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UTSA’s New Dean of Business Focuses on Entrepreneurship

By ANDREW MOORE
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

Gerard Sanders, the new dean of the College of Business at UTSA.

Gerard Sanders, the new dean of the College of Business at UTSA.


Last summer, Gerard Sanders became the new dean of the College of Business at the University of Texas in San Antonio. Sanders comes from the Rice University Jones Graduate School of Business and brings numerous credentials in management and finance, including a doctorate in management from the University of Texas. Working with Center for Innovation and Technology Director Cory Hallam, Sanders is pursuing some ambitious goals for student entrepreneurship.
In the next five years, the Business College wants to launch ten student tech startups annually. The school currently turns out two to three startups a year between its biannual $100,000 Student Technology Venture Competition and its faculty research.
Sanders and Hallam have multiple objectives in mind to accomplish this goal, starting with changes to the College of Business.
“There are a lot of good things happening here. There is a lot of potential. But we are spread a little too thin, and we need to focus,” Sanders said. “Entrepreneurship is one area that will receive that focus.”
Sanders said the college suffers from an overabundance of majors, minors, and concentrations that often overlap and drain administrative resources. By pruning and simplifying those degree plans, he hopes to allow students more class options with fewer concentrations so they can get more out of their education.
“Students can get all these same classes within a smaller program infrastructure,” Sanders said.
Administrative and financial resources will now be focused more than ever on student entrepreneurship training. The college plans to double its entrepreneur-focused faculty and all new faculty hires, regardless of discipline, will need to have an interest in entrepreneurship as well as some private sector entrepreneurial experience.
The Business College is also working on a new, more flexible curriculum structure that would allow students to learn several entrepreneurial skills required to start a business in the same three hour course.
“We want the educational experience to mirror closer to the actual entrepreneurial problems, and address the educational need there,” Sanders said.
Hallam also wants to open up graduate level Business College classes to students in other departments such as computer science – giving those students more entrepreneurial tools while also adding diverse perspectives to the classes.
“It actually builds the quality of the class because you end up with very good students from different disciplines which then expands the thought process of the class,” Hallam said.
Hallam hopes to create a similar approach with the CITE (Center for Innovation and Technology Entrepreneurship) program’s $100,000 Student Technology Venture competition, which pairs business and engineering students to create products. The goal is to expand the competition to include students in computer science, material science, physics, and other tech departments who could work with business students to launch a technology company as well. In the five years since the competition began, 650 students have participated and a total of 85 business plans have been presented. Hallam believes getting students from other departments in the mix will significantly grow the competition and result in more companies.
Of course, none of those startups will get off the ground without some financial backing. To that end, Sanders and Hallam plan to create an endowed student startup seed fund. The endowment — which is simply a large chunk of money in a bank that generates interest — would have to be several million dollars to be effective, but once established it would provide a better way to fund startups.
“Right now, if we have student startups that are struggling for money, Cory has to get on the phone and call someone and say, ‘Hey, $2000 would really help this little company,’” Sanders said.
“We need to grow that donor base and endow it so that you are not having to ask every year but now know you have built an endowment that funds this many companies a year,” Hallam said.
There are a few more ways the College of Business will boost entrepreneurship as well. This October, the UTSA student CEO organization will partner with Venturelab to hold a 3 Day Startup event on campus similar to other 3DS events held at Geekdom of San Antonio.
To facilitate long-term entrepreneurial collaboration between students, Sanders wants to create an entrepreneur-only dorm space in one of the current residence halls. The space will even be equipped with offices and a board room where students can hold meetings with clients. The Business College is still in the initial planning stages for the space but plan to have it set up in three to four years.
While UTSA’s future goals for student entrepreneurship are important, it’s also important to look where it has been. UTSA’s student CEO organization has more than 100 student owned and operated business. The Business College’s CITE program has seen more than 1000 students go through their tech boot camp. The biannual $100,000 Student Technology Venture Competition averages around 20 competing companies a semester and the exiting companies have applied for a total of 12 patents.
Multiple student startups exiting CITE have already gone on to hire experienced CEOs, create prototypes, and raise significant funding. Examples of such companies are Technophysics Solutions, Leto Solutions, Cyclosa, Lapara Medical, and Invictus – some of which have already raised hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Even if students do not move forward with their initial venture, Hallam is confident that they will be able to use their acquired entrepreneurial skills to start additional companies in the future.
“We are trying to unlock their inner entrepreneur,” said Hallam. “We would expect that the rest go out and work in companies and launch products or services – work five to ten years – and at that point they are in the right age bracket to understand the market niche they are familiar with, they understand the business they are in, and at that point they tap into their inner entrepreneur and spin off a company…and 10 years after that we ask them for a donation.”

PayPup Wins PayPal’s Battle Hack in Austin

By LAURA LOREK
Founder of Silicon Hills News

Jeff Linwood, winner of Battle Hack Austin with his app, PayPup, which allows people to adopt dogs from shelters and donate to their medical expenses.

Jeff Linwood, winner of Battle Hack Austin with his app, PayPup, which allows people to adopt dogs from shelters and donate to their medical expenses.

Jeff Linwood, a software developer with Biscotti Labs, loves dogs. He and his wife even adopted one from the Austin Pets Alive shelter.
But helping one dog wasn’t enough, he said.
He wanted to do more, but he couldn’t adopt any more dogs. That’s where he got the idea for a mobile phone app to help match dogs with potential owners.
He signed up for the PayPal Battle Hack competition, held last weekend at TechShop in Round Rock, and he spent Saturday and Sunday working on the project.
It paid off.
On Sunday night, PayPal announced PayPup, Linwood’s app, won Battle Hack. The mobile phone app lists all dogs available for adoption from Austin Pets Alive along with a donation button for each dog to help pay for medical expenses.
Linwood, who also works as an adjunct professor in journalism at the University of Texas, received a laser-etched glass trophy and an 4.3 pound 21-inch solid steel axe trophy.
PayPal will fly him and nine other city winners to the world finals in San Jose in November for one last hack-off where one team will receive a $100,000 grand prize.
So far, PayPal has had competitions in New York, Miami, Seattle and now Austin in the U.S., said Jonathan LeBlanc, developer evangelist at PayPal. It has held international Battle Hack competitions in Tel Aviv, Moscow and Berlin. It still plans Battle Hacks in Washington, DC., London and Barcelona.
“We chose Austin for its innovative culture,” LeBlanc said. “The city is known as a place that is changing the technology industry and creating start ups.”
More than 150 people signed up for the Battle Hack. At TechShop, the hackers had access to laser machines, 3-D printers and all kinds of software and hardware throughout the weekend.
They also had plenty of food and many teams stayed up for days on end.
Tap to Pay, a hardware hack that turns a Raspberry Pi, a credit-card sized computer that plugs into a keyboard, and mobile phone into a mobile payment system, received second place. Lana Jones and Alejandro Vidal created Tap to Pay. They met at the event and worked until 4 a.m. Sunday morning to finish their hack.
“It allows for small transactions on the fly,” Jones said. A kid can use one at the lemonade stand to take payments from customers, she said.
Jones programmed a Raspberry Pi to communicate with a mobile phone to allow for payments anywhere with a simple tap of the phone on the device. It only costs $35.
Trust in Dragons, a crowdfunding platform for non-government organizations that ensures transparency and accountability with gamifaction features, received third place.
The focus of the Battle Hack competitions is to reconnect with PayPal’s developer community, said LeBlanc with PayPal.The company’s developer tools and API were focused primarily on web transactions until recently when the company began to focus more on mobile payments.
“What we are seeing with the Battle Hack competitions is a complete culture shift at PayPal,” LeBlanc said. “PayPal’s President David Marcus has made it clear that our goal is to fix and make better our infrastructure for the developer community.”
The sponsors of the event included Twilio, SendGrind, Microsoft and Nokia. They also gave out sponsor prizes to the teams.

The other teams pitching their projects at the Austin PayPal Battle Hack:

SafeWalk – an app that scrapes the latest crime data and mashes it up with Google maps to show people a safe route home.

TipTastic – an app that lets people tip food truck operators, musicians, street performers, artists or anyone. It’s geared at people who don’t carry cash but who like to tip.

Green Building – real time monitoring of energy consumption in a building, which charges people for over-use.

DoGooder – a mobile phone and web-based app that turns volunteering and donating into a game with levels, badges and the ability to achieve Superhero status.

Missing Hippo – a mobile phone app that integrates GPS with maps and enables people to find lost pets and collect rewards.

ForwardFundr – a crowdfunding app for donating money and volunteer hours to beautification projects in a community.

AUsome Carpool – a mobile phone app which makes chipping in for carpooling easier.

Team Chaos Launches Dragon Academy

Dragon-Academy-640x372Team Chaos in Austin launched Dragon Academy, a puzzle adventure game, available on multiple formats including Apple iOS, Android and Facebook.
The free game adds role playing elements to a format similar to Candy Crush Saga and Bejeweled.
Team Chaos released the game last week. It’s available in the Apple iOS App Store and in the Google Play Store and at Facebook.
Serial entrepreneur Andrew Busey, who sold his Challenge Games startup to Zynga and served as its VP and GM in Austin.
Dragon Academy is the latest title from Austin-based Team Chaos, led
by serial entrepreneur Andrew Busey. He is a veteran of the online gaming industry. He recently served as vice president and general manager of Zynga Austin.
“We believe players will have a great time with Dragon Academy because we combine what players love most: a match-3 game with unique
characters: dragons each with its own great personality,” Busey said in a news statement.
In Dragon Academy, the six main character dragons activate special
powers when they are fed mystic runes as they make matches during a
game. Their job is to save the dragon Hatchlings that have been
egg-napped by the mischief-making Wobblins.
Team Chaos co-founder, Ben Lamm, is also CEO and co-founder of Chaotic Moon, a mobile development studio. Dragon Academy is the second title from Team Chaos, following Elements, a Collectible Card Game, that launched in April.

Five Nonprofit Organizations Pitch Startups at Tech Summit

imgres-9By LAURA LOREK
Founder of Silicon Hills News

Five nonprofit teams pitched their ventures at the Nonprofit Technology Summit Friday at Rackspace.
The teams went through a 3 Day Startup program at Geekdom to prepare their presentations.
Patrick Currie with Boy With a Ball San Antonio pitched a youth mentorship program to reach young people and transform them to be leaders.
Boy With a Ball San Antonio is seeking $70,000 in seed stage funding, Currie said. It plans to make money by charging companies a $5,000 program fee to train 15 young people to be employees.
Joshua Singer, 16, and Canzhi Ye, 17, two high school students, pitched Apps for Aptitude, which uses mobile phone apps to fight illiteracy.
The company’s first app is Flashcards for a Cause to help students study their course materials. Students provide the content to other students. The market is high school and college students with smartphones, Ye said.
Revenue comes from in-app purchases, Ye said. The company plans to market its apps through teachers and bloggers, he said.
Apps for Aptitude was seeking financial support, additional volunteers, legal support and help with marketing and advertising.
Charles Lewis Blunt pitched RoTenGo, a portable game that is a hybrid of ping-pong and tennis. He is seeking to get the game adopted at companies as well as schools throughout San Antonio.
The game originated in Barbados, Blunt said. It’s called “poor man’s tennis,” he said.
The equipment costs around $3,000 per company and RoTenGo can either train coaches at the company or they can facilitate it, Blunt said.

Five nonprofit teams went through the 3 Day Startup program at Geekdom and then pitched their ventures at the Nonprofit Technology Summit at Rackspace

Five nonprofit teams went through the 3 Day Startup program at Geekdom and then pitched their ventures at the Nonprofit Technology Summit at Rackspace

Gemini Ink “helps people create and share the human story.” The company wants to create a literary lounge café, a community space that serves coffee, beer and wine and focuses on reading and writing, said Evie Reyes, managing director.
Gemini Ink already has a loyal audience of 15,000 annually and creating a literary lounge will allow it to expand its space and readers and writers in San Antonio need a space of their own, she said.
Gemini Ink needs a capital investment of $20,000 and estimates that it can generate net revenue of $19,800 a year.
Potential neighborhood competitors are Madhatters, Halcyon and Starbucks.
“We’re trying to be an art space that is also a café,” said Sheila Black, artistic director.
Lastly, Bob Deschner and Dottie Goodsun pitched Veterans Team Recovery Integrated Immersion Program, known as Vet TRIIP, to provide stress reduction massage services to veterans for free. The company wants to branch out into the corporate world and charge them to bring paid staff into the corporations to conduct massage programs.

Crafting Brands and Pitching at the Nonprofit Tech Summit

Bill Schley, author of the Unstoppables, talking about branding to the Nonprofit Technology Summit at Rackspace.

Bill Schley, author of the Unstoppables, talking about branding to the Nonprofit Technology Summit at Rackspace.


By LAURA LOREK
Founder of Silicon Hills News

Teaching nonprofit organizations to pitch, craft brands, harness social media, create effective presentations and use video to influence emotion and create action.
Those are a few of the strategies people learned Friday at the fourth annual Nonprofit Technology Summit at Rackspace.
The daylong event is focused on providing technology tools to nonprofit organizations, said Susan Thompson, vice president at the San Antonio Area Foundation.
This year, 275 people attended the event, up from 95 people last year.
“We do this to help build the capacity of nonprofits in our community so they can more effectively use these technology resources,” Thompson said. “This is really about helping them tell their story to donors, the people they serve and the whole community.”
The San Antonio Area Foundation, Rackspace, 3 Day Startup and the 80/20 Foundation sponsored the event, which took place at Rackspace’s new events center at its corporate headquarters in San Antonio.
“I think in the tech world the ability to have a good pitch is the difference between life and death,” said Lorenzo Gomez, executive director of the 80/20 Foundation. “The startup world gets so many resources to teach them to pitch and we wanted to bring those same resources to the nonprofit world.”
This year, five nonprofit organizations were selected to pitch their ventures at the conference. They went through a two-day version of the 3 Day Startup training at Geekdom. They are scheduled to pitch this afternoon.

Recipeas Launches Recipe Search App

Nate McGuire and Tyler Hobbs, co-founders of Recipeas in Austin

Nate McGuire and Tyler Hobbs, co-founders of Recipeas in Austin

Nate McGuire, co-founder of Recipeas, a recipe search app, recently answered a few questions about his startup, which is based at Capital Factory in downtown Austin.

Q. Can you explain your product in the simplest language possible?

A. Recipeas is an iOS recipe app that tells you what you should cook with the ingredients you have. We make it easy to search popular recipes by ingredient.

Q. What’s your secret sauce? What differentiates you from the competition?

iPhone Portrait 4A. The most significant difference between Recipeas and other recipe apps is our search process. We only ask you about a few ingredients and then give you recipe results that you can actually make from popular food blogs across the web. We determined each ingredient’s initial probability and decay rate so we are able to give users the most accurate search results possible.

Q. Who are your competitors?

A. There are a lot of great food apps out there; we are working to be the best in recipe search.

Q. Are you Bootstrapped, or do you have Venture Capital or Angel Investment?

A. We’ve bootstrapped Recipeas.

Q. Who makes up your team?

A. Nate McGuire (@natemcguire) and Tyler Hobbs (@tylhobbs)

Q. Who are your customers?

A. We built Recipeas for people who need to make something right now using the ingredients they have. It’s not for planning out elaborate meals, but rather someone making dinner on a normal night.

Q. What is your business model?

icon_512A. We offer in-app purchases to unlock your search results, and for unlimited results (1000+ recipes) we charge 9.99. We give you a few recipe credits to start so you can view recipes before you buy.

Q. What is the biggest win you’ve had to date?

A. It’s very early on, but we’ve been pleased with the initial launch. We’re working on a few updates, so that’s our main focus right now. We’re also adding new recipes for people to try every day.

Q. What are the most helpful Austin startup resources that you’ve used?

A. Our biggest resource has been being able to talk to people who have built and launched apps and food startups before. There are so many unknowns when you are building new software, if you don’t have the opportunity to talk to people who have done it before you can end up making a lot of mistakes.

Q. What are the advantages of being in Austin for launching your startup?

A. The biggest benefit is that we actually enjoy and can afford living here. That gives us a lot of freedom to work on things that we think are important.

Q. What are your plans for the future?

A. We’ve received really great feedback from users, and there are a lot of new features that we’d like to explore. We’re working on improving sharing recipes with your friends and being able to add and modify your own recipes.

Q. Anything else you’d like to add or say that I haven’t asked you about?

A. We really believe that machine learning can be used to improve and aid everyday activities. With Recipeas, we’ve done just that by applying some sophisticated probabilistic techniques to the very common problem of creating something delicious to cook for dinner.

At NASA Johnson Space Center in Houston for Expedition 37 Launch

Expedition 37 crew members lifted off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan in the Soyuz spacecraft on Wednesday.

Expedition 37 crew members lifted off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan in the Soyuz spacecraft on Wednesday. Photo courtesy of NASA.

By LAURA LOREK
Founder of Silicon Hills News

In July, I went to a NASA Social meetup at Johnson Space Center to learn about Astronaut fitness and wellness in space.

At that event, our group met the crew of Expedition 37, including Astronaut Mike Hopkins of NASA, a flight engineer, Cosmonaut Oleg Kotov, Soyuz Commander and Cosmonaut Sergey Ryanzanskiy, Flight Engineer with the Russian Federal Space Agency.

I grew up during the Cold War, in which we feared the Russians, so it’s nice to see the collaboration our space program has with Russia now. The Cosmonauts and Astronauts are not only crew members, but friends.

Astronaut Mike Hopkins of NASA, a flight engineer, Cosmonaut Oleg Kotov, Soyuz Commander and Cosmonaut Sergey Ryanzanskiy, Flight Engineer with the Russian Federal Space Agency. Photo courtesy of NASA

Astronaut Mike Hopkins of NASA, a flight engineer, Cosmonaut Oleg Kotov, Soyuz Commander and Cosmonaut Sergey Ryanzanskiy, Flight Engineer with the Russian Federal Space Agency. Photo courtesy of NASA

And on Wednesday at 3:58 p.m. Central Time, Hopkins, Kotov and Ryanzanskiy lifted off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan for a five hour trek to the International Space Station.
I watched the launch from Mission Control Center at Houston’s NASA Johnson Space Center with my teenage son, Teddy. Astronaut Kevin Ford and others from NASA briefed us on Expedition 37 and the flight.

By the time we drove back from Houston from the event, the crew had almost made it to the space station. They docked at 9:45 p.m. Central Time, again without any problems. My son and I were able to watch it live from our computers on NASA Television.
Hopkins, Kotov and Ryanzanskiy will spend the next five and a half months on the International Space Station, which celebrates 15 years in space this November. The U.S. Mission Control Center for the International Space Station is at NASA Johnson Space Center.

Soyuz spacecraft about to dock with the International Space Station, photo courtesy of NASA

Soyuz spacecraft about to dock with the International Space Station. Photo courtesy of NASA.

The crew joined Expedition 37 crew members who have been aboard the space station since late May: Commander Fyodor Yurchikin of Rosmosmos and Flight Engineers Karen Nyberg of NASA and Luca Parmitano of the European Space Agency.
They will work on more than 1,600 experiments on the space station and they will add some new ones focused on human health and human physiology.

So even though NASA officially ended its 30-year space shuttle program in 2011, the U.S. still sends astronauts to space. NASA buys seats on the Russian Soyuz spacecraft.

And Johnson Space Center is still a hotbed for innovation in Texas and the United States.

E4Youth Wins Social Good Summit Fast Pitch

By SUSAN LAHEY
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

Carl Settles

Carl Settles

E4Youth won the Social Good Summit fast pitch competition Tuesday with its program that helps creative young people connect with mentors, internships and jobs in creative services. Rather than having a panel of judges, the participants at the summit voted for their favorite pitch among the six presented. The winner won $5,200.
Founder Carl Settles began his pitch by talking about how creative kids often have a difficult time fitting in in school and budget cuts to school sponsored programs in the arts has made it even tougher. E4Youth takes young people out to tour creative agencies and introduces them to job opportunities in various creative careers. They introduce them to agencies, help them build their resumes and help them raise money to attend events like SXSW. Over the last six years, he said, students helped by E4Youth have had numerous career successes including having a film premier at the Cannes Film Festival, working for congressional campaign and more. The majority of students who complete the program wind up with internships and later jobs. Settles said he would use the money to deepen the organization’s program and help more students. Currently E4Youth works with 400 students a year.
Dollar a Day also works to help kids with creative arts. Founder Cameron Gibson told the story of how sports, music and creative arts had been hugely important to him as a student. When he had to drop out of school to help with family issues, he became depressed. He decided, one day, that the rule of life is, whatever you hope to gain, you have to give it first. So he started giving away $1 a day. That was the advent of Dollar a Day. This nonprofit asks people to commit to spending a dollar a day toward kids who need help with lessons, instruments and other expenses of arts classes. Donors can create a giving team of 10 people who also give a dollar a day. Eighty percent of donations go toward helping kids.
Connect2Good is aiming to be an online marketplace wherein nonprofits can post their needs in terms of furniture and material goods and people can sell their extraneous “stuff.” Joshua Jake Vaugh said he founded the organization because of his own difficulties finding items—like furniture–he needed for another nonprofit he was starting. Fifty to 75 percent of the proceeds of the sale got to the nonprofit of the seller’s choice.
20130924_173211Frugal Innovations aims to be an online site for the various innovations companies and individuals have devised to solve problems faced in the third world such as lack of plumbing and electricity. Founder Jose Briones would like to bring together on one site solutions like the Easy Latrine from Cambodia, water purification systems from India and more so that organizations and nations can have one place to go to find solutions.
David Schwartz of NGO and Social Enterprise Hub wants to create a site, similar to a dating website, where organizations with similar missions can connect and host joint fundraisers or benefit from each other’s resources. An organization with a great meeting space, for example, might help out another organization with a similar mission that needed a meeting space. He hopes to make giving “social” rather than having so many organizations spend so much time fundraising and fighting for the same donor dollars.
Jessica Lowry of Key To The Street has been working with the City of Austin discussing her app-to-be which lets people take pictures of Austin streets and create animated streetscapes that would help start a dialogue about improvements to walkability. The conversation around how to improve Austin so that it is more walkable, she said, would eventually translate to policy changes.
The Social Good Summit pitch competitors were coached by several local experts including Eve Richter, Kevin Koym and Gary Hoover.

Rackspace Adds Schlitterbahn and Other Hybrid Cloud Customers

imgres-2Rackspace announced Tuesday that it has landed Schlitterbahn Waterparks and Resorts as a new customer for its hybrid cloud hosting services.
Schlitterbahn, based in New Braunfels, has water parks in Texas and Kansas City. The company needed a computing infrastructure that allowed it to scale its operations during times of peak demand.
Rackspace already counted Six Flags as an amusement park customer.
“We love having local customers,” said John Engates, Rackspace’s Chief Technology Officer. “It makes us very proud.”
Rackspace was able to give Schlitterbahn a hybrid cloud that allows the company the flexibility to roll servers up or down, according to spikes in year-round activity.
“We chose Rackspace for the flexibility,” said Pat Symchych with Schlitterbahn. Its website gets three million visits during the season and a few hundred during the off-season. They moved to Rackspace after its site crashed on July 4th.
“Rackspace support is unbelievable,” Symchych said. “They are better than any other tech firm I’ve worked with or that I’ve had to work with. It doesn’t matter what time of day or who I talk to they get it done.”
Schlitterbahn is one of Rackspace’s newest enterprise customers. Another, Spencer’s with 700 stores in 48 states and a popular SpiritHalloween.com site, is already seeing heavy traffic for Halloween. CERN, Emerson Electric, Fidelity, Mazda and Sony Playstation were recently announced as customers as well.
“This idea of the hybrid cloud is something we’re seeing a lot more companies take advantage of,” Engates said. “We hear a lot about the move to the public cloud. But we think they’re a lot of companies that mix form factors in this hybrid cloud…We continue to add other products into that mix. Giving customers the right fit with the right infrastructure.”

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