REPOST• @farrowsandwiches This week only, for Startup Edmonton week!! The MSDOS is back - Fried Mortadella, Swiss, Dill Pickle Chips, Sambal Mayo, Arugula! Every year @startupedmonton hosts an amazing week filled with tech workshops, socials and other events. $1 from every MSDOS we sell this week will go towards all the great things they do. #yegfood #startupedmonton #yegtech https://www.instagram.com/p/B351jBXA7ix/?igshid=md5swr8o1kgf
I don't think this will ever get old...even if we have watched it over a hundred times 😍 In case you missed it, here is our story done by CTV news! http://edmonton.ctvnews.ca/video?clipId=1130125 . . . . . . . #yeg #startup #startups #studentlife #macewan #studentlifestyle #macewanu #edmontonlife #studentlife #studentloanssuck #studentdebt #studententrepreneur #socialimpact #socialenterprise #smallbusiness #peertopeer #startupgrind #yegstartup #startupedmonton #universityofalberta #techstartup #students #studentloan #studentloans #yegphotography #yegphotographer #nait #studentissues #edmontonliving
For our next meetup profile, we connected with Mark Bennett - host of Exchange:js: Edmonton’s JavaScript Meetup.
Exchange:js is a welcoming environment, especially for first-time developers. Join Mark for the next meetup on Thursday, April 2 at 6:30 PM. The group also maintains excellent notes on past meetups at exchangejs.com.
Q: Why did you start Exchange.js: Edmonton's JavaScript meetup?
A: Credit for starting the JavaScript meetup has to go to Sean Ouimet. At the time it began I was very involved with running the Ruby meetup, but when Sean moved away last year I felt I had a responsibility to step up and join the exec.
Together with Jeff Marvin, Sean Healy, and Abram Hindle we work each month to connect the local JavaScript community together by sharing stories, personalities, and successes in a fun and accessible meetup.
Q: What is JavaScript?
A: JavaScript is the programming language of the web. It's what allows websites from Facebook to Google Maps to create engaging experiences in our web browsers. Increasingly it's also used on web servers and apps on mobile and desktop. If you own a computing device of any sort, then chances are you use JavaScript everyday.
Q: What are the benefits of having an active JavaScript Community?
A: Edmonton is a great place to make things, and if you want to make things for the web then you need to know JavaScript. Right there that should be reason enough to come out.
What I really enjoy about JavaScript is the way it connects developers, designers, and creative people of all backgrounds together through the web. It doesn't matter what programming language or direction you come from, everyone is making things for the web right now and using JavaScript to do it. It makes for an exciting community with lots of new ideas and perspectives, and I like to think that's reflected in our events.
Q: Who would you encourage to come to future events?
A: We'd love to see more women and first time developers come out to the meetup. We've already got a great group, but there's always room for more!
We host more than 200 community events at the Startup Edmonton campus each year. Many of these events are organized by community leaders that volunteer their time to bring people together around a specific tech or startup topic, from Ruby to robotics.
Lunchalytics is one of the most active meetups groups. Hosted by Dark Horse Analytics, the group explores the use of data and analysis to improve the performance of an individual, organization or industry.
We asked Daniel Haight, Co-founder Dark Horse Analytics, a few questions about their involvement in the startup community:
Q: Why did you start the Lunchalytics meetup?
A: We were involved in a group called the Canadian Operations Research Society that was looking to connect practitioners and academics on the topic of analytics. Lunchalytics seemed like a reasonable vehicle to do so and it has succeeded beyond our expectations. We typically have about 60 people attending, but have had to resort to waiting lists from time to time.
Photo: Edmonton Startup Week 2014 - Mega Meetup Night.
Q: What are some of the uses, trends or concerns around analytics explored at past meetups?
A: We've had very interesting talks about photo radar and commuter safety, the causes of the current energy royalty crunch, how AGLC manages access to gambling, and how water quality varies across the province. Our events are typically "themed" - predictive analytics, data visualization, energy sector analytics, education analytics, transportation analytics, etc..
Q: How have you benefited by interacting & connecting with a larger community?
A: Through the event, we've been exposed to how broad the community is. There are researchers and practitioners doing very interesting things in healthcare, public safety, and a host of other areas. We've been introduced to both opportunities to collaborate and to potential employees with a knack for analytics. And we've been exposed to ideas, tools, and approaches that we're able to apply to our own work.
Q: Who would you encourage to come to future events?
A: We have four main groups that we're trying to connect. We have researchers and academics who are pushing the boundaries in various areas. We have students and recent grads who are looking for jobs or volunteer opportunities. We have "creators" of analytics (consultants and groups within large organizations), and we have decisions makers "consumers" who use analytics in their work.
Lunchalytics 9 - City Analytics is Wednesday, March 18 at 11:45 AM and features three presentations:
Rhys Chouinard
Corporate Analyst, City of St. Albert
Topic: Correlation Searches, Growth Models, and Novel Visualizations
Stephane Contre and Kris Andreychuk
City of Edmonton and Edmonton Police
Topic: Contextual Analysis of Crime in Edmonton
Kurt Borth
Ph.D. Candidate, University of Alberta, Urban Geography and Planning
Topic: Housing Choice and Location Efficiency in YEG: Factor Analysis (Q method)
For more information on weekly meetups at Startup Edmonton, sign up for our newsletter: startupedmonton.com.
Kit Chen will be a keynote speaker at HackLab Student Developer Conference, March 21 at the Shaw Conference Centre. She is a great example of putting your skills into practice while still pursing formal education. She embodies our "don't wait, start now" mindset. Alieo Games launched at Edmonton Startup Week 2014 and supports creative learning through play.
Q: What do you do & how did you get here?
A: I'm a PhD candidate in Computing Science at the University of Alberta and my research is in Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning. Originally, I'm from the U.S. and my masters advisor told me about the AICML and how great the UofA was for Machine Learning research. My supervisor here, Mike Bowling, was a big draw and frankly so was a chance to live in Canada. I moved to Edmonton in 2009 and I've never looked back since.
Describing a typical work week is difficult. Since we're such a new company, none of us are working full-time yet on Alieo (though that will change soon). Each of us spends at least a couple days a week working on other projects -- I'm a teaching assistant for a first year computing course at the UofA. Joel is a professional photographer. Chris is a children's book author. Neesha is about to defend her thesis.
The one consistent thing we do on a weekly basis is have a two-hour long Alieo team meeting on Google hangouts. We set an agenda and we discuss pretty much everything: new features we want in the next release, marketing campaigns, teacher conventions we're attending, business plan competitions we're applying for, the outcomes of meetings we had with various advisors, support questions we got from teachers and students, etc..-- just about any task big or small that you could imagine having to do to make a company run. The meeting orients us towards what we're doing in the next week/month/quarter so that we're all on the same page about how to move forward. In general, people are really down on meetings, but when run efficiently (and ha, I guess I'm suggesting we run them efficiently), they can be very helpful -- especially when you don't have the benefit of a central office where everyone comes to work every day and especially when one of your team members lives in a different province, as Chris does.
Q) What are three skills you would recommend student developers add to their tool kit before they leave school?
A: There are a lot of skills that transfer from classroom to the workplace or to making a startup. If you have the chance, sign up to be a tutor or work as a teaching assistant. You get tons of practice explaining things to people really clearly and patiently. Definitely comes in handy when a teacher asks about how to use COW or when you're pitching to people. Tutoring/TAing also gives you insight into how to ask questions of others which is helpful when you're talking to mentors.
Neesha's research has her running user studies with human subjects and almost everyone's (science/engineering) grad research requires them to run experiments and analyze the results. Being able to process and extract conclusions from a spreadsheet of data is super useful. For Alieo, we've done user tracking to see the who/what/where/when/how people use our web app. We've made surveys to solicit feedback from educators and students. We've visited schools and had students and teachers try COW.
Even though the experimental skills translate, there are some major differences. If you do a user-study as part of University research, you need to apply for ethics approval in order for the work to be publishable. Also, you follow some gold-standard scientific method where there's a control group and an experimental group and you mitigate pretty much every conclusion drawn from the data because you care about statistical significance. Most of the studies you do as part of a company or a startup aren't run for the sake of furthering human knowledge. You're running them for the sake of making an informed decision about the future of your company. Depending on how much you stand to risk, you may or may not have to be very disciplined about running the experiment and drawing conclusions from it.
Q: What are you most looking forward to sharing with the participants at HackLab Student Developer Conference?
A: All I have are my experiences as a student who got together with some friends who collectively worked to make something cool. :)
HackLab Student Developer Conference is a chance to level up your software development skills and learn from leaders at some of the best tech-enabled companies in the world, like Apple and Google.org. $35 includes talks, workshops, lunch & coffee breaks, and an all-ages evening social.
As two longstanding Startup Edmonton member companies grow into new spaces, Ken reflects on the entrepreneurial journey and the role of founders.
Last week, we celebrated as four founders and two longstanding companies left the nest to grow in their new offices.
The best part of my job is watching first-time founders grow and develop as entrepreneurial leaders during their time with us. I get to see them go through the range of emotions that come with the highs and lows of first customers, sluggish sales, building a team, raising capital, and the crushing stress watching the cash run out. Through it all, I get to join their journey as mentor, peer, pitch coach, hard-ass, and friend.
Level up your software development skills with this full-day intensive
We're thrilled to announce our first HackLab Student Developer Conference, March 21, 2015 at the Shaw Conference Centre. $35 - includes coffee/snacks, lunch and an all-ages evening social. studentdevcon.com
Join us for talks, workshops and hands-on projects. Developers from some of the top tech-enabled companies in the world will share how they build software and encourage participants to level up their programming abilities in the fields of mobile development, machine learning and building at scale.
Workshops:
Design for Developers
Machine Learning
Building Web Systems
Confirmed Speakers:
Andrew Vilcsak: AirBnB, AirBnB Mobile Lead
Timo Ewalds: Google.org, Founder of nexopia.com, now engineering at Google.org
Randy Marsden: Apple, Creator of Swype and Dryft (acquired by Apple)
HackLab Student Developer Conference is for university-level developers, including high school students* with a prerequisite of Comp Sci 20 or equivalent.
studentdevcon.com
Teachers, educators & parents: please contact Startup Edmonton if you have any questions or requests regarding high school student participation. We look forward to hearing from you! [email protected]