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Knight Arts Challenge: 2012 winners unveiled, include the Hacktory, 3D video mapping

More than $2.75 million was pledged to 35 organizations at the second annual Knight Arts Challenge Philadelphia unveiling Monday, including a handful of technology-driven projects.

See all the projects listed here. Watch video of the winners above. The funds range from $10,000 to a high of $400,000, which was dedicated to the Center City District for art work on a renovated Dilworth Plaza adjacent to City Hall.

Some of the technology community examples:

  • Project: Little Berlin Fairgrounds
  • Recipient: Little Berlin
  • Award: $10,000
  • Project: Animated Architecture: 3D Video Mapping Projections on Historic Sites
  • Recipient: Sean Stoops
  • Award: $20,000
  • Project: Corps of Interactive Artist Teachers
  • Recipient: The Hacktory
  • Award: $40,000

The unveiling event was held at the Art Museum and featured remarks by Mayor Nutter.

SnipSnap wins Mobile Monday’s 5th annual demo night

SnipSnap founder Ted Mann (left) is named the winner of Mobile Monday's demo event. Here he poses with Early Stage East founder David Freschman.

SnipSnap emerged victorious from Mobile Monday’s 5th Annual Demo Night at the Cira Center last night.

Part of Philly Tech Week for the first time, Mobile Monday is one of the largest networking groups in the city, and drew over 100 people to University City to see demos by SnipSnap, Cloudmine, Interact, OneTwoSee and Communilator.

SnipSnap secured the final Switch Philly presentation slot as well as a free entry to Early Stage East with its demo by founder Ted Mann that demonstrated the product’s coupon clipping and saving technology. To see SnipSnap demo this week alongside four other local startups, purchase your tickets to Switch Philly here.

Below see the video of appRenaissance co-founder Scott Wasserman announcing Ted Mann and SnipSnap as the winner.

Philly Tech Week: lunchtime series, Mobile Lightening, Signature Event [EVENT HIGHLIGHTS]

It’s Philly Tech Week! It’s the Philadelphia Science Festival! The Flyers advance to round two!

Need any more reasons to celebrate?

There are more than 80 events scheduled this week, and they’re all fast selling and offering insight into the community. So you’re going to want to check the full calendar.

Still, in honor of the second annual Philly Tech Week presented by AT&T, this week, let’s highlight a handful that still have spots and are among our favorites: catch a new different showcase every day over lunch, learn about mobile at lightning speed, see Wharton business plan finalists compete, see five startups demo in front of the Mayor, and close it all out with an open bar and robots at the Philly Tech Week Signature Event.

Get ready for a crazy week.


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Yagglo bests 17 other startups to win Philly Startup Weekend

The members of the winning Startup Weekend teams celebrate after hearing the results.

It was a long weekend, so the Startup Weekend participants were willing to wait a little longer.

After accepting the challenge of creating a startup in 50 hours over last weekend, 18 startups emerged to demo to a packed house at the University of the Arts Hamilton Hall. Yagglo, a new browser optimized for the iPad took first place and the fourth Switch Philly demo slot. Second place went to Credit Cario, a service that helps recommend credit cards and financial services to young people. Seed Invest, looking to be a Kickstarter for small businesses, took third place.

After the jump see a short recap of all the companies.


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Philly Startup Weekend kicks off Philly Tech Week presented by AT&T

Cloudmine's Mark Weil demonstrates an ideal pitch in front of the PHLSW attendees.

Last night over 150 people met at Hamilton Hall at the University of the Arts with a simple but ambitious goal: create a startup in a single weekend.

Kicking off the first day of Philly Tech Week presented by AT&T, Startup Weekend challenges designers, developers and “non-technical” attendees to put their heads together to create as many functioning companies by Sunday night. Then the companies will pitch to a panel of judges to determine the winner.

Now in its third iteration locally, the attendees spent Friday night meeting one another and pitching their ideas to one another in rapid fire 45-second speeches in front of the entire group. The attendees will then determine which startups they’d like to help with and team up to make them a reality by Sunday.

The winner, of course, gets a invitation to demo at Switch Philly 3.

We’ll have more Startup Weekend coverage later this weekend.

After pitching, attendees wrote their company names on a sheet of paper to attract signups.

Fergie’s Pub: the site of The Switch Philly Happy Hour (presented by the City of Philadelphia Dept. of Commerce)

Switch Philly 3

Where: The Levitt Auditorium, Gershman Hall, Uarts, 401 South Broad Street, Center City

How much: $10

When: April 25, 6 p.m. – 7:15 p.m.

All those demos are sure to make you thirsty.

After judges Michael Nutter, Josh Kopelman and Ellen Weber pick a winning startup at Switch Philly, we will all head a few blocks away to Fergie’s Pub thanks to the City of Philadelphia Department of Commerce (be sure to check out their business portal).

Join attendees, judges and more as we celebrate Philadelphia’s entrepreneurial community and maybe we can even convince the mayor to come and grab the mic. Switch attendees will receive $1 off wine and all draft beer.

It’s not too late to get your Switch Philly 3 tickets today to watch demos by PalmLing, Inhabi, Airtime and the winners of Startup Weekend and Mobile Monday.

As always, thanks to Morgan Lewis, The Corzo Center and Novotorium for their support of Switch Philly.

Grassroots Game Conference: gamification conference in conjunction with Philly Tech Week

Philadelphia Game Lab must know that just one gamification event wouldn’t satisfy Philadelphia, so the new Northern Liberties based gamification lab is hosting an entire week of gamification events called Grassroots Game Conference in conjunction with the second annual Philly Tech Week presented by AT&T.

The conference will highlight using gamification to facilitate creative development and social good, according to a press release.

Notable game entrepreneur and author Gabe Zichermann who runs Gamification.co, will deliver the keynote. In addition to Zichermann, the Smithsonian, NEA, GlitchLabs LA, and a variety of developers and educators will have presenters at the nine events throughout the week, according to a press release.

“The sessions are low cost or free, and intended for an audience that is interested in game creation and usage, for a variety of purposes. You don’t need to be a game developer to attend any.” said Philadelphia Game Lab founder Nathan Solomon in announcement about the event to OpenAccessPhilly.

Here’s what to expect from the Grassroots Game Conference:

Mayor Nutter joins Philadelphia Water Department and NovaThermal to cut ribbon on energy-saving wastewater geothermal technology

Mayor Michael Nutter joined Center City-based thermal energy technology company NovaThermal Energy and the Philadelphia Water Department in the basement of the Southeast Water Pollution Control Plant to cut the ribbon on  newly installed commercial scale wastewater geothermal technology that can reportedly cut heating costs by 50 percent.

The trial of this new energy-saving heatpump is part of the Philadelphia Water Department’s participation in Greenworks Philadelphia, a citywide effort to make Philadelphia the greenest city in the country. The PWD’s pilot project marks the first time the technology has been demonstrated in the United States, according to a press release.

“I am proud to say that Philadelphia is taking another groundbreaking step in becoming the greenest city in America,” said Mayor Nutter in a release.

The technology, which was transferred to NovaThermal from China, is expected to save up to $18,100 annually and $216,600 in heating and cooling costs over the 15-year project. It is also projected to save the equivalent of 276,000 gallons of gas over the life of the project.

To be sure, cost-saving projections on new technologies are often a dubious science, particularly in the energy efficiency space. For example, when they first launched, the Nutter administration touted big savings for new, much ballyhooed Big Belly solar trash compactors in Center City when they launched, only to face claims two years ago from City Controller Alan Butkovitz that the benefit was exaggerated at best.

[Updated: Richard Kennelly, a spokesman from BigBelly, called that City Controller report misleading. "The best rebuttal to the controller's report is that the city has in fact reduced collections -- by about 85 percent, from from 17 times a week to 5 times week and are now collecting about twice per week -- shifted 24 of 33 workers off trash collection in 2009 to staff a newly expanded recycling program, and invested in more BigBelly Solar stations in 2010 and 2011 bringing the total from about 500 to now about 1,000 stations city-wide," he wrote Technically Philly.]

This new project, part of a mosty lauded shakeup at the city’s Water Department,  is funded in part by the Obama administration’s stimulus act and the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA), through the Greenworks Pilot Energy Technology (G-PET) Grant.

Ben Franklin Technology Partners of SE Pennsylvania is contributing a grant to support the measurement and verification technical assistance of the project, according to a the release.

Jordan Goldenberg talks brand development over Philly beers [Event Highlights]

Welcome to a new week in which we hope the Phillies can score at least as many runs as the Flyers score goals.

In addition to all of the playoff hockey, pre-events for the second annual Philly Tech Week presented by AT&T start Friday and the Philadelphia Science Festival Carnival kick off next week’s roller-coaster of science and engineering celebrations.

This week: It’s Drupal Tuesday. Talk capital over coffee at Quorum on Thursday morning then talk branding over beer at Venturef0rth at night

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NextFab Studios grows up, to hold preview party for NextFab 2

The rough mock-up of NextFab 2.

Next Fab Studio launched in January 2010 on the first floor of the University City Science Center as a members-only 3D prototyping studio. It was part of an idealistic strategy: turn a stretch of West Market Street into a vibrant tech corridor.

Now, the organization is hoping to add window-dressing to another area of Philadelphia, but they need community support.

At the end of February the outfit announced plans to build out a second location at 2025 Washington Avenue in the Graduate Hospital/South Philadelphia. Now they’re hosting a blowout preview launch party they want you to attend.


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