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MONKEYMedia’s Eric Bear Discusses BodyNav Tech to Eliminate VR Motion Sickness on Ideas to Invoices

Eric Bear, founder and CEO of MonkeyMedia

MONKEYMedia is focused on eliminating motion sickness for people using virtual reality applications.

Today, the company released a developer toolkit for its patented BodyNav technology that allows people to try out the BodyNav technology on existing games and applications available for HTC Vive and Oculus Rift.

Eric Bear, founder, and CEO of Austin’s MONKEYMedia, an award-winning, independent research, and development lab, calls BodyNav a game changer for virtual reality applications.

Motion sickness in VR is estimated to impact between 25 percent to 80 percent of the human population and is reported to affect women four times more than men, according to Bear.

“We’re moving to a future where we are going to have virtual reality headsets on every desk,” Bear said.

Making the technology accessible to as many people as possible by eliminating the motion sickness will lead to wider adoption of virtual, augmented and mixed reality applications, Bear said.

In this episode of Ideas to Invoices, Bear talks about the benefits of BodyNav. He also discusses his entrepreneurial ventures and how he left Apple to found MONKEYMedia in the ‘90s in San Francisco. The company’s patent portfolio includes in-house inventions that date back to 1992 and are incorporated in more than 184 million movies distributed on DVD and Blu-ray.

Bear has over 30 years experience crafting and establishing user experience strategies for major corporations and is the first-named inventor on over 100 software and hardware patents and patent applications. Products based on his inventions are used every day by millions of people and thousands of companies.

Bear is also a partner at Capital Factory. He is a mentor and investor in Austin startups. He is also the Chief Experience Officer at Curb, a smart home startup that sells and intelligent energy monitoring system.

BodyNav’s technology allows people to be immersed in an application and comfortable viewing it, Bear said. The BodyNav technology replaces hand controls to move throughout a virtual environment. To move, people simply lean in the direction they wish to go.

For more on MONKEYMedia, BodyNav and Bear’s entrepreneurial ventures, please listen to the podcast.

Graham Weston Donates $15 Million for a UTSA School of Data Science and National Security Collaboration Center

Graham Weston

Graham Weston, one of the co-founders of Rackspace and Geekdom, has donated $15 million to the University of Texas at San Antonio to establish a School of Data Science and a National Security Collaboration Center downtown.

The school is part of UTSA’s 10-year plan to develop its downtown San Antonio campus “as a destination for producing highly skilled professionals in big data and analytics,” according to UTSA.

In addition, UTSA is working with the City of San Antonio and Bexar County for the transfer of land downtown, valued at $13 million, to the university for the new school, a National Security Collaboration Center and the relocation of the UTSA College of Business. All of UTSA’s projects would total $229 million in value.

Already, UT’s system board of regents pledged $70 million for the School of Data Science and National Security Collaboration Center. UTSA is putting up another $5 million and with Weston’s $15 million gift, the university can begin the two construction projects, according to UTSA. The school will be located in the heart of San Antonio’s high tech corridor.

“UTSA is building the best data science program in the world. It will train the smartest students in the field and make them the hottest commodities in the workforce. We hope that as UTSA creates them, the biggest employers in the world will come to downtown San Antonio to recruit their IT workforces,” Weston said in a UTSA post.

“What we are witnessing today is the creation of transformative opportunities for San Antonio for generations to come,” UTSA President Taylor Eighmy, said in a UTSA post. “This convergence of talent, collaboration and innovation will create new jobs and new prosperity while further elevating San Antonio as a powerhouse for cybersecurity, data science and entrepreneurship.”

Visual courtesy of UTSA

Favor has Grown Tremendously Since its Acquisition by H-E-B

By Laura Lorek
Publisher of Silicon Hills News

Favor, the on-demand delivery startup based in Austin, reached profitability last September.

“We became the first on-demand delivery business in the United States, actually, globally, to become profitable and soon after that cash flow positive,” said Jag Bath, Favor’s CEO and H-E-B Chief Digital Officer.

“We didn’t need to raise any more capital,” Bath said. “And when the news of that got out, the phone started ringing. But not from VCs interested in putting more money in. The phone started ringing from well-established companies.”

Bath spoke Monday night during a fireside chat in the auditorium of the Engineering and Education Research Center at the University of Texas at Austin with Bob Metcalfe, founder of Ethernet, 3Com and UT professor of innovation. Genesis, a program at UT focused on nurturing and financing student-led startups, hosted the event.

Favor turned down multiple offers from companies interested in acquiring the business, Bath said.

But when H-E-B called, it made sense, Bath said. San Antonio-based H-E-B acquired Favor in February for an undisclosed price. It was the first acquisition in H-E-B’s 113-year history.

In 1905, Florence Butt founded H-E-B in Kerrville. Today, the privately-held retailer is run by Charles Butt, her grandson, who took over operations as Chief Executive Officer in 1971 and grew revenue from a few hundred million to more than $23 billion last year and 400 stores in Texas and Mexico, according to Forbes.

Since its acquisition, Favor has added 20,000 more runners and expanded into 84 cities, up from 50 cities. It plans to be in 114 cities by the end of the year, Bath said.

And Favor, founded in 2013, has spent a lot of time over the last five years developing a strong digital team, Bath said.

A few weeks ago, H-E-B announced it leased a two-story, 81,000 square foot building at 2416 East Sixth Street in East Austin for its tech facility and innovation lab for Favor and part of the H-E-B digital team.

There’s already a very strong and growing digital team for H-E-B in San Antonio, Bath said.

“We are going to keep growing that,” he said. “Given the way the industry is and what we’re investing we’re also going to add to that team here in Austin too.”

Favor has added six to eight people a week since its acquisition with H-E-B, Bath said. The company now has more than 200 employees. It has hired more than 125 people since the acquisition, Bath said.

Bath has a track record of scaling startups from early stage to successful mature companies with Unicorn status. Metcalfe defined a unicorn as a private company that has achieved a $1 billion valuation.

Favor started out with just the founders, Zac Maurais and Ben Doherty in 2013. They launched a test pilot in California and then moved to Austin and initially worked out of the Longhorn Startup Lab space at 1616 Guadalupe. In 2015, they had moved to a 4,000 square foot house on Sixth Street and they hired Bath, who served on the company’s board, as the company’s CEO.

Bath has never been a founder. He’s part of what Metcalfe refers to as the founderati or the glamorous people involved in the founding of companies.

“It takes a very unique skill set and a very unique personality to be able to be a founder,” Bath said. “The same is true of the early team that founders surround themselves with to help scale the company.”

“When all of the skills come together they work really well and that’s actually one of the secrets of scaling a company to Unicorn status,” Bath said.

In Silicon Valley, people refer to people like Bath, skilled executives brought in to scale a company as the adult supervision, Metcalfe said.

Mass growth requires a new skill set, Bath said. He previously helped to scale WeightWatchers.com, Gilt and RetailMeNot.

Typically, when someone joins a company with less than 50 employees, every single person in that group is working “an inch deep and a mile wide,” Bath said.

Over time, that startup grows into a larger company. That presents a new set of challenges.

Employees then need to be “a mile deep and an inch wide,” Bath said.

There is no real recipe to scale a startup into a Unicorn, Bath said.

But one thing that has remained true with every single startup that Bath has been involved in, the most important ingredient to building companies is talent, Bath said.

“Your ability to attract and recruit the best people you can find,” Bath said. “When you do that that influences the company’s culture. Culture isn’t something you can define or write. You can take a stab at it. But the reality is it’s the people that you bring on to go along on the journey that help to establish the culture. It’s the diversity of what they bring. The different experiences that they have. How they work well with others.”

Favor’s culture comes from its employees, Bath said.

“At Favor, one of the things we’ve put into place, we encourage every single team member to do a three-hour runner shift every month,” Bath said.

Bath also hosts Town Hall meetings on Mondays at 2 p.m. for an hour. Bath kicks off the meeting by going through the numbers and then there’s an opportunity, called spotlight, for any individual in the company to bring something to everyone’s attention. The final part of the meeting is what Bath calls eating your own dog food in which team members talk about their experience running Favors, he said.

Favor also has a program called Famous Salutes in which an employee can nominate another employee to be saluted for illustrating one of Favor’s four core values. They get a pin if they win and a $100 American Express gift card. If employees collect all four pins, which can take a year or more, they win two roundtrip tickets to any destination in the U.S. with a three-night hotel stay.

Things haven’t always been smooth sailing for Favor. The company pulled out of markets outside of Texas in January of 2017 to focus on Texas and becoming profitable, Bath said. It was in 25 cities at the time and Canada.

Favor had a difficult time raising its Series B round of venture capital funding, Bath said. Mainly because a lot of money had flowed into the on-demand food delivery sector and reporters in the financial press began raising questions about whether the business would ever become profitable.

That’s when Favor focused on building the business for the long-term and profitability, Bath said. Favor closed on $22 million in Series B funding in September of 2017 after it announced its profitability, he said.

“We worked really hard,” he said.

During the question and answer session, Bath took a question from an audience member about how his immigrant status influenced his career.

Bath said he grew up in the ghetto of London. His parents had immigrated there from India. They were both well educated. But in the 1970s, it was really tough for his parents to find jobs. His dad had an engineering degree and he ended up working a machine at a chocolate factory and later he joined a concrete company. His mom also had multiple jobs.

His family cared about getting food on the table cheaply, education and the community.

“When that is ingrained in you, it’s interesting the journey that you take,” he said.

It helped determine his work ethic.

“Having a good work ethic and working hard is something that was instilled in us,” Bath said.

Doreen Lorenzo on the Importance of Design Thinking for Problem Solving

Doreen Lorenzo, founder of the Center for Integrated Design.
and the Assistant Dean of the School of Design and Creative Technology at the University of Texas at Austin.

Design thinking is a methodology designers have always used to solve problems, said Doreen Lorenzo, founder of the Center for Integrated Design.

It started in the early 1960s around industrial design and made a comeback in the early 2000s to address a wide range of issues, Lorenzo said, who is also the Assistant Dean of the School of Design and Creative Technology at the University of Texas at Austin.

“Design used to mean just the artifact, the output of something,” Lorenzo said. “It was a visual. But design today means a lot of things. We’ve really expanded the definition and meaning.”

“Really design today, if you take it at its essence is really problem-solving,” Lorenzo said.

Today, people are looking at design to solve problems and make their life easier, Lorenzo said.

Lorenzo discusses the importance of design thinking of the latest episode of the Ideas to Invoices podcast. Before joining UT Austin, Lorenzo co-founded mobile video insights firm Vidlet. She previously served as president of Quirky and Frog Design. She is an internationally recognized thought leader on design and innovation. She is also a columnist for Fast Company Design and Medium.

“Design is still always in the eye of the beholder,” Lorenzo said.

There are still beautifully designed artifacts, but the premise of what people value about design has changed, Lorenzo said. People are seeking simplicity in their lives and design thinking can help them solve problems, she said.

“What is the problem we are trying to solve and who are we trying to solve it for,” Lorenzo said.

Humans have a totally different point of view than people often think they do, Lorenzo said. That’s why it’s so important to talk to the users of your product or service and find out what they really want, she said.

Who would have ever thought couch surfing would become a huge business, Lorenzo said. Marriott probably never saw that coming as a competitor, she said.

AirBnB’s founders talked to its users and designed a product for them, Lorenzo said. A lot of times companies in incumbent industries get so confident in their businesses that they think they know what the customers want, Lorenzo said. Successful businesses and companies must understand what the customer need is, she said. They must pay attention to what people really want, she said.

For more on design thinking, please listen to the podcast. Also, Lorenzo provided this link to a book list for more material on design thinking.

Startup Advice from the Founders of Geekdom in San Antonio

Lorenzo Gomez, Nick Longo and Graham Weston at Geekdom

By LAURA LOREK
Publisher of Silicon Hills News

The founders of Geekdom borrowed the “Serendipitous Collision of Ideas” phrase from Tony Hsieh, founder, and CEO of Zappos, and a catalyst in the Las Vegas technology community, said Lorenzo Gomez, chairman of Geekdom.

Geekdom, founded in 2011, is the catalyst for San Antonio’s technology community downtown. The collaborative co-working center focused on fostering technology startups has nurtured the city’s technology community. And Graham Weston and Nick Longo, founders of Geekdom, visited technology centers around the world to draw ideas from to build Geekdom.

Gomez moderated a fireside chat Monday night at the Geekdom Events Centre with Longo, founder of CoffeeCup Software and Weston, co-founder of Rackspace.

During the hour and half long talk, the three discussed how they built their various ventures and founded Geekdom to be a place where like-minded entrepreneurs could come and launch startups. Geekdom started off on the 11th floor of the Weston building, but now occupies the entire historic Rand Building on Houston Street. It has incubated and spun out several tech startups including Parlevel Systems, Codeup, TrueAbility, Merge VR and others.

The talk is the first in a series of monthly “Collision of Ideas” talks Geekdom plans with various founders.

At Silicon Hills News, we’ve distilled some of the highlights in the form of advice given to tech entrepreneurs from the talk below.

  1. ASSEMBLE A GOOD TEAM – With the Rackspace founders, Patrick Condon was the business expert, Dirk Elmendorf was the software expert and Richard Yoo was the hardware expert, Weston said. That combination of skills made for a winning team, he said. Rackspace, founded in 1998, grew to become San Antonio’s largest technology company with more than 6,000 employees.
  2. FAKE IT TILL YOU MAKE IT – The three founders wore official uniforms with the Cymitar Network Systems logo on them to their first meeting with Weston and his business partner Morris Miller, the early investors in the company. Those uniforms and the professionalism and confidence displayed by the three young founders gave Weston and Miller the confidence to invest in the company, according to Weston. They wrote the first $500,000 check to invest in the company.
  3. MAKE IT EASY – When pitching a new idea it’s critical to explain it in simple terms so that people can understand it and buy into it, Weston said.
  4. GET TO KNOW YOUR CUSTOMERS – Condon and Weston visited Longo at CoffeeCup Software, which was an early customer of Rackspace, in Corpus Christi to develop the relationship and learn about what he needed first hand, Longo said.
  5. FIND A COMMUNITY – Finding a community of like-minded individuals will help you accomplish your goals and help you with your startup. That’s why Geekdom was created, Weston said. It’s a place to chase your dream and find your team, he said.
  6. PIVOTS HAPPEN – A lot of times you think you’re pursuing one idea, you pivot and you’re pursuing another, Weston said.
  7. YOU HAVE TO BELIEVE – Fear is the number one thing that stops entrepreneurs, Weston said. You have to believe that your dream can come true for you. It’s hard to do that when all the people sitting around you are skeptical. We wanted Geekdom to help people overcome that fear and take that first step, Weston said.
  8. FIRST 15 – The first 15 people who join a startup are critical to its success, Weston said.
  9. KNOW WHEN TO QUIT – It’s very hard thing to know when to cut your losses, Weston said. Knowing when to pull the plug is critical. Most entrepreneurs pull the plug when they run out of money, Weston said. Others do it when they lose their passion for the business, he said.
  10. TIMING – Timing can make a big difference, said Weston. “But you have to be prepared to seize the moment,” he said. “There are magic moments happening in all of our lives all the time. And it’s very hard to spot them but when you do you need to be prepared to go all in.”
  11. FINDING PRODUCT MARKET FIT – Iterate, adapt and change constantly to find product-market fit, Weston said.
  12. DO WHATEVER IT TAKES – Longo slept under the counter of his coffee shop to manually process orders for his software as they came in. Be prepared to go “all in,” he said.
  13. SALES AND MARKETING ARE CRITICAL – So many entrepreneurs pitch Weston and say that they are selling their product without any sales or marketing personnel and Weston tells them “You’re an idiot.” Sales and marketing are critical to the success of any startup, Weston said. Tech founders need to respect the skills of others that they will need to succeed, he said.
  14. WHAT IS YOUR NOBLE CAUSE? – Why does it matter to you and why does it matter to someone else? Longo said. What problem are you trying to solve, Longo said.
  15. JUST DO IT – Barriers to starting a business are lower than they have ever been, Weston said. It’s the golden age of entrepreneurship for men and women, he said. With the cloud, starting a business is inexpensive, Weston said. The technology and tools that exist make it much easier than in the past, he said.

Alamo Angels Appoints Cat Dizon as its New Executive Director

Cat Dizon, executive director of Alamo Angels, courtesy photo.

Alamo Angels announced this week that Cat Dizon is its new executive director.

The San Antonio-based group of angel investors, which launched in December of 2017, is now comprised of more than 105 members who have invested more than $2 million in 12 businesses.

Dizon is Alamo Angels second executive director. She replaced Chris Burney who will remain on the Alamo Angels board of directors and investment committee.

Dizon is a partner and chief operating officer of Active Capital, a San Antonio-based venture capital firm. She will remain at Active Capital. She previously spent 11 years at Rackspace as a leader in corporate development, mergers and acquisitions, growth businesses and staff operations.

Dizon, who has lived in San Antonio for more than 20 years, is married to a former U.S. Marine and has one young daughter. She graduated from the University of Texas at San Antonio with a bachelor of arts degree in criminal justice.

September Tech Events to Attend in San Antonio

The Mission San Jose

Welcome to the fall.

Are you ready to attend some great tech events?

Silicon Hills News is working with Igloo Software, one of Canada’s most innovative companies, to give away 50 free tickets to its digital workplace conference at the JW Marriott San Antonio Hill Country Resort and Spa next week. Register by Sept 9th for your chance to receive 1 of 50 ICE’18 Conference Packages (includes conference pass, 2 nights at the JW Marriott San Antonio Hill Country Resort Spa, and more!). Register today.

Events to Attend in San Antonio in September

WHAT: San Antonio Hackers Association
WHERE: Geekdom Event’s Centre, 131 Soledad, San Antonio, Texas
WHEN: Thursday, Sept. 6th at 6:30 p.m.
WHY: Monthly meetup at Geekdom hosted by a group of hackers.
TICKETS: Free

WHAT: ICE by Igloo Conference
WHERE: JW Marriott San Antonio Hill Country Resort and Spa
WHEN: Sept. 11-13
WHY: A fabulous conference with excellent speakers focused on the digital workplace.
TICKETS: Register by Sept 9th for your chance to receive 1 of 50 ICE’18 Conference Packages (includes conference pass, 2 nights at the JW Marriott San Antonio Hill Country Resort Spa, and more!). Register today

WHAT: Fireside Chat with Geekdom’s Founders Graham Weston and Nick Longo
WHERE: Geekdom Events Centre, 131 Soledad, San Antonio, Texas
WHEN: Monday, Sept. 10th 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
WHY: This is Geekdom’s new monthly event series featuring San Antonio founders.
TICKETS: Free but the event is sold out.

WHAT: San Antonio Open Coffee Club
WHERE: Olmos Perk Coffee, 5223 McCullough, Olmos Park, Texas 78212
WHEN: Tuesday, Sept. 11 at 8:30 a.m. to 10 a.m.
WHY: A gathering of likeminded individuals to talk about tech entrepreneurship and innovation.
TICKETS: Free

WHAT: Men as Advocates for Women’s Leadership – Panel and Reception
WHERE: Geekdom Events Center, 131 Soledad, San Antonio, TX
WHEN: Tuesday, Sept. 11th, 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
WHY: Event is hosted by Girl Power Hour-San Antonio and Geekdom and features a panel of speakers
TICKETS: $7

WHAT: Smart SA Datathon Q&A Event by CivTechSA
WHERE: 110 E. Houston Street, 8th floor, San Antonio, Texas
WHEN: Friday, Sept. 14th 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
WHY: CivTechSA and the Smart SA partners will be hosting an open data competition in October and are putting on a Q&A event to cover the Datathon competition and to answer questions about the data sets and give more information about the prizes.
TICKETS: Free, but registration is required.

WHAT: San Antonio Tech Job Fair
WHERE: Jack Guenther Pavilion at The Briscoe, 210 W Market St San Antonio, Texas
WHEN: Tuesday, Sept. 18 at 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
WHY: Codeup presents its bi-annual San Antonio Tech Job Fair where local tech talent can connect with employers.
TICKETS: Free but registration is required.

WHAT: Digital Inclusion Forum – Engaging the Tech Community by the Digital Inclusion Alliance of San Antonio
WHERE: UTSA Downtown Campus, 501 West Cesar E. Chavez Blvd.
WHEN: Tuesday, Sept. 25, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m.
WHY: The alliance is working with Tech Bloc and the UTSA College of Public Policy to engage the tech community to talk about digital inclusion. Others are expected to join the discussion as well.
TICKETS: Free, but registration is required.

Upcoming:
(This one requires a road trip to Austin)
WHAT: InnoTech Austin
WHERE: Austin Convention Center
WHEN: Tuesday, October 2nd

WHY: The 15th annual InnoTech conference has a variety of tech exhibits and talks of interest to the Austin-San Antonio Technology community. It even hosts a popular Women in Tech conference.
TICKETS: Tickets start at $39 a person

September Tech Events to Attend in Austin

Austin’s colleges are back in session. Everyone is settling in and getting projects accomplished post-summer vacation and the city’s tech events are providing lots of opportunities for people to network, learn something new and have a good time.

Silicon Hills News is hosting two events this month: Healthcare Insurance for Startups and Entrepreneurs on Sept. 20th at Galvanize and ContentATX2 on Sept. 29th at Conde Nast. We hope to see you there or at one of these other fabulous events.

Also, Silicon Hills News is working with Igloo Software, one of Canada’s most innovative companies, to give away 50 free tickets to its digital workplace conference at the JW Marriott San Antonio Hill Country Resort and Spa next week. Register by Sept 9th for your chance to receive 1 of 50 ICE’18 Conference Packages (includes conference pass, 2 nights at the JW Marriott San Antonio Hill Country Resort Spa, and more!). Register today.

Events to Attend in Austin in September

WHAT: Austin Tech Happy Hour
WHERE: The Dogwood Downtown
WHEN: Thursday, Sept. 6 – 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
WHY: Bryan Menell has run this High-Tech Happy Hour since 2007. It’s a fun gathering of the tech community in Austin and a great place to network and unwind.
TICKETS: Each month Menell gives away a handful of free tickets. Early bird tickets start at $5 and advance tickets are $7.50. Tickets are available at the door for $10.

WHAT: International Hackathon: Austin-Pune Smart Cities hosted by Blackstone Launchpad at UT Austin
WHERE: UT Blackstone Launchpad, Flawn Academic Center, 2304 Whitis Ave., Austin, Texas
WHEN: Friday, Sept. 8th at 8 a.m.
WHY: “The City of Austin Economic Development Department GBE Division is partnering with UT Blackstone Launchpad, Pune Fashion Week, and Austin Pune Sister City Initiative to host a hackathon centered on Smart City solutions and international cooperation. Pune, India and Austin, TX are both cities striving to overcome unique challenges that can be answered by innovative technology.”
TICKETS: Free, but registration is required.

WHAT: Austin Forum on Cybersecurity: Surviving and Thriving in a Connected World
WHERE: Austin Central Library 710 W. Cesar Chavez
WHEN: Tuesday, Sept. 11 – doors open at 5:45 pm. The event runs from 6:15 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
WHY: The event features Cybersecurity Expert Earl Carter of Cisco Systems who will talk about the principles of cybersecurity, nature of common and notable hacking efforts and security breaches and ways to protect your computer.
TICKETS: The event is free, registration is required.

WHAT: Startup Grind Austin: Never Peak with Investor and Entrepreneur Justin Siegel
WHERE: Capital Factory, 701 Brazos Street
WHEN: Wednesday, Sept. 12, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
WHY: Damon Clinkscales, Startup Grind Austin Director, will interview Investor and Entrepreneur Justin Siegel. Siegel is the co-founder and CEO of two successful mobile entertainment companies: JSmart Technologies and JNJ Mobile.
TICKETS: $10 to $15.

WHAT: Innovation for a Better Austin: Ensuring Equity in Tech by Civic Tech for Smarter Cities
WHERE: Capital Factory, 701 Brazos Street
WHEN: Thursday, Sept. 13th from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
WHY: Danielle Skidmore, Civil Engineer and Commissioner for District 9, Austin LGBTQ Quality of Life Advisory Commission will moderate a panel discussion on the need for equity in the tech industry.
TICKETS: Free, registration required
WHAT: Bunker Labs Austin: Veterans in Residence Launch Party
WHERE: WeWork Domain, 11801 Domain Blvd. 3rd Floor
WHEN: Thursday, Sept. 13th 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
WHY: It’s time for another Veterans in Residence Cohort. Join Bunker Labs and WeWork to learn more about the program for veterans. Also, guest speakers include Nathan Lenahan and Veterans in Residence participants from VIR Cohort 1 and 11.
TICKETS: Free, but registration is required

WHAT: Fireside Chat with H-E-B’s Chief Digital Officer and CEO of Favor Jag Bath and Dr. Bob Metcalfe, inventor of Ethernet and professor of innovation at UT Austin. (Put on by Genesis)
WHERE: UT Austin (room TBA) 2501 Speedway
WHEN: Monday, Sept. 17th, 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
WHY: Bath has helped to scale many companies including Favor, RetailMeNot and others. Metcalfe also scaled 3Com into a multi-billion company after inventing Ethernet.
TICKETS: Free, but registration is required

WHAT: Healthcare Insurance 101 for Startups and Entrepreneurs– hosted by SANA Benefits.
WHERE: Galvanize, 119 Nueces
WHEN: Thursday, Sept. 20th 12:00 to 1:30 p.m.
WHY: Will Young, CEO and co-founder of SANA Benefits will talk about what entrepreneurs and startups need to know to pick the right healthcare plan for your employees and business.
TICKETS: $7.50 – only six remain

WHAT: Entrepreneurship Live! With Julia Cheek by TexTalks at the Herb Kelleher Center for Entrepreneurs in the McCombs School of Business at UT Austin
WHERE: Rowling Hall Auditorium, RRH 1.400 at the University of Texas at Austin
WHEN: Wednesday, Sept. 26th, 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m.
WHY: Julia Cheek, the founder of EverlyWell, landed a $1 million line of credit from Shark Tank Investor Lori Greiner this past April. She’ll talk about her experience in the Shark Tank and how she’s building Everywell, a diagnostic testing startup, in Austin.
TICKETS: Free, registration is required

WHAT: Austin Startup and Tech Networking Mixer powered by Google by weconnect Austin
WHERE: Hotel Indigo Austin Downtown – University 810 Red River Street
WHEN: Thursday, Sept. 27,
WHY: Weconnect is a networking organization that brings together tech professionals and major companies to network.
TICKETS: Start at $5 for early bird tickets to $25 at the door

WHAT: A Hack of the Drones by MD5 and Army’s Future Command
WHERE: Capital Factory, 701 Brazos St.
WHEN: Friday, Sept. 28 to Sunday, Sept. 30th at 3 p.m.
WHY: For developers, designers, and hackers from the academic, military and commercial startup communities to explore ways to counter small unmanned aerial systems.
TICKETS: Free, registration is required

WHAT: ContentATX2 by Silicon Hills News
WHERE: Conde Nast 1645 E 6th St #250
WHEN: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
WHY: ContentATX2 is a second annual conference focused on storytelling. It is geared toward content creators and entrepreneurs and focuses on writing, video, photos, podcasting, blogging, books, social media and other creative ways to tell a story.
TICKETS: $30 – only 10 remain

Upcoming:

WHAT: InnoTech Austin
WHERE: Austin Convention Center
WHEN: Tuesday, October 2nd
WHY: The 15th annual InnoTech conference has a variety of tech exhibits and talks of interest to the Austin Technology community. It even hosts a popular Women in Tech conference.
TICKETS: Tickets start at $39 a person

H-E-B is Creating a Digital Innovation Center in East Austin

San Antonio-based H-E-B is increasing its presence in Austin.

The grocery company announced Wednesday that it has leased a two-story, 81,000 square foot building at 2416 East Sixth Street in East Austin for its tech facility and innovation lab for the H-E-B digital team and Favor, the on-demand delivery startup H-E-B acquired earlier this year.

The new center should open in spring of 2019 H-E-B is renovating the industrial warehouse into a creative and collaborative workspace. The workplace is also close to restaurants, breweries, coffee shops and the 7th Street H-E-B store.

“This state-of-the-art space will be a hub for creativity and innovation as we continue to develop the ultimate digital experience for our customers,” Jag Bath, H-E-B Chief Digital Officer and Favor CEO and President, said in a news release. “Bringing H-E-B and Favor closer together will allow us to promote collaboration between our two companies as we strengthen our commitment to building out H-E-B’s omnichannel services.”

With the new space, H-E-B and Favor plan to add several hundred new employees in a variety of jobs including product management, product design, and software engineering.

This year, H-E-B has made a lot of moves into Austin and the tech industry. It acquired Favor. It also appointed Bath as H-E-B’s Chief Digital Officer and it recently added Mike Georgoff as Chief Product Officer for H-E-B Digital.

San Antonio-based Assembla Buys MyGet

Paul Lynch, CEO of Assembla, courtesy photo.

Assembla, a software development platform based in San Antonio, has announced plans to acquire MyGet, a software management company, based in Belgium.

The financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Assembla, founded in 2005 and acquired by Scaleworks in 2016, is a software as a service company that sells a platform that allows coders to build projects in a secure environment. It’s like GitHub for large companies that need to make sure the software projects that they use don’t have vulnerabilities in them that can be exploited by hackers. It also scans code to make sure the code is good and isn’t proprietary.

The addition of MyGet allows Assembla to provide an even more secure environment for software development, said Paul Lynch, CEO of Assembla. MyGet manages collections of code. It has databases of clean code that software developers use as the foundation for new products.

More than 90 percent of software has open source code in it, Lynch said. That’s why it’s important to use tools to vet the software before it gets introduced into a company’s computer system, he said.

MyGet, founded in 2011, run by its two founders and a handful of contractors, has thousands of teams worldwide using its software to manage their software development process. Its customers include Johnson Controls, Microsoft, and BMW. All of MyGet’s operations will be moved to San Antonio, Lynch said.

“The whole ecosystem of development around open source apps is really murky,” Lynch said.

Protection for the application must start before the software goes live, Lynch said. Security policies and procedures must start at the development level, he said.

Assembla has more than 5,500 customers across 157 different countries. Assembla, with 50 employees including 20 in San Antonio, plans to hire five to six people to manage MyGet.

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