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Archive for 'Philly Tech Week'

Thank You: AppRenaissance and others help fund sign language interpreters at PTW

And now for a bit of a public service announcement.

As Philly Tech Week matures, Technically Philly is often faced with issues that we never even fathomed when creating the event. This year’s Philly Tech Week doubled the total amount of attendees from last year, and with a bigger tent comes a more diverse community. For the first time, Philly Tech Week fielded requests for sign language interpretation across several events, over 34 hours total across the week.

These requests were unexpected and with the help of the community we ended up being able to provide assistance at every event requested, a feat only made possible by some generous community members that we’d like to thank.

  • Philadelphia Game Lab - With only a few days notice, the folks at PGL pitched in to cover partial costs of an interpreter at its day-long “Gamification for Non-Profits” conference.
  • PlanPhilly and PennPraxis – The design and development news site covered the cost of interpretation at their Lunchtime Series event.
  • AppRenaissance – The Old City development firm graciously supported 14 hours of total interpretation across the week.
  • Thanks to interpreter Brandi Chittum for helping us coordinate.

In tech, we commonly use the word “accessibility” when discussing issues of the digital divide. However, true accessibility means everyone has access to the resources and people in this wonderful technology community. Thanks to all the event organizers that worked with PTW organizers to fulfill often last-munite interpretation requests.

A special thanks to Bob Moul for graciously volunteering AppRenaissance’s resources to ensure that everyone could enjoy the second annual Philly Tech Week. If you’d like to sponsor ASL-certified interpreters for the 2013 Philly Tech Week, please let us know.

We’ve uploaded over 1,000 Philly Tech Week photos on Facebook

One of the many photos from the Signature Event photobooth

We have a request for you, Philadelphia: tag yourself.

On the Philly Tech Week Facebook page, we’ve uploaded every picture we’ve taken throughout the week and we want to know the names behind the smiling faces.

Events include:

Thanks to photographer Nell Hoving for shooting a handful of Philly Tech Week events. And thanks to Philadelphia photographer Colin Lenton for the Signature Event photo booth. If you snapped a bunch of photos, please let us know and we’ll upload them with full credit to you and your organization.

And, as always, thanks for coming to Philly Tech Week.

Aweber developers discuss ‘return on integration’ and Kanban project management [VIDEO]

Huntingdon Valley-based email marketing company AWeber Communications aimed to put on display its 40 person development team during the second annual Philly Tech Week presented by AT&T.

As a member of the Greater Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce, Aweber staff took root in a Chamber conference room on South Broad Street to host two conversations on its work, followed by a Happy Hour at Center Ciy microbrewery Nodding Head. Fortunately, the firm filmed both presentations.

[Full Disclosure: Aweber was also a Philly Tech Week sponsor.]

First, above, marketing manager Nick Moore talks to 20 attendees about how AWeber has focused on ‘return on integration,’ or funding its application development. Next, below, Ethan McCreadie and Philip Cristiano discuss with 35 attendees AWeber’s use of Japanese project management system Kanban.

Bootstrappers Breakfast: Mike Krupit of Novotorium brings national meetup to Philadelphia

The kickoff Philadelphia Bootstrappers Breakfast at Elephant and Castle in Center City during Philly Tech Week

Entrepreneurship and investment need not be inextricably linked.

That’s something of the bailiwick of Mike Krupit, the seasoned suburban entrepreneur who is now the general manager of Langhorne-based incubator Novotorium.

Krupit kicked off the Philadelphia Boostrappers Breakfast with a chatty group of 30 entrepreneurs at Elephant and Castle in Center City during Philly Tech Week. The meetup will take place the fourth Tuesday of every month — next time will be May 22 — and the first had a waiting list, so get it on your calendar.


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Sheltr.org mobile add-on, LGBTRights.me star at ‘News’ Hackathon during Philly Tech Week

In 1979, then-Inquirer reporter Tom Ferrick was part of a team that won a Pulitzer Prize for its coverage of the Three Mile Island disaster. Last Saturday, the respected columnist was part of a hackathon project.

Six projects made it to the judging phase at the end of the fourth annual BarCamp NewsInnovation, which like last year again featured a hackathon focused on informing communities, particularly underserved ones.

A mobile add-on to Sheltr.org, a web resource for accessing Philadelphia social services that had been built at a previous hacakthon, won top prize and was built by Azavea developer Adam Hinz.

More than 40 developers and journalists worked on tools that had a mobile focus and a news spirit. The hackathon happened conterminously with BCNI, which welcomed 120 reporters and news media thinkers from throughout the East Coast.

Check out the participants below and photos of the event on Facebook here.


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Frankford CDC, Rep. Tony Payton graduate 5 residents in computer literacy training during Philly Tech Week

From Left: Instructor Chandi Queen from the People's Emergency Center's digital inclusion program, student Frank Cutler, State Rep. Tony Payton, Rasheem Jennings, William Brown and front row, Ethel Dawson and Karen Lee.

Five Frankford residents completed a three-day computer literacy certification program hosted during Philly Tech Week in partnership between state Rep. Tony Payton and the Frankford CDC.

The five residents celebrated with a small graduation ceremony last Thursday. The residents who completed the course were the following:


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PhillyHistory.org posts historical technology photos for Philly Tech Week

To celebrate the second annual Philly Tech Week presented by AT&T, the Department of Record’s PhillyHistory.org highlighted a handful of technology shots.

Some of the shots are featured currently here, including the above shot of Water Department computers in August 1959 at 29th and Cambria.

Here are some others linked up:

What It Takes to be a black tech entrepreneur: Philly Tech Week lunchtime panel

Entrepreneurship is hard, regardless of color, Defined Clarity cofounder and CMO Bruce Marable reminded those gathered at WHYY for the fourth Philly Tech Week Lunchtime Series event, “WHAT IT TAKES To Be a Black Tech Entrepreneur.”

Despite the challenges the four panelists mentioned, many of the approximately 100 people in attendance raised their hands when asked if they wanted to become an entrepreneur.

Temple University professor and Director of STEM education, outreach, and research Jamie Bracey deftly moderated the panel of Philadelphia entrepreneurs, which included Interactive One CTO Navarrow Wright, Angel Venture Forum Managing Partner and Mataron Development Managing Director Marc Mathis, Marable, and award-winning technologist Dean Harris, as they debated the challenges that face black entrepreneurs in the technology field.


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Use this web app to see what city properties are tax delinquent: PlanPhilly and Inquirer project

Philadelphia has the worst property tax delinquency problem among big cities in the country.

That’s what freelance journalist and former Inquirer City Hall reporter Patrick Kerkstra told an audience of about 60 people who gathered at WHYY as he demonstrated the tax delinquency web application he helped create to document the issue. He says there are more than 100,000 records of tax delinquent properties.

“There are many blocks in the city where the vast majority of properties are tax delinquent,” Kerkstra said, at the Philly Tech Week event, which included a panel discussion.

Visit the application here.


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IGDA Philadelphia Game Showcase spotlights games by 11 Greater Philadelphia area game developers

The only thing more fun than walking into a room where you can play all the video games you want may be to do that while getting to meet the developers who actually made the games.

That rare privilege is what brought more than 150 people out to the International Game Developers Association (IGDA) Philadelphia Game Showcase held in conjunction with the second annual Philly Tech Week presented by AT&T Wednesday.

Held in the otherwise empty storefront space that will soon be an expansion of coworking haunt Indy Hall in Old City, 11 Philadelphia-area and New Jersey based game developers set up PC’s, Macs, iPads and iPhones to let a flow of visitors try out their games.

Old City-based Cipher Prime brought a beta-version of its forthcoming game, Splice, for attendees to test out. The studio recently made news headlines for successfully funding a game concept via Kickstarter, as Technically Philly reported.


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