategy by adding deep relationships with a diverse blue-chip client base and broadening our portfolio of cloud networking services,” Rick Calder, GTT President and CEO, said in a news release.

“Today’s agreement provides great benefit to our clients as well as our two organizations,” Ernest Cunningham, One Source Networks CEO, said in a news release. “GTT gains a talented employee base with a proven track record of supporting Fortune 1000 clients and a passion for providing a differentiated service experience. OSN clients will benefit from GTT’s global network reach and expertise in delivering a comprehensive portfolio of cloud networking services.”

Quantcast Opens Austin Office and is Hiring

Quantcast-LogoQuantcast, a digital advertising and audience measurement firm, is opening an Austin office and is holding a recruiting event at Capital Factory on Wednesday.

The San Francisco-based company’s new office will be located at Capital Factory in downtown Austin. It is hiring sales, client services and media professionals.

“Austin has one of the highest start-ups per capita in the United States right now,” Stephen Collins, Quantcast’s chief financial officer, said in a news statement. “It’s fast growing, eclectic and attracts a lot of talented tech professionals. We believe our Austin presence will add to the local tech community and be accretive to our global company culture.”

Quantcast foresees big growth for its business and industry. Real time bidding digital display advertising is projected to increase from an estimated $14 billion in 2015 to $20 billion in 2016, according to eMarketer.

“This is just the beginning of a very exciting time for Quantcast corporate sales and services,” Megan Edwards, global head of client services, said in a statement. “We look forward to a strong 2015 and an even stronger 2016 with our joint offices and teams.”

Quantcast, founded in 2007, has raised $65.3 million in four funding rounds, according to its CrunchBase profile.

BioMed SA Honors San Antonio Native and Nobel Prize Winner William Moerner

William Moerner, San Antonio native and 2014 Nobel Prize Winner in Chemistry and recipient of the 10th annual BioMed SA Julio Palmaz Award .  Courtesy Photo.

William Moerner, San Antonio native and 2014 Nobel Prize Winner in Chemistry and recipient of the 10th annual BioMed SA Julio Palmaz Award . Courtesy Photo.

Nobel Prize Winner William Moerner spent the first 18 years of his life growing up in San Antonio and graduated from Thomas Jefferson High School.

Moerner went on to get multiple degrees in physics and math, including his PhD, and last year he won the 2014 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

BioMed SA honored San Antonio native Moerner Thursday night by awarding him the 10th annual Julio Palmaz Award for Innovation in Healthcare and Biosciences. More than 500 people turned out for the event, which took place at the Grand Hyatt.

“Tonight we’re especially pleased to celebrate the success of a man who grew up here in San Antonio and graduated from Jefferson High School and went on to win the Nobel Prize in Chemistry,” said Mayor Ivy Taylor.

“This is a testament to what bright young minds in our city can aspire to and achieve,” Taylor said.

Even the principal of Thomas Jefferson High School attended the event.

Moerner, during his presentation to the crowd, acknowledged the importance of his education in San Antonio as providing the foundation for his science career. He showed a picture of himself as the winner of his 9th grade science fair. He also credited a high school counselor with providing him with information to apply for a full scholarship as an Alexander S. Langsdorf Engineering Fellow at Washington University in St. Louis. Moerner earned three bachelor’s degrees in physics, mathematics and electrical engineering. He went on to earn his master’s and doctoral degrees in physics from Cornell University.

In high school, Moerner participated in band, amateur radio club, math and science contest team, national honor society and the speech and debate team. He also achieved the status of Eagle Scout in the Boy Scouts.

His parents helped him immensely in his love of learning, Moerner said. His mother read to him every night from birth to five years old, he said. And his father, a member of the U.S. Air Force, encouraged him to take things apart and troubleshoot problems with automobiles and electronics.

Moerner, the Harry S. Mosher Professor of Chemistry at Stanford, shares the Nobel Prize with Eric Betzig of Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Stefan W. Hell of the Max Plank Institute for Biophysical Chemistry in Germany. They received the prize “for the development of super-resolved fluorescence microscopy.”

“For a long time optical microscopy was held back by a presumed limitation: that it would never obtain a better resolution than half the wavelength of light,” according to a news release from the Nobel Prize organization. “Helped by fluorescent molecules the Nobel Laureates in Chemistry 2014 ingeniously circumvented this limitation. Their groundbreaking work has brought optical microscopy into the nanodimension.”

Moerner was the first person to visualize a single molecule. His later research with fluorescent light allowed him to see molecules turning on and off and allowed researchers to study smaller molecular structures.

Moerner’s discovery is leading to breakthroughs in research on detecting and treating various diseases. In particular, his research has been used to reveal how a mutation in proteins leads to Huntington’s disease and damages the brain.

Moerner ended his presentation with a plea to parents and educators to inspire kids to pursue careers in science and to question their assumptions and pursue their passions.

Rackspace and Intel Open the OpenStack Innovation Center

Rackspace, Intel and UTSA officials and UTSA interns at the opening of the OpenStack Innovation Center at Rackspace's headquarters.

Rackspace, Intel and UTSA officials and UTSA interns at the opening of the OpenStack Innovation Center at Rackspace’s headquarters.

By LAURA LOREK
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

Officials with Rackspace and Intel Thursday officially cut the ribbon on the OpenStack Innovation Center at Rackspace’s headquarters.

“We are going to make this the launching pad to make OpenStack and the entire cloud available to everyone in the industry,” said Imad Sousou, vice president of the software and services group and general manager of Intel Open Source Technology Center.

“And, yes, we’re hiring,” Sousou said.

Rackspace and Intel officially announced their partnership for the OpenStack Innovation Center in late July. On Thursday, a few hundred people gathered in front of the new center at Rackspace’s headquarters in San Antonio to cut the ribbon on the facility where they will be working.

Rackspace has more than 200 employees working on OpenStack every day and they will occupy the OpenStack Innovation Center, which is in the fourth phase of development at the old Windsor Park Mall, which Rackspace refurbished into its headquarters, which Rackspace employees call “The Castle.”

In addition to the Rackspace employees, Intel will have developers at the center. Already, eight Intel developers have moved to San Antonio from Santa Clara, California, Arizona, Dallas and other Intel locations around the country to work here.

IMG_6515The OpenStack Innovation Center will add even more technology talent to San Antonio, said Darrin Hanson, vice president and general manager of Rackspace Private Cloud. And Rackspace’s partner in providing the tech pipeline of new talent locally is the University of Texas at San Antonio, he said.

Already, UTSA selected ten students to work as interns initially at the center and 30 more will be joining the program in the next year, said Mauli Agrawal, vice president of research at UTSA.

“By opening this innovation center, we’re creating the largest OpenStack development team in the world,” Agrawal said.

UTSA has developed a reputation nationwide as experts training computer and software engineers in open cloud computing and cybersecurity, Agrawal said. And this center further solidifies that reputation, he said.

“We are Cyber City and Cloud City USA,” Agrawal said.

The center will do research and development on OpenStack, which is an operating system that runs on the cloud and enables all kinds of software applications to run quickly and seamlessly from online banking to e-commerce. The cloud is a term used to described computer servers linked together in data centers that contain information accessible to anyone, anywhere through the Internet.

Intel has invested in the OpenStack project, which it calls “Intel’s Open Cloud for All” initiative although financial terms of the deal were not disclosed. It is also putting engineering resources behind the initiative. The New York Times recently did a story on Intel’s strategy to invest heavily in software that enhances cloud-computing capabilities. The idea is to create many competitors who offer cloud computing services, which ultimately creates many customers who demand servers that run Intel’s chips, and that way Intel will not get squeezed in price margins for its products by just a few giant companies, according to the article.

In July of 2010, Rackspace developed and launched OpenStack in cooperation with NASA. In the five years since then, OpenStack has grown considerably in popularity and other companies have exerted their influence on the software. HP, IBM and other big firms came in and contributed to the project. And the software got bogged down in bureaucracy and fragmentation as many companies contributed to it, Hanson with Rackspace said. This new initiative is about accelerating OpenStack development and adoption, Hanson said.

“We’re trying to create an environment where people are fully committed to improving OpenStack and doing it in a fully opened source way,” Hanson said.

“OpenStack is becoming the de facto cloud operating system for enterprises,” Hanson said. Enterprise is the name for large companies.

Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud are closed and proprietary platforms that compete with OpenStack, an open source alternatives to those services.

Intel and Rackspace’s collaboration seeks to make OpenStack the best operating system for the public and private cloud, Hanson said.

“For companies, the promise of OpenStack is that it gives them a platform that allows them to be much more efficient, much more nimble and it really improves speed to market for their customer facing and revenue generating applications,” Hanson said. “It gives them a really flexible and efficient platform where the IT department can go from being a call center to a center of strategy and to an enabler of revenue.”

Freescale Buys Canada-based CogniVue

449px-Freescale_Semiconductor_logo.svgFreescale announced its acquisition of Ottawa, Canada-based CogniVue Corp. to boost its position in the autonomous vehicles and advanced driver assistance systems market.

Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Freescale, a microchip maker based in Austin, is a market leader in making sensor, microcontroller and microprocessor solutions for automotive radar and vision applications. The company already has shipped more than 20 million units for autonomous vehicles and advanced driver assistance systems market.

“The acquisition of CogniVue accelerates our autonomous vehicles portfolio with leading-edge vision processing IP,” Bob Conrad, Senior Vice President and General Manager of Freescale’s Automotive MCU group, said in a news release. “With the exceptional market response to our S32V234 vision processor, as well as demand for our next generation vision solutions, this acquisition places Freescale in a position to supply highly automated car applications with the requisite performance, safety, security and reliability those systems require.”

Freescale already uses CogniVue’s technology in its S32V processor.

Favor Names New CEO

Jag Bath, CEO and President of Favor, courtesy photo

Jag Bath, CEO and President of Favor, courtesy photo

NeighborFavor, which operates Favor, Wednesday announced Jag Bath as its new Chief Executive Officer and President.

The Austin-based startup has been expanding quickly and recently entered the Canadian market. Bath has served on Favor’s board since May.

Bath previously worked as senior vice president of product at RetailMeNot, an Austin-based coupon retailing site. Before that he worked at luxury retailer Gilt Groupe and WeightWatchers.com.

“Having been a Favor customer from the very first day of its launch, I’ve been a fan for some time now,” Bath said in a news release. “Favor’s superior customer service and proprietary technology nicely lay the foundation for future growth. I’m thrilled and honored to be joining the team and excited at the prospect of putting the service into the hands of more consumers and businesses.”

Bath takes over from Ben Doherty, Favor’s co-founder, who is taking on the role of Chief Operating Officer.

Favor, which launched its app-based delivery service in Austin in June of 2013 has grown significantly in the past few years. So far this year, the company reports it has made 600,000 deliveries, which is already more than tripled its total deliveries for 2014. The startup pledges to get anything a customer wants delivered to their door within an hour. It operates in 12 cities in the U.S. and Canada including Austin, Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, Denver, Houston, Miami, Nashville, Fort Worth, San Antonio, San Marcos and Toronto. Favor has 50 employees and more than 3,000 contractors.

To date, Favor has raised $16.9 million in funding.

SchooLinks Serves as Matchmaker for Students and Colleges

Katie Fang, founder of SchooLinks. Courtesy photo.

Katie Fang, founder of SchooLinks. Courtesy photo.

Deciding on a college can be one of the most perplexing decisions a high school student and their family face.

Some students don’t know about all the opportunities available to them, said Katie Fang, founder of SchooLinks.

“It’s very hard for a student to navigate the admissions process,” Fang said.

To help match students with higher education institutions and scholarship opportunities, Fang created SchooLinks.

The idea sprang from consulting Fang did for schools helping them to recruit students. Fang is from China, moved to Canada and graduated from the University of British Columbia in Vancouver.

Fang realized that if one school wanted her help that others may also. So she created a platform to connect students with schools and educational consultants. She launched the site, SchooLinks.com, a little over a year ago in Los Angeles.

The site is free for students. They log on to the website and create a profile and from SchooLinks they can apply to different schools and multiple scholarships. They can also elect to receive help from consultants to pick the right school. The site also offers tips on essay writing and submitting a successful college application.

“We give them recommendations according to their unique circumstances,” Fang said. “We help you achieve your maximum potential. We increase your chances of getting scholarships.”

SchooLinks is working with more than 2,000 schools all over the world, Fang said. The international search feature can open up a student’s search to schools abroad they might not have considered, Fang said.

“It’s a cost effective way for schools to market themselves to students,” Fang said.

SchooLinks makes money through an online software as a service model. Schools subscribe to the site to recruit students. With the platform, schools can view profiles of students. SchooLinks also provides data and analytics to the schools on who is viewing their school and where they are coming from.

SchooLinks moved to Austin a few months ago and joined the incubator at Capital Factory. It’s currently bootstrapped but it is raising a seed round of funding, Fang said.

There’s a ton of edtech going on in Austin and that makes SchooLinks a good fit for the city, said Joshua Baer, cofounder of Capital Factory. One of the top startup technology industries in Austin is the educational technology space with startups like Civitas Learning, Aceable, Blackboard and Sapling Learning.

With young startups, they don’t have a lot of data yet, so Capital Factory evaluates the team and Fang is very entrepreneurial at a young age and impressive, Baer said.

“Katie really knows this space she is working in,” Baer said. “She’s the kind of person you meet and you know they are going to be really successful. “

And Fang likes Austin. It’s affordable and she’s surrounded by other like-minded entrepreneurs, she said.

“Austin is an up and coming technology region,” Fang said. “And the burn rate is way too high in Los Angeles.”

All seven members of the SchooLinks staff moved to Austin from California. They are all sharing a house together.

“It’s a very young and vibrant city,” Fang said.

Overcoming Obstacles to Hike Mt. Kilimanjaro

Ian Warshak plans to hike Mt. Kilimanjaro in December as part of The Cloud Walkers.

Ian Warshak plans to hike Mt. Kilimanjaro in December as part of The Cloud Walkers.

In 2012, Ian Warshak, a software developer in San Antonio, came down with what he thought was a cold.

But within a few days he got really sick with a bacterial infection in his lungs. The infection spread and led to septic shock. He was put on life support and put into an induced coma because the infection was causing organ failure.

Warshak was not expected to live. But he woke up after eight days on life support and his body began to recover. During his sickness he had lost circulation in his fingers and feet. They had turned black. He had to have both lower legs and all of his fingers amputated a few months later.

But Warshak didn’t let the loss of his limbs get him down.

Since then, Warshak has coached his four-year-old son’s soccer team. He has been snow skiing four times. He went snorkeling and ziplining this summer on a cruise to Honduras. He’s training for a half marathon and he’s going to climb Mt. Kilimanjaro this winter.

For a few years Warshak couldn’t work. But now he’s back to doing freelance work for clients and he’s working with a few San Antonio startups.

“I feel like losing my fingers and my legs, not to minimize it, is just at this point, it’s an inconvenience,” Warshak said.

Warshak is part of a group called The Cloud Walkers, sponsored through the San Antonio Amputee Foundation. He’s one of 13 amputees who plan to climb Mt. Kilimanjaro, the tallest mountain in Africa at 19,341 feet.

This weekend, the group travelled to Taos, New Mexico to do a practice hike on Wheeler Peak, a 13,100 foot mountain. The group meets monthly to do practice hikes around the country. They also train individually.

The day after Christmas, the group plans to leave San Antonio to travel to Tanzania, Africa. A medical support team and a film crew will accompany them. The film crew plans to create a documentary depicting their stories.

“The biggest challenge is going to be the altitude,” Warshak said. “So we’re taking it pretty slow.”

Another challenge is the ability of the prosthetic limbs to endure hiking five to seven miles a day for five or six days, Warshak said.

“We’re all going to have to take back up parts and back up legs,” he said. “Everyone wants to make it to the top. We don’t want to get carted down by the locals.”

The Cloud Walkers are raising money through the San Antonio Amputee Foundation, which is organizing the trip. They are looking for corporate sponsors. In addition, Warshak has raised $2,980 of a $6,000 goal through a Go Fund Me campaign.

Warshak said he was grateful and didn’t take life for granted before his illness. Now he seeks to live life to the fullest.

Vote for Seven SXSW Interactive Panels with a San Antonio Focus

images-300x141South by Southwest extended voting for its 2016 Panelpicker until midnight tonight.

To make the process even easier for you, here are seven San Antonio panels that may be of interest. Earlier, Silicon Hills News did a post on these 13 panels offered up by Austin entrepreneurs.

Just visit Panelpicker.sxsw.com and log in to vote.

The State of Crowdfunding: New Laws, Risk & Reward: Texas just approved crowdfunding and Mass Venture was the first crowdfunding portal approved under the new state regulations. This panel features Nathan Roach with San Antonio-based MassVenture, R.C. Rondero de Mosier with MWR Legal, David Neff of PricewaterhouseCooper and Andrea Kalmans with Lontra Ventures.

Multicultural Blogger and Content Creator Meet Up: Melanie Mendez-Gonzales, a San Antonio blogger who pens the Que Means What Blog, is organizing this meetup to talk about the power and influence of a multicultural audience and how to reach them and what social media tools work best.

Be Helpful: the Strategy for Social Success: this panel features San Antonio-based Rackspace employees Garrett Heath, Elizabeth Jurewicz and Frank Cerda discussing how a strategy focused on being helpful helps a company succeed. Being helpful is the social media strategy for Rackspace.

Unfiltered-Distilling Down the Beverage Industry: thinking about starting up a beverage company? Then you might want to listen to a few entrepreneurs from San Antonio who have been there and done that. This panel discusses the “trials and tribulations” of the process. It features Ryan Salts with Break Fast & Launch, Manny Carral with Revolucion Coffee+Juice, Vera Deckard with San Antonio Brewing Co. and Boyan Kalusevic from Dorcol Distilling Co.

The New Age Trade School: Apply Within: this panel looks at alternative education and coding schools like San Antonio-based Codeup as a way for employees to gain skills needed in today’s marketplace. The panel features Peter French of FreeFlow Research, Michael Girdley with Codeup, Ravae Shaeffer with Transformation Central Texas T-STEM Center and Brittany Shamsky with LiftFund.

False Alarm: Periscope Really Helps Rights Holders: A discussion about the use of Periscope and Merikat at professional sporting events including discussions about copyright. The panel features Nick Velliquette and Ray Machuca with FloSports and Chris Wenk with the San Antonio Spurs.

Hacking Water Security: Cities at the Forefront: Water is a hot button topic in Texas and across the country. The drought in California and Texas has led many to focus on innovation in the water industry. This panel will talk about how cities are searching for new supplies of water and grappling with conservation and scarcity. The panel features Kevin Allison with Thomson Reuters, Jimmy Gomez with the State of California, Robert Rivard of The Rivard Report and Avital Dror-Ehre with Clever Water.

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2025 SiliconHills

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑