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Bruce Sterling’s Talk to Startups

May 3, 2013 By Steve Borsch

ipad-brain-150x150Always on the hunt for thought leaders who are thinking strategically about the future, I watched the video below last night and it sparked so many thoughts I was compelled to share it with you.

Bruce Sterling is one of the founders of the cyberpunk movement in science fiction. A prolific science fiction author, he is generally recognized as one of the world’s foremost visionary futurists. He also has a blog you should follow at Wired called, “Beyond the Beyond.”

In this talk at NEXT Berlin, “The leading European conference for the digital industry,” Sterling talks about design fiction, touts a firm called called superflux out of London (and Anab Jain has recreated her NEXT13 talk in blog post form, “Design for the New Normal“), and brings forth something a bit uncomfortable for anyone doing a startup: You are working to make VCs richer and not yourself.

What is ‘design fiction’? In this Slate interview Sterling sums it up as this:

It’s the deliberate use of diegetic prototypes to suspend disbelief about change. That’s the best definition we’ve come up with.  The important word there is diegetic. It means you’re thinking very seriously about potential objects and services and trying to get people to concentrate on those rather than entire worlds or political trends or geopolitical strategies. It’s not a kind of fiction. It’s a kind of design. It tells worlds rather than stories.

Watch this and make a comment on what you think…

[youtube http://youtu.be/2VIoRYPZk68]

Filed Under: Thought Leaders

Minnesota Cup Application Process Now Open

May 3, 2013 By Steve Borsch

mncuplogoThe ninth annual Minnesota Cup competition – the largest statewide new venture competition in the country – will close its application window on May 17 at 11:59 p.m. Entrepreneurs, inventors and small businesses have two weeks to enter their breakthrough business ideas on Minnesota Cup’s website for a chance to compete for $200,000 in prize money.

The competition is free to enter and encourages entries from a wide range of business ideas in six divisions – Energy & Clean Tech, General, High Tech, Life Science & Health IT, Social Entrepreneur and Student. Entrepreneurs advancing in the competition will have the opportunity to advance business ideas, gain exposure, learn about resources available to entrepreneurs, be paired with mentors, meet members of the Cup’s review board – and win cash prizes if their idea is judged to be among the best entries.

Submissions must contain a description of the product or service, explanation of the market size or opportunity, a sales and marketing overview, brief operating plan and high level financial projections and assumptions.

For more information and to enter, please visit www.breakthroughideas.org.

Filed Under: Events, Startups & Developers Tagged With: MN Cup

Minnesota’s Spark Devices Launches ‘Spark Core’ to Enable Wi-Fi for Everything

May 2, 2013 By Graeme Thickins

Spark-logo-horizontalMinneapolis-based Spark Devices today launched a new project on Kickstarter in a major reboot of the company. The new Kickstarter comes as the cofounders are about to complete an accelerator program in China called HAXLR8R (“hack-celerator” – get it?).  It’s described as “a new kind of accelerator program for people who hack hardware and make things.” (Mentors include Brad Feld, Nolan Bushnell, and a host of others.) The Demo Day for the current class is May 13.

“There’s been a lot of excitement around Internet-connected devices, but the barrier’s always been pretty high because building Wi-Fi into a product is surprisingly expensive and difficult,” said Zach Supalla, cofounder and CEO. “We want to take down that barrier so that people can experiment with Internet-connected products as freely as they do with electronics in general using an Arduino.”

Spark Devices is building an open source development kit for Wi-Fi enabled products. “Spark Core” — it’s first product (and the name of the Kickstarter project) — is an Arduino-compatible, Wi-Fi enabled, cloud-powered development platform that makes creating Internet-connected hardware a breeze.  The team confidently state on its new Kickstarter page, “There’s nothing you can’t build with the Core.” SparkCore-InHand

How big is this “Internet of Things” (IoT) thing?
How does 24 billion devices connected by 2020 grab you?  How does the notion of “transforming everything” grab you?  A recent survey on IoT found 66% of IT professionals actually believe it will play a part in business and consumer technology converging within 3-5 years. (More about that SAP/Harris Interactive study in this post from ReadWrite Cloud.)

As Spark Devices aptly puts it, “we’re entering a world where products listen and communicate.” It notes that, so far, the Internet of Things is being driven by startups — think Pebble Watch, FitBit, the Nest thermostat, and others that are disrupting sleepy old product categories. But the founders rightly see a huge opportunity to help thousands of established companies take advantage of this connected-devices movement. [That’s right, so they don’t get disrupted.]

Spark Core works like an Arduino with integrated Wi-Fi. It’s powered by the new Texas Instruments CC3000 Wi-Fi module, and can be easily integrated into any circuit board.

How to manage all these devices?
Spark Core isn’t all that’s being debuted in this Kickstarter project.  The company is also announcing it will be building a cloud service to manage its Wi-Fi enabled products in the field. The “Spark Cloud” is SparkCloud-logoa scalable, managed infrastructure for communicating with all Spark-powered devices — an open but secure system, with a developer-friendly REST API. A key point: this cloud will enable over-the-air firmware updates to improve products over time. Read the FAQ on the Kickstarter project.  If you’re a hacker, it will blow your mind.

How to back Spark
Spark Core is being sold for $39 on the company’s Kickstarter project page, and later will be sold on its website and through electronics distributors.  But if you move fast, 200 Spark Cores are available for $29 each on Kickstarter as an Early-Bird Special.  And there are other great options to back the Kickstarter project.

What can you build with Spark Core and Spark Cloud?
Sample products cited on the Kickstarter page include things like a wireless motion detector, a solar-powered security camera, or even, as the Kickstarter video shows, a “pizza orderer.” To say the possibilities are limitless is not exaggerating.

Here’s more on the Spark Devices team:

  • Zach Supalla, CEO. Formerly worked at McKinsey (operations and product development) and Groupon. Kellogg (MBA), McCormick (MEM), Dartmouth (BA).
  • Zachary Crockett, CTO. Software developer with broad experience across platforms (Ruby, Java, Objective C). U of MN (Ph.D), Vanderbilt (BA).
  • Stephanie Rich, VP of Biz Dev. Former director of sales and marketing in the film industry (GreeneStreet Films). Cambridge (MBA), Northwestern’s Medill School of Journalism (BS).
  • Will Hart, Design Engineer. Cook Engineering Design Fellow at Dartmouth College. BE and ME in Mechanical Engineering, Dartmouth.
Recent photo shows the team in China, minus Steph, who stayed home in Minneapolis to hold down the fort. Left to right: Zach, Zachary, Will.

Recent photo shows the team in China, minus Steph, who stayed home in Minneapolis to hold down the fort. Left to right: Zach, Zachary, Will.

The partnership with the aforementioned HAXLR8R hardware-focused incubator, based in Shenzhen, China, provides Spark Devices an extensive ecosystem of mentors, investors, and fellow startups.

For more on Spark Devices, see its latest web site, and follow the company on Twitter and Facebook.  Also catch the founders at the upcoming Bay Area Maker Faire, and (I personally hope) at the Glue Conference later in May.  Then, soon, the entire team will be back home hard at work at CoCo Minneapolis at the Grain Exchange.

Congrats to Spark Devices: another great example of Minnesota tech innovation — gone global!

Filed Under: MN Entrepreneurs

What Comes First in Fargo – the #MidwestMobileSummit or the Spring Floods?

April 14, 2013 By Graeme Thickins

MidwestMobileSummit-logoThey’re both coming soon! And they may actually be arriving about the same time. But, no worries, the first-year Midwest Mobile Summit will be held April 28-29 in downtown Fargo ND, which I’m told is a pretty safe area of town from the rising waters that come every spring to this city partially bordered on the Red River.

But if you really want to find out when the floods might arrive — well, it turns outH2O-1
there’s an iOS app for that.  Its name?  Why, H2O Fargo, of course!  And it became available a couple of weeks ago in the App Store, just in time for the inevitable rising waters.

I learned about the app when I met with the guys from Myriad Devices, a mobile app development shop that’s the lead sponsor and organizer of the Midwest Mobile Summit. They developed the flood app as a public service for their community, and Jake Joraanstad, CEO, told me the app was approved by Apple in only one day! I guess they understood the urgency of the situation. (Screenshots of the app shown.)

H2O-2The MIdwest Mobile Summit has big support of the local community, and will draw a large representation of the area’s significant technology industry, including angels and VCs, Microsoft and ex-Microsoft managers, NDSU officials, and a strong mobile development community.  Read more about the the schedule, speakers, and sponsors at the event site — and how to obtain tickets. You can purchase Day One, Day Two, H2O-3or both days. Overnight accommocations for Sunday, April 28, are availabke at the nearby Radisson downtown (info at event site). Several speakers and attendees are coming from the Twin Cities. See you there if you can make it!

Filed Under: Events Tagged With: Android, angels, iOS, Minnesota, mobile

Mobile Fans Have a Big Day at the Farm

March 24, 2013 By Graeme Thickins

EarleBrownFarmA whole bunch of busy tech professionals dropped everything on Thursday and headed to the farm — the Earle Brown Farm, that is (now called Earle Brown Heritage Center  — a very cool place). Okay, it wasn’t all that far out of town, only Brooklyn Center, but it was like a trip to the country in a way, getting out of the office to focus on a where our world seems to be heading these days: mobile everything!  (Wonder what Earle would think of that?*)

The occasion was, of course, the 4th Annual Mobile March Twin Cities conference, and it drew a sellout crowd of some 300. This MobileMarchTC-logoconference gets bigger and better every year. The 2013 iteration offered myriad opportunities to network with mobile developers, designers, enterprise IT people, gaming enthusiasts, marketers, and knowledgeable vendor representatives. And an awesome agenda of 32 break-out sessions made for a jam-packed day of learning as well. This ever-changing industry we call mobile is made up of many moving parts and pieces, and it touches every segment of the Twin Cities business community — from the smallest of startups to the hugest Fortune 500 giants. All those segments were well represented at MobileMarch, and there was some serious mixing of the pot going on!

Sessions were in four tracks: Mobile Strategy, Mobile Development, Mobile Gaming, and Mobile MMTC13-BigRoomBusiness. A sampling: “Four Key Principles of Mobile User Experience Design” … “The Beginning and End of Mobile Marketing” … “BYOD & MDM FYI” (for enterprise IT types) … “Avoiding Apple Rejection” … and the ever-playful “Using Chipmunk Physics to Create an iOS Game.” It was damn hard choosing from the four concurrent sessions going on throughout the day! Which is why getting to see presentations you missed will be helpful — and many are in the process of being posted on the event site here. So keep checking back.

To get the real lowdown on the event as it happened, one can, of course, go read the very MMTC13-SystemsVsAppsactive #mmtc13 hashtag stream. During the day, I was trying to do my share on the Minnov8 tweet stream myself, and I also posted some pix here on Flickr — shot with a mobile device, of course!  The official tweets of the @MobileMarchTC team were flying all day, too.

Next time you see one of that team, who do such a great job organizing this event, be sure to thank them: Justin Grammens, our own Phil Wilson, Linda Cummings, and Mike Bollinger. Also, Phil made me tell you to lavish the sponsors with copious amounts of gratitude, as this event would definitely not happen without them: Verizon, Fusion Room, Livefront, Code 42 , SDG, W3i (now NativeX), Microsoft Windows Phone, Compuware, Intertech, and Digineer. They rock, each and every one of them! It was great meeting and talking to many of their people during the breaks and cocktail reception.

Postscript: To illustrate the reach and impact of this four-year-old MobileMarch event, I learned on Thursday that it’s inspired the Fargo tech community to launch one of their own: Mobile Summit, taking place April 28-29. The organizers were in attendance and have already landed some Twin Cities-based speakers.

———–

* Earle Brown Farm, which went through a major renovation that transformed it into an impressive, sprawling conference center, is the namesake of, you guessed it, a really cool guy named Earle, who was Hennepin County Sheriff in the early 1900s and founded the Minnesota Highway Patrol. He was also quite a horseman. He just never got to own a mobile device, as he died in 1963. More history here. When I worked for Medtronic early in my career, my office was in an adjacent building and looked right down on horses romping around the large corral, which is now a parking lot. See what you learn reading Minnov8!  (No, I didn’t ride a horse-and-buggy to work — we had cars then. Just no airbags.)

Filed Under: Events, Mobile Technology, Startups & Developers Tagged With: Android, Apple, Google, iOS, Microsoft

W3i Rebrands, Launches Native Ad Platform for App Devs, Adds Trip Hawkins as Senior Advisor

March 20, 2013 By Graeme Thickins

Final_GDC_Booth_5W3i, one of Minnesota’s largest and fastest-growing Internet companies, with headquarters in St. Cloud and offices in Minneapolis and San Francisco, just made a major announcement today.  The company has changed its name to NativeX and completely rebranded around a new platform to help developers better monetize their apps. The focus for W3i has long been primarily (though not exclusively) on game apps, so it’s no surprise the announcement was timed to hit the wire as the company prepares for the huge Game Developers Conference, which takes place all next week in San Francisco.

With this move, the company is positioning to jump on what is becoming a clear trend toward advertising that is more specific, or native, to various web platforms, as opposed to the old, tired banner advertising, which everyone loves to hate.  W3i, now Native X, clearly wants to own the concept for apps, and what better way than to use the term right in their name?

A key part of the announcement today, adding mucho cred with the gaming community, is the addition of Trip Hawkins as an http://www.kmendozaphoto.com (408) 315-4714“advisor to the board.”  Trip, whom the company rightfully calls an “industry giant,” has a history going back to Apple’s early days. You can read all about him here on his Wikipedia page.

“Native advertising is the future,” Hawkins says in the news announcement. “Every major publisher on mobile and web has their eye on native advertising right now. NativeX is proving that we as an industry can do better than banner ads.”

What many observers would find even more interesting about this new initiative of W3i (now NativeX) is that a guy named Young Sohn is chairman of its board.  (More on Young below.)

I conducted an email interview with Rob Weber, cofounder and EVP of NativeX, after I got early word of this news last night:

Why did you decide to rebrand the company?

RobWeber“As we reviewed our marketing strategy, it became clear to us that the name “W3i” didn’t convey what we are all about. In the digital media world, most industry experts would agree that display advertising is broken. Even the largest banner ad units result in CPMs for publishers only in the $2.00 range, max. The reason for the low performance is display ads don’t drive engagement, and ultimately value, for marketers. This is why Google invented a more ‘native’ ad unit for its business (paid search), Facebook created new ad units built for the news feed, Twitter launched sponsored tweets, and, locally, DoApp introduced ‘RSS news ads.’  We are focused on solving this problem for consumer app developers, and we felt like the name ‘nativeX’ speaks directly to where we are headed — creating new, native ad units for developers that bring strong monetization to their business.”

How did you get connected to Trip? What role will he play?

“I was first introduced to Trip about a year ago by a mutual friend on a trip to San Francisco. We stayed in touch, and it became clear he could help us in a number of ways. Trip will provide a strategic perspective to our board with respect to what is going on in mobile and in the app space, which is dominated by game apps. Trip will help us build even stronger ties and awareness within the broader app world, and specifically in the Bay Area. On a personal level, Trip has also been helpful as a mentor to me.”

How long have you been planning this?  Who drove the rebranding?

“Plans have been in the works for a few months, and the rebranding effort has been led by our new VP of Marketing, Diana LaGattuta, DianaLaGattutabased in San Francisco.” [Ed.: Her photo at right, and her bio appears on the NatixeX web site.]

What changes will result to the organization locally, if any? 

“In terms of local changes, we expect a clearer message to our target clients, along with the new technology we are launching, will enable us to continue to increase the value of our company, which will result in us ontinuing to hire even more folks locally.”

How will this affect your SF organization? Will you be expanding it?

“We are looking to grow additional headcount in all three of our offices — Sartell, Minneapolis, and San Francisco. The Bay Area has a lot of relevant talent for a business like ours, and we plan to add significant headcount there. We’ve seen that the Bay Area talent we already have gives us the opportunity to increase our perspective, which helps the rest of the team grow faster.”

Does it mean any significant new hiring plans right away?

“We have lots of hiring plans immediately. Check out our career page for specifics.” [Ed.: That would be here.  No specific jobs listed there yet, but there sure is some enticing copy. And an email link to apply.]

What new partnerships, if any, will become a part of this new initiative?

“We will continue to ramp partnerships with mobile and desktop app developers. For example, in October we announced a new partnership with one of the globally most popular mobile app developers in the world, Imangi Studios, maker of the smash hit Temple Run. We have some other new partnerships that will be similar, but taking advantage of our new native technology.”

What are the long-term implications in this for your company?

“We think the rebranding and new technology will help us create further differentiation in the market. We think we can own ‘native advertising’ within the app space. Expect to see more specifics in terms of new products, technology, partnerships, and more tied to this ‘native’ approach.”

What if anything can we read into this because you have the Chief Strategy Officer of Samsung on your board?

“Young was 100% supportive of our rebranding.”

Rob Weber and his company have long been champions of developers, not only helping them make money with their apps, but even helping them get funding to launch or expand. He wrote a guest post on VentureBeat earlier this month, Six ways the Five Horsemen of Tech can build better app ecosystems, in which he spoke about that. (The “Five Horseman” being Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google, and Samsung.)

#3 Lend a Hand: Create Funding Programs for Developers

This one is also fairly obvious. On one hand, you have large thriving companies generating billions of dollars in revenue every year. On the other hand, you have an app market that gets more cutthroat every day and is filled with bootstrapped developers struggling to stay competitive. All of the horsemen should be creating sizable developer funds to help them build the teams and infrastructure they need to make great apps. Such funds would also encourage developers to leverage the horsemen’s technology and make something innovative on their platform. Samsung is a great example of this. With their recently announced $100 million Samsung Catalyst Fund, Samsung will expand their brand, work with great developers, and help build their app ecosystem as clarified at the recent Dive Into Media conference.

Horseman that does this the best: Samsung*

*Full disclosure, the Chairman of our board at nativeX, Young Sohn, is President and Chief Strategy Officer at Samsung, and is involved in overseeing Samsung’s fund.

Young Sohn will surely play a role in guiding NativeX to even more growth going forward. Stay tuned!

By the way, I will be reporting from GDC next week myself, including updates about Minneapolis-based startup Canopy, which also will have a presence there.

——-

(My disclosure: I provided consulting services to W3i in past years, but have no current contractual relationship with the firm.)

Filed Under: News & Events Tagged With: mobile, NativeX

MN Startup Moves to SF, Gets Fame, But Still Keeps Some Roots Here

March 19, 2013 By Graeme Thickins

ColinKarpfingerSome pretty amazing tech entrepreneurs come out of Minnesota. I can attest, as I’ve worked with way more than one hundred of them, and written about my fair share. Colin Karpfinger is an excellent example, one whose story inspired me to want to tell more people about him.

It all began when we reconnected recently by email, after originally meeting at a Minnebar event some years ago through a common client connection. I knew he’d moved to San Francisco (not the first of my entrepreneur friends to do that!), but he had kept in touch with occasional email reports — whichPunchThrough-logoimpressed me. Pretty much every single successful entrepreneur that I have known is an excellent communicator. They don’t forget where they came from, and those they met or who helped them early on. They network well, they take advantage of mentors and advisors, and they extend a helping hand to others, especially other entrepreneurs when they can. The fact that Colin’s latest blog post made me aware we shared another passion, besides entrepreneurship, only made reconnecting with him all that much more fun. (More on that later.)

When Colin told me he’d be in Minneapolis for a few days recently, I suggested we meet for coffee at my new favorite place to work one day a week: the CoCo coworking space on the Historic Grain Exchange trading floor in downtown Minneapolis. (That’s where I shot the photo of Colin you see here.) There, I got an in-person update about the success Colin is having building his business, primarily out in the center of the tech universe, San Francisco, but still maintaining his ties to Minnesota.

That business is called Punch Through Design, which describes itself thusly on its web site: “We’re a small and agile group of developers in San Francisco and Minneapolis. Over 90% of our designs have been iPhone accessories. This specialization allows us to know the details of Apple’s Made For iPod/iPhone/iPad (MFi) program, front and back. Our experience allows us to help guide clients through the somewhat complicated process in a quick and efficient manner.”

Products that Punch Through has contributed to, with consulting, design, and engineering services, include: BasisWatch

• The Basis watch, a device that tracks heartbeats and more to improve your health. It uses Bluetooth 2.1 to pair to an iPhone or Android phone. PunchThrough assisted Basis in obtaining Apple’s “MFi” approval.

• ITAMCO’s industrial Bluetooth transmitter – the world’s first.

• Air Guitar Move™, a motion-sensing guitar pick for iOS (shown in red) — a product Colin and a partner developed. (It was a Kickstarter project that successfully raised its funding goal in July 2011.)

AirGuitarMove-pick• A recently developed app of its own called LightBlue™, a Bluetooth Low Energy test app that lets developers test both their hardware devices and their iOS software. (More than 2,500 people are using it currently, and it has 14 five-star reviews.)

• LumoBack, a company that’s received a lot of attention for its Bluetooth Low Energy posture sensor (shown at right).  It received funding from Eric Schmidt and launched at DEMOfall 2011. (“Great team, fun guys toLumoBackwork with, and a very cool, simple product,” Colin said.)

• popSLATE™, a second-screen case for your iPhone, which was a successful Indigogo project, raising $220,000 as of January 15.

PopSlate-iPhoneCaseAnd other clients that can’t be named yet due to confidentiality agreements — but watch for future announcements!

An Entrepreneur Is Born

Colin is originally from Wisconsin, where he started tinkering with electronics and building things when he was only 12.  He attended college at UW-Eau Claire, but, some five or six years ago, he was attracted to the larger electrical engineering program at the University of Minnesota.

The story of how Colin got to where he is today with his business starts some four years ago. Though a whiz at electronics, school just wasn’t challenging him (more on that later). With his studies not keeping him busy enough, he longed to start his own hardware engineering design firm, even while working part-time at the Minneapolis office of the large product development firm LogicPD, as an associate electrical engineer, while attending the University of Minnesota.

Punch Through Design was born in mid-2009, while Colin was still taking classes at the U.  Some months later, after conferring with people he trusted, he decided to drop out of school and go West, where he knew there was much need for his talents. “I moved to San Francisco on February 12, 2010, leaving behind many great friends in Minneapolis, but fortunately soon meeting a lot of new ones in the Bay Area,” he said.

Colin had plenty of consulting work, but it wasn’t long before he needed to make his first hire.  That was Mike Waddick of Minneapolis, who came highly recommended, in the summer of 2011.  Mike moved to SF to hold down the fort while Colin spent three months in Spain that year.

A few months prior to that, there was a major turning point for Colin. “With help from others, I was able to launch my first product, ‘Thumbies.’  It hit the shelves in Best Buy stores in May 2011.  Walking into a store and seeing the product that started with a broken Nintendo controller and SuperGlue was a surreal experience.  As a kid, it was hard to imagine how an ‘invention’ could find its way in a store.  I felt like I had cracked the code.”

But the honeymoon was short. “Unfortunately, I learned that getting your product into stores doesn’t mean you’ve made it.  Thumbies sold at an average rate, and the product is no longer being sold.  I learned a lot, including a few things that I consider to be the reasons for less than awesome sales. This was hugely valuable in experience for me, even though the product was not a monetary success.”

Soon after, Colin returned fulltime to consulting with Punch Through Design. “We wrote some nice blog posts that helped us reach #1 on Google for the search term ‘iPhone accessory product development,’ and that resulted in increased business. In the summer of 2011, I had Mike Waddick take over the lead engineering role on consulting projects, and his good work is one of the main reasons I was able to focus my time on starting a new product, Air Guitar Move™ — working with a cofounder named Ron Mannack. It was a motion-sensing guitar pick that let you strum in the air, with your iPhone becoming a guitar via a companion app.”

Air Guitar Move was successfully funded as a Kickstarter project in July 2011, and within a year 700 units were shipped to backers.Colin+partner-WiredMag “Taking what I learned from Thumbies, we developed this product under our own brand. That led to a slew of lessons learned about overseas manufacturing, music licensing, iPhone app development, game design, motion sensing, packaging design, Apple approval, and distributor agreements.”  (Colin’s partner on this project continues with the venture.)

(If you’re interested in history, a more complete story of Colin’s experience with Thumbies, and then the beginnings of his experience with Air Guitar Move™, is well documented in the Wired article from June 2012, where the above photo appeared: In the Kickstarter Future, Hardware Is the New Software, by @RyanTate.)

What Others Have to Say

One of the first clients of Colin’s business, before he set up shop in San Francisco, was Matt Bauer, who founded a startup here in Minneapolis called PedalBrain. Matt is one of Colin’s biggest supporters and I’m sure was instrumental in inspiring Colin’s entrepreneurial pursuits. I asked Matt (a former client of mine, and a developer I have great respect for) to give me his perspective on Colin, who was his contract hardware designer for the PedalBrain product:

“The name of Colin’s company, Punch Through Design, refers to an electrical property of transistors. It’s a property defined at the extreme case of a transistor where the drain and source regions merge. It’s analogous to Colin and his work. He is the merging of a maker/hacker/entrepreneur with that of a precision engineer/manufacturer/large company CEO. He and his team are producing tools and solutions for companies large and small to be at that intersection of hardware and software. No one is merging these two worlds together better than Colin, and no one is busier doing it.”

Harold Slawik, a partner in a Minneapolis law firm focused on tech startups, NewCounsel, had this to say about Punch Through’s founder:  “We’ve been working with Colin for a couple of years and have been impressed with what he’s accomplished since taking the plunge with Punch Through. He has the intelligence and the drive to make it big. He’s also very mature and sensible in his business dealings, especially given his age. He is one of the three or four youngest among our active client group of approximately 75.”

A Side Project of Colin’s

This past September, Colin shared with me by email his experiment to improve higher education.  He started a program he calls “The First Lecture” to try to address some of the issues he encountered during his time in university.  His theory is that school teaches students the “how” but not the “why.”  He believes that leads to a lack of motivation, “and turns brilliantly beautiful and interesting subjects into drudgery.”

His experiment is to see how much he can improve a student’s experience by simply giving one lecture providing the right “why,” or motivation to learn.  Some months ago, Colin gave his first talk for the Microcontrollers class at the University of Minnesota, thanks to the Electrical Engineering department, which allowed him to do do.

To assist in this effort, Colin even donated some equipment to allow the EE students to build things outside of school.  Previously, this equipment was only available in the University’s labs; students could not take it home with them.  Thanks to Colin and an equipment supplier, each student in the class received a PicKit2 programmer and a USB logic analyzer.

Here’s a video link to Colin’s lecture at the University of Minnesota. (Screen shot shown.)  Colin tells me he’s now also working with the first university he attended, UW-Eau Claire, to improve its electronics course.  “It’s a small school but was really beneficial to me, Colin-Lecture-UMNand part of the reason I got started on my current path,” he said. “My professor and advisor there, Dr. Kim Pierson, has been my advocate even after I dropped out of school, which speaks volumes about him. He’s there to help out the students, whether they’re in school or not.”

And what of his relationship with the University of Minnesota?  “I’ve stayed in touch with some students from the class I lectured in, and with University personnel,” said Colin. “I am in fact actively recruiting now for one or two engineering positions, and the U is a promising pool of talent.  As to the future of my lecture program, I’m working on starting a ‘Maker Scholarship,’ where people could get scholarships not just for school, but for the projects they’re working on, which I believe have a higher return on investment.”

Colin ended a recent email update to friends and supporters with this note: “If you too think that higher education can be much better, I’d love your support.  Either by sharing my video link with friends, or helping to expand this initiative to other schools in some way, shape, or form. If you have any ideas, please contact me.” ColinSurfing_Mexico

But That’s Not all in Colin’s Life 

So, you’d think all of the above would be exciting enough?  Wrong!  Colin and his team keep life very interesting with other pursuits — first of all, surfing. (That’s him stylin’ a radical longboard bottom turn in Mexico recently.)  Surfing is how I connected with Colin a month or so ago, after seeing a blog post he did that talked about the team heading to Santa Cruz to hit the beach, part of an offsite retreat of sorts. (The other shot shows three of the team doing a surf check on that trip.)

Then I learned, not only does Colin surf, he’s into kiteboarding, too! … as part of SurfCheck-PunchThrough_teamthe famed MaiTai Group.  Hey, this thing is not your normal group of weekend warriors — check out this story about the MaiTai crew in the December 2011 Forbes: Kiteboarding Techies Generate $7 Billion In Market Value.

But, wait, there’s more: for these kiteboarders, water isn’t enough — they also kite on (you guessed it) snow.  Colin just returned from Utah, where one of the group had previously written this blog post: Utah Snowkiting with Charles River Ventures and MaiTai.

Punching Into the Future

I asked Colin for a closing thought.  He immediately wanted to praise his team.  Mike Waddick, his first hire, now works in Punch Through’s office in SE Minneapolis, joined more recently by Ray Kampmeier, still a student at the U of M.  Ray will move to San Francisco when he graduates in May.  Another addition to the team came when Colin hired SF-based iOS developer Kevin Johnson in the summer of 2012, to help round out Punch Through’s product development services.  Thus, the team is now four people total — “but we’ll be five or six by the summer,” said Colin.  In addition, the company uses other contractors for industrial design, mechanical engineering, and overflow software work.

“I’m very thankful for the great people I get to work with at Punch Through,” Colin said. “Big shout-outs to Mike, Ray, and Kevin!”

It’s easy to see that Colin is building a strong culture at Punch Through Design, which will go a long way toward ensuring the continued success of the firm.  As I said, Minnesota produces some amazing entrepreneurs — and, even if we do have to share a guy like Colin with Wisconsin, and now California, I know he’ll be a continuing source of pride to our state.  He proves again that one doesn’t necessarily have to complete a degree program to be inspired by our great University.  A love of learning — both formal and informal education — is a huge part of being an entrepreneur. But, in my book, passion and perseverance, plus the ability to recruit and motivate others, make all the difference in succeeding.

And a little surfing and kiting surely can’t hurt, either.

———–

Follow Colin and his team’s pursuits on the Punch Through web site, the company’s Twitter account, and on its LinkedIn and Facebook company pages.

(Note: This post appeared earlier today on my personal blog, Graeme Thickins On Tech™.)

Filed Under: MN Entrepreneurs, Startups & Developers Tagged With: Apple, iPhone

Minnesota Serial-Entrepreneur Rockstar Phil Soran Is Now a VC

March 15, 2013 By Graeme Thickins

IconVenturePartners-logoNews broke today about the founding of a new venture capital firm composed mainly of Minnesota names, including partners from a VC firm with a name familiar to many here in Minnesota that is now being retired. Four Minnesotans, plus a transplanted one, form the core of the new firm, Icon Venture Partners (no web site yet), which it appears will be co-based in the Twin Cities and Silicon Valley.

In a story just published a few hours ago, Icon Ventures Forms from El Dorado’s Ashes, Fortune venture capital reporter Dan Primack wrote:

“El Dorado Ventures is kaput, after 27 years of investing in early-stage companies. But two of its partners hope to continue working together, on a new platform that they’re calling Icon Venture Partners.”

He said the cofounders — longtime colleagues Jeff Hinck (top right, based in Minnetonka, MN) and former Minnesotan Charles Beeler (below right, based in Menlo Park, CA) — JeffHinckare seeking to raise $80-100 million for the firm’s initial fund. As general partners in El Dorado Ventures (Charles for a dozen or more years, and Jeff for the past few years), the duo was instrumental in Series A funding rounds recently for two Minneapolis-based startups: TST Media (known for its Sport NGIN platform), and enStratus — which also just changed its name, to enStratius. It’s more than a name change for the VC firm, however, as the Fortune story clearly says El Dorado is done, with Icon being formed as a brand-new entity, albeit with some of the same players.

What’s more interesting is that three other Minnesotans are mentioned as part of a “large group of venture partners and advisors” in Icon Venture Partners, including Zenas Hutchinson (at left below), Jeff Hinck’s longtime colleague and fellow partner at Vesbridge Venture Parters (now apparently inactive, so Primack’s story implies).

The other two Minnesotans named are Phil Soran (below center), who some 10 years ago cofounded storage company Compellent, acquired by Dell in 2011. Prior to that, Soran CharlesBeelercofounded Xiotech, which was acquired by Seagate in the late ’90s.  Soran’s longtime associate Dennis Johnson (below right), who served in senior sales positions at both storage firms, is the other Minnesota venture partner named in the story. Icon Venture Parters’ Hinck and Beeler were early investors in both of Soran’s startups, Hinck then a partner at Palo Alto & Minneapolis-based Crescendo Ventures, and Beeler at Menlo Park-based El Dorado.

(Disclosure: Crescendo Ventures was a client of my consulting firm some ten years ago. Compellent was also a client in early 2011.)

ZenasHutchinson   PhilSoran  DennisJohnson
(Note: A version of this story appeared minutes ago on my blog, Graeme Thickins On Tech™.)

Filed Under: MN Entrepreneurs, Tech Investors Tagged With: cloud

We Received SmartThings Kits Last Night

March 8, 2013 By Steve Borsch

SmartThings logoLast evening about two dozen people showed up at the SmartThings office. It was the first rollout of ‘kits’ we’d pre-ordered through their Kickstarter funding adventure and I was pleased to have been chosen to attend and get my kit, even though I’m not a developer.

A typical SmartThings kit contains a hub you plug in to the internet and a smartphone app to control the hub. Then you set up sensors for open/close, presence, switches and more. Developers create apps that deliver multiple-sensor functionality—and these SmartApps are downloadable from within the smartphone app—and SmartThings has built a developer kit to spark the building of apps for all sorts of markets and applications. Fortunately SmartThings also embraces and supports open standards and protocols, so they’ll work with damn near everything made and this preliminary list of compatible devices, out of the 900 or so already on the market, will give you an idea of how expandable and scalable this smart platform truly is and why you’ll want it.

The opportunity for SmartThings is SO crystal clear that I’m really excited for them and what I am certain will be resounding success. They have first-mover-advantage, lots of buzz, good funding, retailers highly interested, and listening to CEO Alex Hawkinson and CTO Jeff Hagins (team here) last night my belief deepened that they already have an amazing start toward making their developer platform a reality.

In my opinion SmartThings is home automation finally done right. It is more affordable than anything else I’ve ever seen on the market. Not only did these guys blow past their Kickstarter.com initial funding (tried to raise $250k and got over $1.3M in 30 days) they’ve also recently raised a $3M seed round of capital. Plus, their over 5,000 ‘backers’ on Kickstarter read like a whos-who of technology leaders and the buzz about them is incredible.

Click to view larger versions:


Last night I picked up my SmartThings ‘kit’ at their offices at an event for early, early adopters and developers. As you probably know by now, SmartThings contains a hub you plug in to your internet hub or switch and then use a smartphone app to control the hub. Then you set up sensors for open/close, presence, switches and more. The team, and a few developers, have already created some ‘SmartApps’ to download. This sort of surprised me, but after installing my SmartThings hub and sensors last night I realized that I want to immediately buy more! I’ve already scoped out what I intend to buy:

  • 6-10 smart outlets (probably from GE and $40 or so apiece)
  • At least 6 smart switches (probably from GE and also $40 or so apiece)
  • Probably 3-4 Spark sockets that will let me turn on lighting turn on and do so by time (about $50 apiece)
  • Schlage Deadbolt lock that uses either a key, a code, or is controllable within the SmartThings app (about $170).

So my initial $300 ‘investment’ in my SmartThings kit will grow to more than $1,000+ and that’s just the beginning!

Here is a post and interview I did with co-founder Ben Edwards last August (and released it the day their Kickstarter campaign debuted) as well as YouTube videos like this series of SmartThings YouTube videos if you’d like to see more.

Filed Under: MN Entrepreneurs Tagged With: #IoT

Me and My Pebble

March 1, 2013 By Phil Wilson

pebbleIf you’re a regular listener to our Minnov8 Gang Podcast you’re aware that I was a major…er…one of the first…um…ok, an investor in the Pebble watch Kickstarter campaign. You also know that I get a good deal of questions like, “Have you got that Pebble yet, Phil?” or “How’s that Pebble working out?” from the rest of the Gang.

Who knew that after ponying up some of my hard earned shekels to help fund one of the most successful campaigns on Kickstarter…and to get me a nifty geek watch…Pebble would become the poster child of what can happen when you over-promise.

Well, huzzah! My Pebble has arrived and I wanted to share some first impressions. (You can see my version of an “unboxing” below. What’s up with unboxing videos anyway?)

[youtube=http://youtu.be/53_yOAF74bg]

First and foremost, the design is very slick. The screen and body are one, with no gaps or raised edges like that found on a regular watch where the crystal and body come together. While I’d like to see a band that is as wide as the square watch itself the black rubber band is of good quality.

Pairing it with my HTC Evo via Bluetooth was a breeze. I’ll have to admit there was a bit of head scratching to set up the sync with mail etc. Set up is not all that intuitive once you get past pairing and it took me a bit of time to actually locate the settings. The Pebble app relies on both it’s own visible menu bar as well as a settings function accessed by the Android menu button. It’s quite obvious once found, making me feel a bit like a dolt for not checking that first.

I was prompted to update the firmware and then was off and running. I selected the classic watch face and lashed it to my wrist. My first thought…I need a bigger wrist. Being a skinny kid from way back always becomes apparent when I try a new watch, but the Pebble really is very sleek. I’ll just have to bulk up a bit.

I’m still getting a feel for the need for this watch but here are the quick observations:

  • The screen is a lower resolution than I expected with some pixelization to the graphics and fonts. However, it’s a watch, not a TV.
  • I can’t find a way to scroll through multiple emails received at the same time. However, it may exist and I haven’t found it. (See above head scratching.)
  • There’s no battery life indicator. I hook it up via the handy magnetic charging USB cable each night to be sure.
  • I like that I’m notified regularly of incoming emails and texts. I often have the phone on vibrate and I miss calls and texts because I don’t feel the phone’s vibration. The Pebble alleviates that problem. That alone is makes me a fan.
  • I love being able to control playing music on my phone. It’s great to keep the phone in my pocket and reach for my wrist when I want to skip or pause a track. I would so dig a volume control.

pulsarThe wearable technology space is growing and all in all the Pebble watch is a darn fine early entry in this soon to be competitive arena. The size and design of the Pebble raises its geek factor a little. It reminds me a bit of the early digital watches Those of you in my demographic can still remember the first digital watches from the 70’s (right). Ok, show of hands, who had a Pulsar watch? Oh look, some of you are still rockin’ one. (Sorry.)

I like this watch and many of my tech friends are a bit jealous that theirs hasn’t arrived yet…so that’s kinda fun. I’m looking forward to more apps. Soon I hope. So perhaps those who are waiting for the Pebble to arrive can take heart that more apps may be available by the time they unbox theirs.

 

 

Filed Under: Innovation, Trends

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