Tag: Austin (Page 17 of 37)

The Collaborative Economy Can Help Save the Planet

By LAURA LOREK
Founder of Silicon Hills News

Robin-ChaseThe world is getting hotter.
In fact, it’s supposed to rise 11 degrees fahrenheit over land by the 2060s if we don’t meet our goals to reduce carbon impact, said Robin Chase, founder of Buzzcar, a peer-to-peer car sharing service and co-founder and former CEO of Zipcar, a car sharing service.
That means we must act now to institute drastic change to save our planet, Chase said during the afternoon keynote at South by Southwest Eco in Austin.
“I’m really, really focused on getting these jobs done,” she said.
Global warming is caused by Carbon Dioxide and air pollution trapped in the atmosphere, which acts like a blanket warming the earth when the sun heats it up. The biggest contributor to global warming is the burning of fossil fuels.
To solve the problem, Chase proposes Peers Incorporated, a partnership to drive the collaborative and shareable global economy.
“It’s a partnership between autonomous individuals and bigger institutions,” she said.
In 2000, when Chase launched Zipcar she saw an unfilled need and excess capacity in the marketplace.
On average, it costs $8,000 annually to own a car, but owners only drive them five percent of the time, Chase said.
The problem was people could only rent cars in 24 hour bundles.
“You couldn’t buy it in the way you actually consume it,” Chase said. “There was a real economic opportunity here.”
To address the problem, Chase created a platform for participation and treated Zipcar’s customers as its peer collaborators. They were not consumers, but co-creators.
“You wouldn’t rent a car for an hour if it was going to take you 20 minutes to get one,” Chase said. “Thanks to the Internet we could make that transaction cost really simple. We built this platform that allowed you to rent a car in 60 seconds.”
To create Zipcar, they would ask people for help all the time.
“We talked to them intimately about our desire to build a great company,” Chase said.
logoThe big shift in the Peers Incorporated method is to look at customers as collaborators and producers. Some of today’s most successful tech companies relied on this method to scale their platforms including Skype, Facebook, YouTube, Wikipedia, eBay and Flickr.
Chase discussed the power of the shareable economy to scale quickly.
For example, she said it took the largest global hotel company, InterContinental Hotel Group, 60 years to amass 645,000 hotel rooms in 4,400 hotels in 100 countries. And Hilton, the second largest, took 93 years to build 3,800 hotels with 610,000 rooms in 88 countries.
But it only took four years, for Airbnb, a peer-to-peer room rental service, to amass 650,000 rooms in 192 countries.
And Couchsurfing, which is nine years old, has 2.5 million rooms in 207 countries.
“It is the incredible pace of growth that is possible,” Chase said. “This new way of doing business is incredibly disruptive. And it provides some good opportunities for us.”
imgres-2The old industrialization model required companies to build a business as big as possible. It involved industrial strength, large investments, multi-year efforts, integration and aggregation of many parts, deep sector knowledge, diverse technical expertise, standard contracts and standardization, consistency, brand promise and globalization.
The new model relies on individual strength focusing on people, small non-government organizations and companies, small investments, short term sporadic efforts, delivery of small services, local knowledge, specific unique expertise offering customization, specialization, creativity, and personal social networks (trusted individuals.)
“With this model, we can capitalize on what individuals do best,” Chase said. “It’s this collaboration that I’m calling Peers Incorporated.”
It’s a platform for participation, she said.
“The individuals bring this incredible creativity,” Chase said. “Each side has to give a little that makes it interesting for the other side to play. Excess capacity is just permeating the whole thing. Platforms deliver economies that scale and high growth – that is what a platform is made to do.”
In addition to Airbnb, other examples include Etsy, a marketplace for selling things made by individuals, Fiverr, which has grown from 2010 to 2013 to offer 2.5 million gigs, or things people will do for $5. And even though the smartphone is only five years old, people have created more than 1.5 billion apps for Apple devices and Android devices.
The Peers Incorporated model lets people tap into “those tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, millions of people outside of the room,” Chase said.
The Peers Incorporated model brings diversity, innovation, resilience and redundancy, Chase said.
Under that model, the economics of things completely change, she said.
imgres-3Her latest venture is Buzzcar, a peer-to-peer car sharing company in France that leverages the excess capacity of vehicle owners to rent out their cars to others. Buzzcar has a network of 7,000 cars across France, Chase said.
“I think of this excess capacity as a path toward abundance,” she said.
PeersIncorporated.com just launched based on case studies but this kind of disruption is happening in every single sector of the economy, Chase said.
For example, Global Forest Watch provides satellite images to let people find out what is happening in forests right now and shows deforestation happening in real time.
“It’s giving the power of the corporation to individuals,” Chase said.
Massive satellites and photographic evidence given to the tribe leader of a region in the Amazon in Brazil enables him to fight corporations to take back his land, Chase said.
“For me this is an example of a powerful platform for participation,” she said.
To end, she quoted Tim DeChristopher, a climate activist: “We are on track for such rapid and intense change, we might as well steer toward the world we want to see.”
Chase said there’s three things to do every day to build a sustainable world we want to live in:

  • Exploit excess capacity
  • Build Community Muscle – the future ahead is so hard – this is something we really have to do.
  • Focus on Platforms for Participation – scale and grow as fast as possible.

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Report says that the world will use up its carbon budget in 30 years, Chase said.
“We should feel this incredible urgency,” she said.

For more on Robin Chase’s ideas, watch her Ted Talk from last year.

Austin Startup Week Kicks off on Monday

imgres-1Austin Startup Week kicks off Monday and runs through Friday and it’s the biggest one yet.
Along with all the festivities celebrating startups, the Captivate Conference kicked off Sunday and South by Southwest Eco begins on Monday. Both have sessions and talks geared to technology startups.
Jacqueline Hughes and Josh Baer created the first Austin Startup Week in 2011 and it has grown steadily every year with new events like the Battle of the Bands and old favorites like the Austin Startup Crawl and Austin Startup Bazaar.
On Monday night, Ricardo Sanchez will host the largest Co-founders Meetup ever. He has more than 130 signed up to watch 12 pitches from The TechMap, Radvocacy, TeleCog, Freedom Family Ranches, Musiqmatrix, Zaplink, Taplet, Kindery, TaskTrak, Culture Booster, Aland Decision and Scribe Sense.
The Austin Technology Council hosts the first ever Battle of the Bands Monday night at Mohawk starting at 7 p.m. featuring bands from local startups.
For a full list of events, check out the Austin Startup Week website.

Tabbedout Receives $7.75 Million in Venture Capital

imgres-7Tabbedout, a mobile payment app that allows people to pay bar and restaurant tabs with their mobile phone, received $7.75 million in venture capital.
The Austin-based company announced the Series B financing deal Thursday on its website. The investors included NEA, Heartland Payment Systems and Morgan Creek Capital.
With the latest financing, Tabbedout has raised $13.5 million, according to its CrunchBase profile.
Tabbedout, founded in 2009, plans to use the funds on marketing and to expand sales.
“Tabbeout has created a truly innovative solution for the hospitality industry, giving merchants key insights into customer behavior and feedback, which greatly improves the consumer experience,” Rick Yang, principal at New Enterprise Associates, said in a news release.
Tabbedout is available at more than 1,000 locations nationwide. The free smartphone app is available for download from the Apple App Store or Google Play.

FBI Busts $1.2 Billion Silk Road Illegal Online Marketplace with Ties to Austin

By LAURA LOREK
Founder of Silicon Hills News

Ross William Ulbricht, alleged mastermind behind Silk Road, an illegal online marketplace for drugs, hacking software, forgeries and hit men. Photo from Ulbricht's LinkedIn Profile.

Ross William Ulbricht, alleged mastermind behind Silk Road, an illegal online marketplace for drugs, hacking software, forgeries and hit men. Photo from Ulbricht’s LinkedIn Profile.

The crazy tale of Ross William Ulbricht, also known as “Dread Pirate Roberts,” after a masked fictional character in the movie “The Princess Bride,” sounds like a HBO series on a renegade Internet entrepreneur gone wrong.
Ulbricht, 29, allegedly operated the Silk Road, a sprawling $1.2 billion black-market bazaar for drugs, computer hacking software, forgeries and hit man services. He founded the site, programmed its features and oversaw its operations on a daily basis, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigations.
The FBI arrested Ulbricht earlier this week on charges of narcotics trafficking, computer hacking and money laundering, according to a sealed criminal complaint by Christopher Tarbell, FBI special agent.

A Native of Austin

Ulbricht, who grew up in Austin and graduated from Westlake High School in 2002, is now in jail in San Francisco facing charges that carry several hundred years of jail time.
imgres-6The FBI arrested Ulbricht for owning and operating the underground website known as “Silk Road,” which provided a platform to sell heroin, cocaine, LSD and Methamphetamines. Ulbricht, under an alias “altoid” allegedly called the site “an anonymous Amazon.com.”
The complaint also alleges that the Silk Road provided a platform to trade “malicious software designed for computer hacking, such as password stealers, keyloggers, and remote access tools.” It also traded in other illicit goods and services through a payment system based on Bitcoins, an unregulated digital currency.
The FBI alleges that Ulbricht added a Bitcoin “tumbler” to the Silk Road payment system to “ensure that illegal transactions conducted on the site could not be traced to individual users.”
The two-year investigation of Silk Road, headed up by FBI Special Agent Tarbell, also involved agents of the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Internal Revenue Service, and Homeland Security Investigations.

So who is Ulbricht?

Ulbricht’s Facebook page reveals that he liked beer pong and crazy hat parties. He enjoyed movies like The Matrix, Office Space, Time Bandits and Lord of the Rings. His favorite books included Be Here Now, Hyperion, The Power of Now and Shogun.
His interests spanned money, partying, yoga, dancing, drumming and strength training.
He also focused on entrepreneurship and participated in a 3 Day Startup program in 2010. His LinkedIn profile listed his occupation as an “investment adviser and entrepreneur” based in Austin.
But the FBI alleges that starting in January of 2011 through September of this year, Ulbricht ran a global platform for drug dealers to sell controlled substances online.
And the plot deepened even further this year when Ulbricht allegedly “solicited a Silk Road user to execute a murder-for-hire of another Silk Road user, who was threatening to release the identities of thousands of users of the site,” according to the complaint.
The Silk Road operated on the “the onion router” or “tor” network, which provides anonymity to users.
“Based on my training and experience, Silk Road has emerged as the most sophisticated and extensive criminal marketplace on the Internet today,” according to Tarbell. “Silk Road has been used by several thousand drug dealers and other unlawful vendors to distribute hundreds of kilograms of illegal drugs and other illicit goods and services to well over a hundred thousand buyers, and to launder hundreds of millions of dollars deriving from these unlawful transactions.”

All transactions took place using Bitcoins

Silk_Road_Marketplace_Item_ScreenThe site generated more than 9.5 million Bitcoins and collected 600,000 in Bitcoin commissions, equivalent to about $1.2 billion in sales and $80 million in commissions, according to Tarbell.
As of Sept. 23, the Silk Road had 13,000 items listed for sale under categories such as “cannabis,” “dissociatives,” “Ecstasy,” “Psychedelics,” and “Stimulants.” The items were sold in individual dosages and bulk orders.
During its investigation, law enforcement agents purchased more than 100 items of controlled substances such as cocaine, heroin, LSD and more from sellers on the Silk Road.
The Silk Road charged a commission, ranging from 8 percent to 15 percent, for every transaction on its site.

Hiring Hitmen

Tarbell also reported that Ulbricht took “it upon himself to police threats to the site from scammers and extortionists, and has demonstrated a willingness to use violence in doing so.”
In a second criminal complaint from the state of Maryland listed on the Baltimore Sun’s website, Ulbricht is alleged to have hired a hitman to kill an employee who he thought was stealing from Silk Road. He allegedly paid $80,000 to an undercover cop to execute the employee in January of 2013.
And in another case of hitman for hire a few months later, Tarbell outlines how Ulbricht allegedly sent messages to have a Silk Road user in Canada with a wife and three kids, named “FriendlyChemist,” killed for $150,000 or 1,670 bitcoins. The guy was trying to extort Ulbricht for $500,000 or else he would release the names and addresses of Silk Road users.

Ross Ulbricht, photo from Twitter

Ross Ulbricht, photo from Twitter

Ulbricht struck a deal with a user called “redandwhite.” After receiving his payment, that user messaged Ulbricht stating, “Your problem has been taken care of…. Rest easy though, because he won’t be blackmailing anyone again. Ever.” The user provided pictures to Ulbricht of the alleged dead body of the victim, but the police have been unable to find any record of a homicide occurring in White Rock, British Columbia on or about March 31, when this incident allegedly took place.

How did Ulbricht end up in jail?

He graduated from the University of Texas at Dallas with a Bachelor of Science degree in physics in 2006, according to his LinkedIn profile. Then he attended graduate school at the University of Pennsylvania School of Materials Science and Engineering.
On his LinkedIn profile, Ulbricht states that his goals shifted since graduate school and that he was focused on “creating an economic simulation” designed to “give people a first-hand experience of what it would be like to live in a world without the systemic use of force” by “institutions and governments.”
Tarbell believed that system to be Silk Road. He also reported that Ulbricht, under the alias “altoid” posted on different online forums to market Silk Road.

The Social Media Trail

The FBI heavily relied upon social media sites like LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter and Google + to put together a profile of Ulbricht and link him back to Silk Road. For example, Ulbricht’s Google + profile listed his favorite YouTube videos, which included a number originating from Mises.org, the website of the Mises Institute, the world center of the Austrian School of Economics.
Ulbricht, under the alias DPR, had cited the “Austrian Economic theory” and the work of Ludwig von Mises and Murray Rothbard – economists closely associated with the “Misus Institute” as providing the philosophical underpinnings for Silk Road.
Ulbricht’s best friend is Rene Pinnell, founder of Hurricane Party and Forecast in Austin, which shut down in July of 2012. Pinnell moved to San Francisco shortly after that. Ulbricht was living at his parents house in Austin and moved shortly after that to join Pinnell in San Francisco.
In its complaint, the FBI reported that Ulbricht lived for a while with a friend who moved to San Francisco in September of 2012. That friend is believed to be Pinnell. They also made a YouTube video together interviewing each other for Story Corps, according to a posting on Pinnell’s personal website. The video shows Pinnell and Ulbricht in split screen talking about moving out to San Francisco, school friends, work, women and other interests. The two have known each other since sixth grade at West Ridge Middle School.

Josh, Frosty and other Aliases

In July of 2013, the U.S. Customs and Border Protection intercepted a package from Canada that contained nine counterfeit identity documents. Agents then visited Ulbricht at his house on 15th Street in San Francisco where he sublet a room for $1,000 monthly, which he paid in cash. He provided them with a copy of his real Texas driver’s license and said that his two other housemates currently only knew him by the fake name “Josh.”
He told the agents that “hypothetically anyone could go onto a website named “Silk Road” on “Tor” and purchase any drugs or fake identity documents the person wanted.”
“The agents also spoke with one of Ulbricht’s housemates at the address, who state that Ulbricht, whom he knew as “Josh,” was always home in his room on the computer.”
Tarbell concluded in his investigation that Ulbricht was stocking up on fake identities so he could rent multiple servers from hosting companies under false identities.
Ulbricht also used the alias “Frosty” posting in computer coding forums for help on programming his illegal underground website.
So how did a kid, who liked cliff jumping and snowboarding and grew up in Austin, got advanced degrees and studied to be an entrepreneur, go down such a bad path? That’s something that only Ulbricht knows. But one thing is for sure, this Silk Road didn’t lead to riches and the good life, but to the inside of a dingy jail cell. And if convicted, Ulbricht, a bright kid with so much promise, faces the possibility of spending the rest of his life in prison.
At a hearing on Friday, Ulbricht’s lawyer denied all charges including that Ulbricht ran the Silk Road website, according to the Los Angeles Times.

Sparefoot and Sputnik Creative Make Best Young Companies to Work for List

BYCTWF_2013_winner_badgeTurnstone, in partnership with Wharton management professor and human resource expert Peter Cappelli, has selected 15 Best Young Companies to Work for nationwide.
The list includes two companies in Austin: Sparefoot, an online marketplace for self-storage, and Sputnik Creative, a digital and branding studio.
Turnstone received more than 100 nominations in its inaugural contest.
Turnstone selected the companies based on positive culture, great leadership, business innovation, talent retention, community outreach and “an intentionally designed workspace,” according to a news release.
The companies had to be less than 10 years old with no more than 100 employees.
“These 15 companies have created environments which embrace the company’s personality by vividly representing their culture, fostering a tight community and exuding fun,” Kevin Kuske, general manager and chief anthropologist for turnstone said in a news release.
The other companies included: Chalkfly of Detroit, Cloudability of Portland, OR, Fanology of Los Angeles, Greatist of New York, Groove Commerce of Baltimore, MD, Hoopla.io of Kansas City, KS, Nexus IT group of Overland Park, KS, Parking Panda of Baltimore, MD, Privy of Boston, MA, SocialRada of Washington, D.C., Sparkhouse of Costa Mesa, CA, Sprout Social of Chicago, IL and Thanx Media of Glen Ellyn, IL.

Recipeas Launches Recipe Search App

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Q. Who are your competitors?

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

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

A. We’ve bootstrapped Recipeas.

Q. Who makes up your team?

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

Q. Who are your customers?

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

Q. What is your business model?

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Q. What are your plans for the future?

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

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

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

Austin-based Veros Systems raises $8 Million

gI_132709_logoVeros Systems announced Monday that it has received $8 million in Series A venture financing.
Chevron Technology Ventures led the deal with additional investment from Austin Ventures and LiveOak Venture Partners.
Veros, which makes control center software called Veros ForeSight that monitors industrial operations, has been testing its software system for several years at multiple Chevron sites.
The company is also presenting at the Chevron-Oiltech Investment Network today in Houston.
Veros, based in Austin, received $1.5 million last year from the Texas Emerging Technology Fund.
Tommy Knight and Alex Parlos founded Veros System in College States and licensed the rights to commercial the technology from Texas A&M University.

Beyonic Makes a Global Mobile Payment System

By SUSAN LAHEY
Reporter with Silicon Hills News

Ronald Miller, vice president of marketing and Luke Kyohere, president and CEO of Beyonic

Ronald Miller, vice president of marketing and Luke Kyohere, president and CEO of Beyonic

Non-profit organizations spend more than $30 billion every year in overhead costs, trying to get cash to people around the world, according to Luke Kyohere, president and CEO of Beyonic.
That $30 billion goes to armed guards and armored trucks, currency exchanges and even helicopter drops to rural farmers and all that money could be used to lift 42 million more people out of poverty. The non-profits use cash because it’s the only currency that translates across countries and payer systems.
Ironically, in the countries where this cash goes, more than 80 percent of the rural population uses smart phones to buy goods and services. But the mobile and payment networks are so disjointed, it would very difficult for any organization to use them. That’s where Beyonic comes in. Beyonic is a cloud-based platform that lets payers use mobile networks for payments. Right now, Beyonic is working in Uganda, Kyohere’s native country, and Kenya. But the founders have in mind expanding globally as well as becoming the payer system of choice for governments and other enterprises currently relying on cash.
“In rural areas where people don’t have credit cards, these mobile wallets have become a big part of life,” said Ronald Miller, vice president of marketing and public relations for Beyonic. The phones they’re using are the old Nokia ones that went out of fashion years ago in the U.S. “But the organizations doing work in East Africa are not able to aid beneficiaries on mobile wallets because there are three or four different telephone companies and it’s difficult for an employer or aid organization to integrate with all the different mobile phone companies. So they go to the bank and pull out a bag of cash, bring it back to the office and their employees go on these field trips to take it to the beneficiaries. There’s extra cost and extra work that’s involved, and also extra risk.”
Making a Difference
“What I wanted,” Kyohere said, “was the idea of a payment system that was a branded product. It was beyond integrated circuits, more than just technology. This can actually help people achieve impact.”
The first impact, of course, would be freeing up the money now used in overhead to actually provide services, microloans and other benefits to more than 40 million people—roughly the entire population of Sudan–who are not now receiving that help. But another benefit is that receiving money via smartphones would give people an opportunity to keep better track of their money and help them achieve more financial understanding and independence.
“I think this is a no-brainer for African non-profits because it will greatly ease the operations of cash disbursal and, save money, and greatly cut down on potential for fraud, a huge issue with petty cash disbursement,” said Boris Bulayev executive director of Educate! an organization that trains leaders and entrepreneurs in Africa. Beyonic is working on cash distribution systems for the organization which is scaling from 54 schools to 200. “The biggest challenge to scaling in a place like Uganda is the distribution challenges. Beyonic provides a one-stop solution to solving the problem for distribution of cash as we scale.”

Building Beyonic

Kyohere has been refining the platform during the past six years. He got his degree in electrical engineering from Makerere University in Uganda and worked for several years in software and Internet companies in New York and Uganda before becoming senior software developer for a Danish company that handled online and microcredit services. His most recent jobs were in Uganda, working for mobile online financial companies. That’s where he got the idea for Beyonic.
He met his cofounders, vice president of operations Dan Kleinbaum and Miller at the McCombs School of Business where he got his Master’s in Technology Commercialization. The company now operates out of Austin Technology Incubator and has been racking up awards:

  • They finished 2nd in the Global Venture Labs competition.
  • First in the SXSW Longhorn Startup Showcase Pitch contest.
  • First in the IBM Global Entrepreneur Pitch Competition.

“I think Luke is brilliant and has built a really relevant product in a market he really understands,” said Bulayev. “He has also found two partners who complement him perfectly. I joked after we first met how stereotypically Luke, Ronald and Dan played in their roles. I think teams like that are rare to put together, especially in East Africa, where there is a clear talent shortage. I feel like you can feel when a startup has the package – innovative product with massive scale potential and a well-rounded team to execute it – and I truly believe Beyonic has it all. ”
Dan Lowden, mentor, serial entrepreneur and currently vice president of business development at startup BRiGGO, said his main suggestions to the team were tips to tell their story more clearly, looking from the perspective of an investor.
“They’re so close to it they think the story resonates with everyone, but potential investors and partners may not get it,” Lowden said. Otherwise, the team has done a lot of due diligence, including having good discussions with potential partners to understand what has to be done to solve the problem. They’ve started good pilot programs; and they’re listening.
“They’re seizing on an opportunity to really help people, which I love,” Lowden said. “They’re trying to reduce the burden and improve efficiency and they do it incredibly well and elegantly.”
Beyonic allows for scheduled and repeat payments, authorization and access controls, multiple signoffs, reporting and analytics and other security and convenience features. At present the company is just focused on getting investment and expanding into countries like India and Pakistan. But they know that there are companies in the same space, like Visa, who might be acquirers down the road.
Bulayev acknowledges that the challenge ahead is to get non-profit organizations to migrate their systems as well as dealing with the charges mobile payments providers take for transactions. But, he said, the Beyonic system “is really easy to test…I really think they just need to execute.”

Mu Sigma Opens Austin Analytics Center with 300 Employees

imgres-1Mu Sigma, a global data analytics company, announced Thursday plans to open an Analytics Center in Austin with 300 employees.
The Chicago-based company reports the center will have 300 “decision scientists” plus support staff. It will have a “Delivery Center, Customer Lab and Innovations Lab.” The center will open in October and will complement Mu Sigma’s operation center with 2,500 employees in Bangalore, India.
Krishna Rupanagunta will run the Delivery Center and Customer Lab and Zubin Dowlaty will run the Austin Innovation Lab.
Mu Sigma has already hired more than 30 math, science and engineering graduates from Georgia Tech, University of Texas, University of Chicago, Purdue and Rutgers and other universities.
“Our client base is growing swiftly all over the world, and having a large analytics center in the U.S. will help us better serve clients who need rapid turnaround on their analytics projects,” Dhiraj Rajaram, founder and CEO of Mu Sigma said in a news release. “With decision scientists in both Austin and Bangalore, we’ll essentially have 24-hour coverage for clients.”
Mu Sigma selected Austin, “often touted as the Silicon Valley of the South” because of its educated workforce, culture of innovation, education system, “vibrant outdoor environment and affordability, which are all attractive to the decision scientists the company is planning to recruit.”
The Mu Sigma Analytics Center is located at 2222 Rio Grande Street.

Cinegif Raises $500,000 in Angel Funding

Photo courtesy of Cinegif

Photo courtesy of Cinegif

Cinegif, an Austin-based startup specializing in animated graphic technology, has just received $500,000 in angel funding.
The investors included the Baylor Angel Network and the Houston Angel Network and its Halo Fund.
Cinegif plans to use the funding on sales and marketing for its cloud-based Graphics Interchange Format, known as GIF, marketing platform. The company sells primarily to marketers, advertisers and agencies.
Graham McFarland founded the company and serves as its CEO. He previously founded ExpressDigital and PhotoReflect. Here’s a post SHN did on the company last year.
Since then the company has created a Do It Yourself Platform that allows anyone to create GIFs easily. Cinegif recently partnered with Pulsepoint to market the service and T3Media to create a GIF stock image library. Cinegif’s partners also include HP, which featured Cinegif’s technology at tradeshow and festival booths this fall.
“Today’s average online attention span is only 10 seconds, and getting noticed is becoming increasingly important,” McFarland said in a news release. “Animated GIFs add motion to messages and are as engaging as a video but as simple to use as a still image, making them the perfect medium for digital marketing.”

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