Philly Tech Week 2012 presented by AT&T: Program & Magazine

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Organized by THE STATE OF STEM STEM Graduation Rates Show Uphill Battle With Math And Science In School District COVER STORY PLUS The rise of e-commerce in Philadelphia FULL CALENDAR INSIDE FEATURING MORE THAN TECH EVENTS Who owns OpenDataPhilly? Presented by A WEEK-LONG CELEBRATION OF TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION IN PHILADELPHIA WWW.PHILLYTECHWEEK.COM philly tech week April 20 28

description

Our printed program and magazine for Philly Tech Week 2012, featuring the full calendar and editorial content highlighting Philly's technology community.

Transcript of Philly Tech Week 2012 presented by AT&T: Program & Magazine

Organized by

The STaTe of STeM Stem Graduation Rates Show Uphill Battle With math And Science In School District

cover story

p lu s The rise of e-commerce in Philadelphia

full calendar inside feaTuring

more Than

tech events

Who owns OpenDataPhilly?

Presented by

A week-long celebrAtion of technology And innovAtion in PhilAdelPhiA WWW.Philly techWeek .cOm

philly tech week april 20–28

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Have you heard the one about the scientist, the entrepreneur and the investor?

Innovation has its Place. find us on...

3711 Market Street, 8th Floor Philadelphia, PA 19104 [email protected] 215-966-6000

They collaborated at Quorum, a meeting place like no other. Quorum is creating a magnet for entrepreneurs and innovators to convene, interact, network and exchange ideas. Not just a high-tech program and event space for Greater PhiladelphiaÕs entrepreneurial community, Quorum is a collaboration, a catalyst and a state of mind. And thatÕs no joke.

We look forward to seeing Philly Tech Week participants at Quorum Ð all year long.

www.morganlewis.comconn

ect

contact:Jeffrey P. Bodle 215.963.5417 | [email protected]

This communication is provided as a general informational service to clients and friends of Morgan Lewis. It should not be construed as, and does not constitute, legal advice on any specific matter, nor does this message create an attorney-client relationship. Attorney advertising. This photo is a dramatization. © Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP

protecting your vision,fostering your growthSuccess for entrepreneurs takes the support and guidance of a partner who is there every step of the way to help realize your business’s potential.

We partner with you by offering the resources, relationships with investors, and savvy business knowledge to protect your ideas, connect you to capital, and lay the foundation for your business’s success.

t e c h n I c A l ly p h I l ly. c O m • p h I l ly t e c h W e e k . c O m 3

p r o g r a m & m a g a z i n ePresented by

phillytechweek.com

Philly tech week 2012 presented by At&t is a week-long celebration of tech-nology and innovation in Philadelphia. this year’s theme is: making a better Philadelphia through technology. the week is organized by local technology news organization technically Philly.

technicallyphilly.com

Lead Organizers and Technically Philly Co-FoundersSean blanda, brian James kirk,

christopher wink

COver PhOTO

rachel Playe

COnTribuTOrs

matthew Albasi, yael borofsky, erica dePascale

Design anD PrinTing

red flag media

LOgO anD WebsiTe

Jarvus innovations

PubLisher

technically media inc. 1515 market Street, Suite 400

Table of Contents

Page 04 startups for startups / L&i gets an app / nextfab expands

Page 06 opendataPhilly looks for a home / the anti-Craigslist / a new tool for digital access

Page 07 PTW2012's complete calendar

Page 15 Quotable: how tech takes Philly

Page 18 Philly's rising tide of e-commerce

Page 20 from bus attendent to robotics instructor

Page 22 The state of sTem education in Philadelphia

Page 27 PTW2012 sponsors

Page 30 PTW2012 Participants

a LeTTeR fRoM the oRGaNIZeRS

The real value proposition of Philly Tech Week is that if we organize all the corners of the region’s technology community together to celebrate innovation for one, crazed week, it will be hard to ignore.

hard to ignore in Philadelphia, in the region, in the country. hard to ignore the entrepreneurship community that continues to take root. hard to ignore the artists,

hackers, hobbyists, designers and developers finding new ways to use familiar and new tools. hard to ignore how far ahead so many of us are in changing the way we work, live and play. hard to ignore that there are still many of us in Philadelphia who need help accessing the digital dream.

This is the second annual Philly Tech Week and in organizing another open calendar of events cel-ebrating technology and innovation, it’s proven very clear that what we all started together last year is still in its early stages.

There are communities in Philadelphia that still need opportunity, yet there are also many other places — in shiny university City towers, in converted northern Liberties warehouses and in old City lofts — where this city is developing a reputation for being a place for urban renewal through technology.

much of what started last year is continuing to grow: opendataPhilly.org, the civic catalog of data, is further uncovering an open gov movement; a network of women-in-tech events is expanding and a public-private partnership now called KeYsPoT continues to roll out new computer centers in low-income neighborhoods.

and there is even more coming in this, the second Philly Tech Week, across more than 70 events in the city and region.

Thank you for again supporting Philly Tech Week. There is little doubt that next year will feature another call for celebration.

With continued optimism,

Christopher Wink, brian James Kirk and sean blanda Philly Tech Week organizers and Technically Philly co-founders

Welcome

cover story

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Presented by

acceleration of coworking in PhiladelphiaWhether you bet it on a bubble or on a sign of a maturing entrepreneurship com-munity, Philadelphia has seen a wave of new startup ventures hoping to house other, well, startups.

Call it the coworking/incubation/accelerator gold rush of the first half of 2012, in which groups with office space sell low-cost desks, packaged with mentorship and backend services, to budding entrepreneurs.

“This is an opportunity to create a stronger network of younger, smarter tech-nology business in Philadelphia,” said elliot menschik, who started accepting applications in march for Venturef0rth, an accelerator in Callowhill.

hot on the heels of Venturef0rth, after a year or more of rumors, a trio of local entrepreneur scenesters opened in february the doors to seed Philly, the mission-minded nonprofit accelerator, at 1650 arch street, adjacent to green Village, itself an accelerator dedicated to sustainable-focused businesses.

news of the three initial startups in the Project Liberty digital incubator, hosted by the inquirer’s publisher and largely funded by the Knight foundation, broke in January, the same month that the novitorium in suburban Langhorne announced it had welcomed its initial tenant. This month, Benjamin’s desk, a coworking space with a more corporate feel was due to launch in rittenhouse.

activity in the first four months of 2012 has likely more than tripled the number of subsidized seats aimed at startups in Philadelphia.

This crew follows the path of university City accelerator dreamit Ventures, incubator good Company Ventures and the half-decade old old City coworking standard bearer independents hall.

in recent years, other tech businesses with room to spare have, too, opened

License to Inspect a possible launchDon’t hold your breath, but there is a shot that the long-awaited City of Philadelphia Licenses and inspections web app could launch during Philly Tech Week.

The tool, about two and a half years in the making, would use a scalable aPi built by the city’s office of innovation and Technology and allow users to access geo-coded information on permits, applications and zoning. dubbed ‘License to inspect,’ the app is the brainchild of robert Cheeham, the founder of azavea, which is building the web interface, matt golas, the managing editor of development news site PlanPhilly, which will host the tool, and har-ris steinberg, of PlanPhilly parent organiza-tion PennPraxis, which secured funding from the William Penn foundation.

“This would be the real deal of the city open data conversation,” said golas.

as Technically Philly reported in septem-ber, the project has been plagued by delays since its original concept in december 2009, part due to a collision of priorities with other projects in the city’s oiT office. rumors of a direct pledge for increased city data trans-

up desks to summon collaboration, including devnuts in northern Lib-erties, alliance equals in manayunk and Bashpole in Center City, but never has there been so many new desks in so short a time.

Launching is one thing, as any startup housed in one of these spaces will tell you. surviving is an-other. —Christopher Wink

parency from mayor nutter persist which could push the project to launch and beyond.

still, progress has been made since the last missed deadline — for the end of 2011. This february, Cheetham and golas were using a live, test version of the web app.

“it is spectacular,” golas said, “has all the bells and whistles too.” —Christopher Wink

entrepreneur expo Thursday, april 26 6:00pm – 9:00pm @ levitt Auditorium, 401 S. Broad St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_entrepreneurexpo; Free w/ RSVp

Bright ideas? Philly has them. The entrepreneur expo, a Philly startup Leaders, inc. event, will showcase the work of top Philadelphia-area entrepreneurs in a tradeshow setting, with an estimated 50 ex-hibitors and presentations. hosted by Corzo Center for the Creative economy.

a screenshot of the License to inspect application

seed Philly founder brad Denenberg, at right, with the Center City accelerator’s project manager bill Mellinger

Lunchtime Series: License to Inspect

Wednesday, april 25 12:00pm – 1:00pm @ Whyy, 150 n. 6th St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_license; Free w/ RSVp

a demo event showcasing Plan-Philly’s forthcoming License to inspect application and a panel discussion highlighting the public-private partnership between it, azavea and the city’s department of Licenses and inspection that made it happen.

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p r o g r a m & m a g a z i n ePresented by

pennsylvania • delaware • new jersey

we’ve got covered.philadelphia

smart. local. news.

the next generation nextFab studios grows up, becomes nextFab 2 // by yAel borofSky

next Fab studio launched in January 2010 on the first floor of the university City science Center as a members-only 3d proto-typing 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. at the end of february the outfit announced a second location at 2025 Washington avenue in south Philadelphia.

To transition the venue from ironworking to 3d printing, Philly architecture and design firm inhabit is revamping the 21,000 square foot spot to in-clude everything from private studios, classrooms, and an on-site street-level cafe. "The next space is going to be five times larger and have twice as many machines," nextfab's Community service specialist itsuki ogihara said.

The vision for the new Washington avenue nextFab studio

The ToooL Lockpick Workshop Wednesday, april 25, 12:00pm – 4:00pm @ nextFab, 3711 market St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_lockpick1; $10-$30

are you interested in learning more about the mys-tery behind locks and the tools used to open them? are you already a seasoned picker? attend this workshop to learn, practice, or show off!

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Presented by

The new, new Craigslistapartment hunting in a major american city like Philadelphia usually involves a lot of hopeful emails to anonymous web postings. Philadelphia startup inhabi is looking to change that by doing for renters what match.com does for soulmates.

one of the five companies demoing at switch Philly on april 25, inhabi asks renters about the amenities that they are looking for in an apartment. hardwood floors? definitely. Target rent? Keep it af-fordable, please.

Landlords and property managers are then able to send users the listings that match that defined criteria. The more landlords pay for the service, the more leads are available for them. Like dating sites, renters' personal details are anonymous until the deal goes down.

it's ultimately a better use of everyone's time. no word if the company is looking at the dating site market. —Sean Blanda

meet Connect Phillyat Technically Philly, we value highly the opportuni-ties that access to and education about the internet provide to citizens across city. for those that have access to it, technology is changing Philadelphia.

With active efforts being launched and main-tained across the city to improve the rate of those that have access — like the city’s KeYsPoT (Pow-ered by the freedom rings Partnership), the free Library’s hot spots and retail locations that provide internet access — it became abundantly clear to us that if we could point to all of them at once, we could help connect citizens that lack access.

That’s why we launched Connect Philly, a new tool that aggregates locations across the city that provide internet access. Citizens can send their address by text message to find the closest available internet access point. Try it now: type an address in an sms message (i.e. “1515 market st.”) to 215-240-7296. in a matter of seconds, you’ll be able to find the closest location that provides free, or nearly free, access to the internet.

We hope to get the word out about the service so that additional locations that provide free access and training can add their location, or improve the records already on file. We hope you’ll join us in that effort. To see the app, visit connect.tphilly.com. —Brian James Kirk

Young, public data catalog seeks older, more established institution to hostOpenDataPhilly is looking for a new home // by chriStoPher wink

OpenDataPhilly.org, the civic-orientated directory of information, tools and apps that launched during last year's Philly Tech Week, will mark a year in existence later this month. in that time, dozens of new data-infused items have been added, thousands of developers and hobbyists have visited and a local network of hackathons have embraced it as the natural starting point for projects.

The trouble might be that no one is quite sure who owns it, a strange hiccup in what may have been among the first and largest municipal data portals created outside of city staff.

Well, the community owns it, is the answer from robert Cheetham, the founder of azavea, the popular gis firm that built the site. The initial work was done pro bono, though a partnership with nPower Pa and funding from the William Penn foundation have helped the cause.

"i don't think a private, for-profit business is the right owner for something like this," said Cheetham. for now, the opendataPhilly.org domain is owned by azavea and the site is hosted by the company.

no formal contracts or long-term strategy has been put in place. Though Cheetham asked last year for ownership interest from institutions — requests were made by Philly.com and privately by a research initiative, among otherrs — that effort has somewhat calmed. Temple's new Center for Public interest Journalism is another suspected possibility, as is the city's office of information Technology and public media outfit WhYY.

for now, the effort remains a pet project for azavea, as chess pieces are moved alongside.

The april 2011 unveiling of OpenDataPhilly.org

a screen capture of the Connect Philly interface at http://connect.tphilly.com

Lunchtime Series: openaccessPhilly Showcase

Monday, april 2312:00 pm – 1:00 pm @ Whyy, 150 n. 6th St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_openaccessphilly; Free w/ RSVp

Lightning presentations on ma-jor public-private partnerships including Code for america, open-dataPhilly, Connect Philly and the freedom rings Partnership.

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p r o g r a m & m a g a z i n ePresented by

p h O t O B y S A R A h S c h U

saturday, April 21

Women in Tech SUMMIT 10:00am – 6:00pm @ Jon huntsman hall, 3730 Walnut St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_womentech; $25

This symposium will bring together women who will support, challenge and empower other women at all stages of their careers. Panels and talks plus technology skills workshops.

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Calendar

sunday, April 22

Indyhall Block Party 1:00pm – 8:00pm @ Indyhall, 20 n. 3rd St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_blockparty; Free w/ RSVp

Celebrate Philly Tech Week’s kick-off weekend at a block party hosted by america’s premier coworking space independents hall.

Tracks

entrepreneurship/Investment

s P ons or

media/transparency

s P ons or s

Arts/creative

Access/policys P ons or s

Design/Development

s P ons or

new for

2012!

Kickoff Weekend, April 20∙21∙22

Startup Weekendstartup Weekend is an intense 54-hour event which focuses on building a web or mobile application with people of different skillsets — software developers, graphic designers and business people — that could become a credible business over the course of a weekend.

DaY 1 FriDaY aPriL 20 5:00pm – 11:30pm

DaY 2 saTurDaY aPriL 21 9:00am – 11:30pm

DaY 3 sunDaY aPriL 22 9:00am – 9:00pm

@ hamilton hall, 320 S. Broad St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_startup; $89

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Monday, April 23

Kickoff Breakfast 8:00am – 10:00am @ Whyy, 150 n. 6th St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_kickoff; Invite Only

an invite-only event for event organizers and spon-sors to celebrate the opening of Philly Tech Week. Presentations from Chamber of Commerce Ceo rob Wonderling, City of Philadelphia Chief innovation officer adel ebeid and Wilco electronic systems ex-ecutive Vice President Brigitte daniel. Leading up to this kick-off, we encourage you to show your support for digital literacy and inclusion by joining us for the KeYsPoT internet fasT.

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Lunchtime Series: openaccessPhilly Showcase

12:00 pm – 1:00 pm @ Whyy, 150 n. 6th St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_openaccessphilly; Free w/ RSVp

Lightning presentations on major public-private part-nerships including Code for america, opendataPhilly, Connect Philly and the freedom rings Partnership.

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Performing with Technology 5:00pm – 8:00pm @ thefidget space, 1714 n. mascher St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_techperform; Free

an evening of sound installation, interactive dance, and experimental electronic music at thefidget space, a multimedia collaboration center in the Kensington area.

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Behind the Philadelphia eagles NfL Draft

6:00pm – 8:00pm @ Apple Store, 1607 Walnut St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_eagles; Free w/ RSVp

Join the Philadelphia eagles at Content strategy Philly for a look behind-the-scenes at how the franchise’s web team will put together compelling content during the nfL draft.

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Digital Performances in a Possible future

6:30pm – 8:30pm @ hamilton hall, 320 S. Broad St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_performances; Free

new Paradise will open the laboratory doors to its fringe productions in virtual space and live theater and will propose a possible future for the delivery of theater. hosted by Corzo Center for the Creative economy.

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5th annual Mobile Monday Demo Night

5:30pm – 8:30pm @ the hub at cira centre, 2929 Arch St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_mobilemonday

mobile monday’s demo night is one of the great chances to see what’s new in mobile technologies coming out of this region. many past presenters have gone on to great things, so this is your chance to see what’s new and interesting coming out of today’s great startups.

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jarvis Digital art Gallery 7:00pm – 10:00pm @ Devnuts, 908a n. 3rd Street; http://ph.ly/ptw_artician; Free

artician.com is hosting a digital art gallery for any and all Philadelphia digital media artists. The event will feature local digital art on a series of TVs, moni-tors, and projectors around the studio.

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Node.Philly 2012 6:30pm – 10:30pm @ Quorum at the University city Science center, 3711 market Street, Suite 800; http://ph.ly/ptw_nodephilly; $25

tracks entrepreneurship/Investment Media/Transparency arts/Creative access/Policy Design/Development

Philly Robotics expo12:00pm – 5:00pm @ Bossone center, 3140 market St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_robotics; Free w/ RSVp

Philadelphia’s premiere exhibition of ro-botics and advanced technology. meet the companies on the cutting edge of tech. Learn, play and build robots with tomorrow’s tech leaders.

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node.Philly 2012 is an exclusive evening event for anyone interested in node.the js framework. in addition to hearing from some of the most influential node experts, meet and collaborate with other members of the community.

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p r o g r a m & m a g a z i n ePresented by

in less than a year, The Knight foundation, Philadelphia media network, Ben franklin Technology Partners of southeastern Pennsylvania, dreamit Ventures and drexel university united to launch a digital incubator. Learn how this collaboration is positively changing media in the Philadelphia region.

Tuesday, April 24

Gamification for Non-profits Conference

9:00am – 7:00pm @ hamilton hall, 320 S. Broad St.; http:/ph.ly/ptw_gamification; $20

a full-day conference on the benefits of gamifica-tion for non-profit organizations including panel discussions, presentations, case studies, a social hour, and more. hosted by Corzo Center for the Creative economy.

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Lunchtime Series: Civic engagement in Science

12:00pm – 1:00pm @ Whyy, 150 n. 6th St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_civicscience; Free w/ RSVp

a showcase and panel on the technology and other factors increasing citizen participation in scientific research.

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Intellectual Property and Social Media — is your ip leaking out?

12:00pm – 1:30pm @ United plaza, 30 S. 17th St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_social-ip; Free w/ RSVp

although social media offer tremendous new op-portunities for marketing and communication with consumers, these outlets also present potential minefields for trademark infringement, ownership of copyrights, and loss of company trade secrets.

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how I Stopped Wasting Time and Made Money on My apps

1:00pm – 2:30pm @ Greater philadelphia chamber of commerce, 200 S. Broad St., Suite 700; http://ph.ly/ptw_appsroi; Free w/ RSVp

What are the advantages to software integration? Beyond the thrill of growing a cool product, creating integrations with other software can increase expo-sure and revenue.

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Tales of a Philly entrepreneur 2:00pm – 4:00pm @ cira center, Woodcock Washburn Offices, 2929 Arch St., Suite 250; http://ph.ly/ptw_tape; $15 - $50

four Philly entrepreneurs will cover everything there is to know about launching a successful startup in Philadelphia. from fundraising to scaling to exiting, you’ll hear local success stories and better under-stand how to take your business to the next level.

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Kanban-What? one Company’s Project Management Journey

3:00pm – 4:30pm @ Greater philadelphia chamber of commerce, 200 S. Broad St., Suite 700; http://ph.ly/ptw_kanban; Free w/ RSVp

When faced with the challenges of managing a growing email marketing software and 40-person development team, aWeber turned to the project management system Kanban. advantages and disadvantages other companies should take into consideration before implementing the system.

aWeber happy hour 5:00pm – 7:00pm @ nodding head Brewery, 1516 Sansom St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_aweberhour; Free

Join fellow members of the Philly tech community for a happy hour at nodding head Brewery. drink tickets are available for first 40 people that register for aWeber’s “Kanban” or “how i stopped Wasting Time” events earlier on Tuesday.

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KeYSPoT: Digital Literacy 2.0 5:00pm – 6:00pm @ parks & Rec center tBD; http://ph.ly/ptw_keyspotliteracy; Free

Join us for a lively discussion of the city’s challenges with digital literacy and numeracy. Learn how the Parks & recreation department is using innovative technology and e-learning practices to address these issues and what role you can play in play in fostering digital inclusion. Visit phillykeyspots.org for location of this event.

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Startup 1016:00pm – 8:00pm @ pyramid club, 1735 market St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_startup101; $10

What does it take to launch a startup? it starts with a great idea that is up to you. funding, Technology, and marketing are where we come in. Three profes-sionals walk you through the process.

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tracks entrepreneurship/Investment Media/Transparency arts/Creative access/Policy Design/Development

CheCK PhillytechWeek .cOm for uPdaTes and more Than a dozen addiTionaL eVenTs

The Birth of a Digital Incubator 5:30pm – 7:30pm @ Inquirer Building, 400 n. Broad St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_birth; Free

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Presented by

Tuesday, (cont’d)

Blogging about Philadelphia’s Creative Spaces

6:00pm – 8:00pm @ philamOcA, 531 n. 12th St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_blogging; Free w/ RSVp

Philadelphia’s creative vitality is stronger than ever, full of cultural nooks and hidden gems wait-ing to be discovered. We’ll ask these innovative storytellers to discuss tips, triumphs, and chal-lenges associated with covering and cultivating culture in Philadelphia.

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12th annual Information Technology awards

6:00pm – 8:00pm @ mitten hall, temple University, 1913 n.Broad St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_itawards; Free w/ RSVp

The fox school of Business will award three iT in-novators for leadership, innovation and their con-tribution to the community at this annual event.

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PhillyPUG 6:30pm – 8:30pm @ liberty two, 50 S. 16th St., Office of Buchanan Ingersol and Rooney, 32nd Floor; http://ph.ly/ptw_phillypug; Free w/ RSVp

The Philadelphia Python users group (PhillyPug) will meet for its monthly meetup during Tech Week. We will then have a networking/social at Ladder15 following the meeting.

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Marketing with Quick Response Codes

7:00pm – 9:00pm @ 100 S. Broad St., Suite 2100; http://ph.ly/ptw_qrcodes; Free w/ RSVp

Qr Codes are popping up everywhere – but how can you leverage this useful tool to really gain some mobile marketing insight? discover the do’s and don’ts of Qr code marketing.

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DIY Music Night7:00pm – 9:00pm @ hive 76, 915 Spring Garden St., Suite 519; http://ph.ly/ptw_diymusic; Free

hive 76 will feature synthesizers and hand-made instruments at the well-known hacker and diY space.

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Wednesday, April 25

Smart Talk: Women in Science 8:30am – 10:30am @ Quorum at the University city Science center, 3711 market St., Suite 800; http://ph.ly/ptw_womenscience; Free w/ RSVp

Cross-listed with the Philadelphia science fes-tival: speakers – Jane hollingsworth, nuPathe; gwendolyn Binder-scholl, adaptimmune; deborah Crawford, drexel university; susan rohrer, merck research Laboratories Partners

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Lunchtime Series: License to Inspect

12:00pm – 1:00pm @ Whyy, 150 n. 6th St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_license; Free w/ RSVp

a demo event showcasing PlanPhilly’s forthcom-ing License to inspect application and a panel discussion highlighting the public-private partner-ship between it, azavea and the city’s department of Licenses and inspection that made it happen.

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The ToooL Lockpick Workshop 12:00pm – 4:00pm @ nextFab, 3711 market St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_lockpick1; $10-$30

are you interested in learning more about the mystery behind locks and the tools used to open them? are you already a seasoned picker? attend this workshop to learn, practice, or show off!

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KeYSPoT: Women & Minority Tech Leaders

3:00 pm – 4:30 pm @ Drexel University tBD; http://ph.ly/ptw_techleaders; Free

get inspired by women and minority tech en-trepreneurs of all ages (from the 16-year-old web whiz-kid to the seasoned computer hacker) as they share their personal and professional stories. followed by a speed networking session. Visit phillykeyspots.org for more information.

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The ToooL Lockpick Workshop4:00pm – 8:00pm @ nextFab, 3711 market St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_lockpick2; $10-$30

are you interested in learning more about the mystery behind locks and the tools used to open them? are you already a seasoned picker? attend this workshop to learn, practice, or show off!

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Designing for Touch happy hour 5:00pm – 7:00pm @ 1011 n. hancock St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_touchdesign; Free

With the rise of the iPhone and iPad, touch inter-faces are everywhere, yet designing for these experiences can prove tricky and offer up a range of new user behaviors, interface challenges and expectations. interactive agency Bluecadet goes behind-the-scenes on a range of touch-based projects.

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Digital Bridge 6:00pm – 7:00pm @ huntsman hall, 3730 Walnut St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_digitalbridge; Free

The digital divide impacts us all: discuss how and ways to help combat it here in Philadelphia.

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tracks entrepreneurship/Investment Media/Transparency arts/Creative access/Policy Design/Development

t e c h n I c A l ly p h I l ly. c O m • p h I l ly t e c h W e e k . c O m 11

p r o g r a m & m a g a z i n ePresented by

Switch Philly 6:00pm – 7:15pm @ levitt Auditorium, 401 S. Broad St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_switchphilly; $10

five Philly startups will demo in front of judg-es and attendees to determine the winner of a prize pack that includes free office space and meetings with local investors. Judges: mayor michael nutter, Josh Kopelman and ellen Weber. hosted by Corzo Center for the Creative economy.

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WordPress for Beginners & Intermediates

7:00pm – 9:00pm @ Inquirer Building, 400 n. Broad St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_wordpress; Free

Beginners: Learn WordPress from the ground up. This beginner presentation will teach you everything you need to know to operate a WordPress-powered website. intermediates: see two presentations covering topics like theme creation and plug-in developoment.

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Thursday, April 26

feaTUReD: Social Media for Nonprofits hosted by NPower Pa

9:00am – 3:00pm @ Alter hall, 1801 liacouras Walk; http://ph.ly/ptw_socialnonprofits; $50

a day-long conference featuring some of the region’s best perspective on how social media can impact and benefit the missions, strategies and efforts of nonprofits. The day will be heavy on takeaways and action to improve existing strategies and launch new ones.

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Computer Training Basics for Seniors

10:00am – 11:30am @ tBD; http://ph.ly/ptw_seniors; Free

a brief overview of computer literacy basics for se-nior citizens in northwest Philadelphia, sponsored by state rep. rosita Youngblood.

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enterprise Mobility Workshop 10:00am – 3:30pm @ comcast center, 1701 John F. kennedy Blvd., Suite 2520; http://ph.ly/ptw_enterprise; Free

Come explore how mobility is taking the enterprise by storm not only externally with apps and mobile websites, but with new ways to engage employees and still maintain information security.

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e-commerce exposed —The Business and Technical Realities of the Modern e-commerce World

10:30am – 12:30pm @ SeeR Interactive, 1028 n. 3rd St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_ecommerce; Free w/ RSVp

This is a two-part session looking at the business and technical side of e-commerce. Tickets are available for each session individually or for both sessions. o3 World is hosting and moderating event, held at the headquarters of seer interactive.

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Lunchtime Series: “WhaT IT TaKeS to be a Black Tech entrepenuer”

12:00pm – 1:00pm @ Whyy, 150 n. 6th St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_blacktech; Free w/ RSVp

Join us for lunch and meet tech entrepreneurs at the top of their game that will share their strategies that made their tech start-ups or used technology to turn their ideas into successful companies.

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IGDa Philadelphia Game Showcase

7:00pm – 9:00pm@ Indy hall, 22 n. 3rd St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_igda; Free w/ RSVp

The game industry is one of the fastest growing tech sectors in Philadelphia. in the last year, more than 15 new studios have set up shop. game developers will show off their newest finished and developing games to the public. have a first chance at playing those games.

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hive 76 open house7:00pm – 9:00pm @ hive 76, 915 Spring Garden St., Suite 519; http://ph.ly/ptw_hive76; Free

This is a weekly open house for hive 76, where folks drop by to work on software, hardware, or any other diY projects that may be of inter-est. feel free to bring your own work along and ask questions!

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tracks entrepreneurship/Investment Media/Transparency arts/Creative access/Policy Design/Development

CheCK PhillytechWeek .cOm for uPdaTes and more Than a dozen addiTionaL eVenTs

12 P h i l ly t e c h w e e k . c o m • t e c h n i c A l ly P h i l ly. c o m

Presented by

Thursday, (cont’d)

The future of ioS Games1:00pm – 2:00pm @ phillycAm Studio, 699 Ranstead Street; http://ph.ly/ptw_iosgames; Free w/ RSVp

Talkadelphia hosts a lively conversation at the new PhillyCam studio about the next phase in ios gam-ing. Be part of the live studio audience as this popu-lar local podcast takes to airwaves in a new medium.

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KeYSPoT: Broadband for Small Business/Non-Profits

2:00 pm – 3:30 pm @ OIc, Inc.; http://ph.ly/ptw_broadband; Free

Whether you are a small business or a nonprofit, learn how you can leverage broadband internet access to further your business goals. get expert advice on growing your organization with online tools. Visit phillykeyspots.org for more information.

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Philly SNUG april 2012 meeting5:00pm – 7:00pm @ experis It, 1600 JFk Blvd., Suite 610; http://ph.ly/ptw_snug; Free w/ RSVp

enterprise Content management… why do it? Why sharePoint? We’ll discuss things you should consid-er, customer success, and then open it up to a Q&a.

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entrepreneur expo 6:00pm – 9:00pm @ levitt Auditorium, 401 S. Broad St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_entrepreneurexpo; Free w/ RSVp

Bright ideas? Philly has them. The entrepreneur expo, a Philly startup Leaders, inc. event, will showcase the work of top Philadelphia-area entre-preneurs in a tradeshow setting, withv an estimated 50 exhibitors and presentations. hosted by Corzo Center for the Creative economy.

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Database options 20126:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m. @ Devnuts, 908 n. 3rd St.; ph.ly/ptw_database; Free w/RSVp

as part of Philly Tech Week, this PhillydB event will host representatives from several different database products and projects to help you understand the ecosystem.

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Tech- and Design-Themed Quizzo6:00pm – 9:00pm @ the trestle Inn, 339 n. 11th Street; http://ph.ly/ptw_techquizzo; Free w/ RSVp

Join i-siTe and PhillyChi as we celebrate Philly Tech Week with a Quizzo custom made for folks who love technology and design. Trestle gift certificates will be awarded to the first, second, and third place teams.

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New Technologies: Impact on artists, their work and careers

6:30pm – 8:30pm @ Gershman hall, 401 S. Broad St., Room 100; http://ph.ly/ptw_techart; Free w/ RSVp

a discussion of the impact of technologies on the way artists work, how they present their art, and how they promote their careers. speakers will provide both an overview and concrete suggestions and examples. hosted by Corzo Center for the Creative economy.

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Tetris arm Wrestling Tournament7:00pm – 9:00pm @ hive 76, 915 Spring Garden St., Suite 519; http://ph.ly/ptw_tetris; Free

go head-to-head with other Tetris fans with a 100% original hive76 Tetris arm Wrestling game.

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Friday, April 27

Lunchtime Series: Unity Videogame showcase

12:00pm – 2:00pm @ Whyy, 150 n. 6th St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_unity; Free w/ RSVp

Come play with locally made games and learn about how they’re made.

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Without Walls: Works from the muraLaB/Breadboard Residency

5:00pm – 7:30pm @ esther klein Gallery, 3600 market St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_without; Free

Without Walls: is a joint exhibition between Breadboard and muraLaB that explores new directions in public art and technology.

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hack Gallery Show 5:00pm – 8:00pm @ 1519 Walnut St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_hack; Free

haCK is a juried design/art exhibition with an open call for technology based design and art from the Philadelphia region. We have a jury of top designers, artists, professors, and technologists.

TraCKs4

tracks entrepreneurship/Investment Media/Transparency arts/Creative access/Policy Design/Development

t e c h n I c A l ly p h I l ly. c O m • p h I l ly t e c h W e e k . c O m 13

p r o g r a m & m a g a z i n ePresented by

Games and Music 8:00pm – 11:30pm @ levitt Auditorium, Gershman hall, 401 S. Broad St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_gamesmusic; Free w/ RSVp

Presentations and a dialog with the people creating amazing and groundbreaking games that integrate music into gameplay. This isn’t about music for games, but rather games in which music is a core interactive element.

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LoW LIVeS 4 in Philadelphia 8:30pm – 11:30pm @ little berlin, 2430 coral St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_lowlives; Free

little berlin and mascher space are partnering to present Low Lives 4 in Philadelphia – for two days little berlin gallery will be connected via livestream to co-presenting spaces all over the world.

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KeYSPoT: Solutions SessionTbD @ philadelphia Fight; http://ph.ly/ptw_solutions; Free

Come ready to brainstorm with the region’s technol-ogy leaders to develop effective ways to further close the digital divide. Visit phillykeyspots.org for more information.

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tracks entrepreneurship/Investment Media/Transparency arts/Creative access/Policy Design/Development

saturday, April 28

TeDx Souderton high School 9:00am – 4:00pm @ Souderton Area high School, 760 lower Rd. Souderton; http://ph.ly/ptw_souderton; Free w/ RSVp

a locally-organized Ted conference. The in-ternet has changed everything in a radical way. now what? What are the most pivotal ideas to our future.

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BarCamp News Innovation 9:00am – 5:00pm @ Annenberg hall, temple University, 2020 n. 13th St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_newsinnovation; $5

BarCamp newsinnovation is an annual, one-day national unconference on journal-ism innovation and the future of news as explored by practitioners and friends.

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open Gov ‘News’ hackathon 9:00am – 5:00pm @ Annenberg hall, temple University, 2020 n. 13th St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_opengov; $5

developers and subject matter experts build civic oriented tools using local data sets (event is held alongside BarCamp newsinnovation).

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Regional US forum for Innovative educators and Learners

9:00am – 5:00pm @ 4021 parkside Ave.; http://ph.ly/ptw_forum; Free w/ RSVp

school of the future is proud to host the regional us forum for innovative educa-tors and Learners, sponsored by microsoft Partners in Learning. Join us to celebrate great teaching and learning. help us honor educators, learners, and schools and show-case how technology can further educa-tional transformation.

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The Ruby Workshop12:00pm – 6:00pm @ Venturef0rth 417 north 8th Street; http://ph.ly/ptw_ruby; Free w/ RSVp

so you want to learn ruby? maybe you’re familiar with other languages. maybe you’ve never written a line of code in your life. maybe you just want to see what all the fuss is about. in this interactive session held at the Venturef0rth offices, you’ll learn some of the basic principles and practices of writing software with ruby.

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Podcasting Workshop – TechGirlz 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm @ Springside School, 8000 cherokee St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_techgirlz; Free w/ RSVp

do you have something to say and want to learn how to make your own podcast? Join us at sCh academy to learn all about it! You’ll work with an all-girl high school technology leader team to create, edit and produce your very own podcast from start to finish.

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LoW LIVeS 4 in Philadelphia 3:00pm – 6:00pm @ little berlin, 2430 coral Street, 19125; http://ph.ly/ptw_lowlives2; Free

little berlin and mascher space are partnering to pres-ent Low Lives 4 in Philadelphia — for two days little berlin gallery will be connected via livestream to co-presenting spaces all over the world.

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hack Gallery Show 5:00pm – 8:00pm @ 1519 Walnut St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_hack2; Free

haCK is a juried design/art exhibition with an open call for technology based design and art from the Philadel-phia region. We have a jury of top designers, artists, professors, and technologists.

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N3rd Street Gamer Party7:00pm – 12:00am @ Devnuts, 908a north 3rd St.; http://ph.ly/n3rdstreet; Free w/ RSVp

n3rd street gamers, a group of gaming enthusiasts in northern Liberties, is hosting the neighborhood’s first gamer party. The night will include a dJ, bar, dance floor and all your favorite 4 player games on various TVs around the studio. Whether your a gamer or not, come out and enjoy the party.

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Signature event 6:00pm – 9:00pm @ Moore College of art & Design, 1916 race st.; http://ph.ly/ptw_signature; $30

A celebration of the Philadelphia technology community with all of Philly tech week’s attendees, sponsors and organizers. hosted by At&t and technically Philly.

CheCK PhillytechWeek .cOm for uPdaTes and more Than a dozen addiTionaL eVenTs

14 P h i l ly t e c h w e e k . c o m • t e c h n i c A l ly P h i l ly. c o m

NEXT GENERATIONDATA PROTECTION & MANAGEMENT FOR VIRTUAL ITHeadquartered in Philadelphia, PHD Virtual is leading the way developing next generation data protection and management solutions for todayʼs Virtual IT environments. Over 4,000 customers worldwide leverage PHD Virtualʼs award winning solutions. PHD Virtual is experiencing tremendous growth and is at the forefront with innovative solutions that are in high demand in the rapidly growing virtualization market.

For more information about our company, products, and career opportunities, please visit www.phdvirtual.com

PHILLY. MEET TROPO.SEPTAlking.com PHInditfor.me PHILLYsnap.com

Check out these Philadelphia-based AppsPowered by Tropo (then build your own)

t e c h n I c A l ly p h I l ly. c O m • p h I l ly t e c h W e e k . c O m 15

p r o g r a m & m a g a z i n ePresented by

Al SchmiDt

City Commissioner, on technology’s

impact on the Board of Elections

“a lot of the changes are really primitive that still move the agency

forward a light year.”

Brigitte DAniel

Executive Vice President, Wilco

Electronic Systems, on digital access

issues

“everyone is seeing that without access, you’re not

a participant in government.”

A . J. ruSSOMegatouch

Creative Director

“Before the iPhone was a glimmer in

steve Jobs’ eye, we were in the touch screen industry.”

lOuiS tOth

Comcast Ventures Managing Partner

“i don’t think any large company

can possibly claim they have a lock on

innovation”

JOe DiStefAnOInquirer Business

Columnist

“every company you think is new is in someway is connected to an

older company. so many people …

have links to that older story.”

AlAn ButkOvitz

City Controller, on Sheriff’s

Office website

“They charged $2.9 million for maintaining a

website for five years [laughs]… and it’s not very

good.”

SASkiA thOmPSOn

The Executive Director of the Office of Property Data at

City of Philadelphia, on Open Data initiatives in Philadelphia

“i’m not involved in this because of the data. i’m involved in this because i

believe in making government as

efficient as we can.”

Dr. chAD WOmAck

Entrepreneur and STEM education

advocate, on STEM

graduation rates

“What is the likelihood of a

kid growing up in West Philadelphia,

in terms of employment in the technology

industry?”

DeSiree Peterkin-

BellCity of Philadelphia

Director of Communications, on Mayor Nutter’s

social media-focused NBC10

Town Hall

“no other mayor in the country has partnered with a local broadcast station to do an

unrehearsed, full-hour to take questions from every medium

imaginable.”

BOB mOul

Former CEO of Boomi which was acquired by Dell

“You can look at all the different industries that

Philadelphia used to have and how

that connected to what the region

became.This is a digital rebirth.”

Steve tAng

President & CEO, University City Science Center,

on his appointment to a federal innovation

advisory board

“ i felt like Vance Worley in a pitching rotation of Cliff Lee, roy halladay and

Cole hamels.”

SAm kAtz

Investor and past Philadelphia

mayoral candidate

“Philadelphia is disconnecting from

government and has become quite entrepreneurial.

most of it’s happening without

permission.”

Quotablehow tech impacts my Philadelphiaeach week ever the past three years, Technically Philly has interviewed a prominent member of Philly's technology community. The conversations are distinctly Philadelphia. some of the best of those interviews, below. For more, visit Technically Philly every Friday.

16 P h i l ly t e c h w e e k . c o m • t e c h n i c A l ly P h i l ly. c o m

ATM_PHL_M2_1441_Spread_R1.indd 3-2-2012 10:11 AMSaved at NonePrinted At Client AT&TMedia Type MagazineLive 15.75” x 10.375”Trim 16.25” x 10.875”Bleed 16.5” x 11.125”Job Title Philly Tech Week SponsorshipPubs Philly Tech WeekMCD 3/5/12Ad Code None

DEPARTMENT:

APPROVAL:

Addl. Notes: no gutter - saddle stitch. estimated .25

Art Director Copywriter Acct. Manager Studio Artist Proofreader Traffic Production

ATT.COM/NETWORKScreen images simulated. ©2012 AT&T Intellectual Property. Service provided by AT&T Mobility. All rights reserved. AT&T and the AT&T logo are trademarks of AT&T Intellectual Property. All other marks contained herein are the property of their respective owners.

4G speeds not available everywhere. Learn more at att.com/network.

Samsung Galaxy Note™

Samsung Galaxy Tab™ 8.9

Stream video, upload pictures, and download presentations fast, in more places than ever, on the nation’s largest 4G network.

AT&T. The nation’slargest network.

Delete line before shipping

t e c h n I c A l ly p h I l ly. c O m • p h I l ly t e c h W e e k . c O m 17

ATM_PHL_M2_1441_Spread_R1.indd 3-2-2012 10:11 AMSaved at NonePrinted At Client AT&TMedia Type MagazineLive 15.75” x 10.375”Trim 16.25” x 10.875”Bleed 16.5” x 11.125”Job Title Philly Tech Week SponsorshipPubs Philly Tech WeekMCD 3/5/12Ad Code None

DEPARTMENT:

APPROVAL:

Addl. Notes: no gutter - saddle stitch. estimated .25

Art Director Copywriter Acct. Manager Studio Artist Proofreader Traffic Production

ATT.COM/NETWORKScreen images simulated. ©2012 AT&T Intellectual Property. Service provided by AT&T Mobility. All rights reserved. AT&T and the AT&T logo are trademarks of AT&T Intellectual Property. All other marks contained herein are the property of their respective owners.

4G speeds not available everywhere. Learn more at att.com/network.

Samsung Galaxy Note™

Samsung Galaxy Tab™ 8.9

Stream video, upload pictures, and download presentations fast, in more places than ever, on the nation’s largest 4G network.

AT&T. The nation’slargest network.

Delete line before shipping

18 P h i l ly t e c h w e e k . c o m • t e c h n i c A l ly P h i l ly. c o m

Presented by

While the national job market is showing tentative signs of recovery, Philadelphia’s e-commerce sector is growing so fast, many local em-ployers can’t hire talent quickly enough.

according to forrester research, e-commerce is expected to see double-digit growth through 2013 to a total of $240 billion in transactions, making online retail a wonderful option for a city looking to continue its reputation as a place with a growing technology job market (third in the nation according to a January CyberCoders study). after surveying some of the region’s entrepreneurs we’ve found that Philadelphia is in fantastic shape to build a strong com-merce ecosystem. in fact, such an ecosystem may already be here.

one of Philly’s fastest growing online retailers, revzilla, is tucked away in a south Philly warehouse within walking distance of long-time Philadelphia lunchtime staple John’s roast Pork. once you walk through its nondescript neighborhood and enter its warehouse, you’ll see a bustling showroom of motorcycle gear and back office with a rapidly-growing staff aiming to be “The zappos of motorcycle gear.” a reference to the Las Vegas-based shoe company that grew radically thanks to a focus on customer service before eventually selling to amazon for $1.2 billion in 2009. in 2011, co-founder anthony Bucci says revzilla did $20 million in total sales and hired more than 25 people, nearly doubling his staff. he’s now considering next steps.

“We love our Philadelphia address and the Philadelphia talent pool,” says Bucci, noting that two of three co-founders have graduated from drexel. “Being over the bridge just wouldn’t be the same.”

in old City, Christian dimarco’s business has a different focus: lamps. The co-founder of Lamps.com is building a growing e-com-merce destination with the help of arch street Lighting, founded in

Philadelphia’s next big thing? e-commerce.a handful of Philly firms are growing fast // by SeAn blAndA

1914. The site was named one of the regions fastest growing businesses at the Philly 100 event in october and is up to 15 employees in a little more than a year.

in malvern, americanmuscle is staffing up for what boasts to be among the country’s largest aftermarket mustang parts distributors, all through online sales.

While Bucci, Lamps.com and americanmuscle each have warehouses full of shippable goods, most of Philadelphia e-commerce-related job growth is in supporting services. most notably monetate, headquartered in Conshohocken, has been among Philadelphia’s fastest growing startups providing com-merce optimization tools like a/B testing to large realtors like QVC.

The company has grown from a handful of employees hud-dled in a shared office to more than 90 in a cavernous set of offices in downtown Conshohocken in four years.

The city’s web development shops are also experiencing rapid growth. old City’s Weblinc, o3 World and Queen Village’s sumo heavy industries have all moved into new offices in the past six months. seer inter-active, the seo firm that counts many local e-commerce businesses among its client base, just recently moved into the “search Church” a church at Third and george streets that houses the company’s over 40 employ-ees.

Perhaps the best part of Philadelphia’s commerce ecosystem is that, well, it’s an ecosystem. The companies above all rou-tinely work together and use each other’s services. for example, Lamps.com counts seer as its seo consultant. revzilla was one of monetate’s earliest customers.

dimarco says that some even get togeth-er routinely for a dinner to swap advice and war stories. “We know each other very well,” he says.

Monetate’s office is pictured in september 2011, before it scaled to its current 90 employees and growing

e-commerce exposed— The Business and Technical Realities of the Modern e-commerce World

Thursday, april 2610:30am – 12:30pm @ SeeR Interactive, 1028 n. 3rd St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_ecommerce; Free w/ RSVp

This is a two-part session looking at the business and technical side of e-commerce. Tickets are available for each session individually or for both sessions. o3 World is hosting and moderating event, held at the headquarters of seer interactive.

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t e c h n I c A l ly p h I l ly. c O m • p h I l ly t e c h W e e k . c O m 19

Knight Foundation’s mission is to help sustain

democracy in the digital age by ensuring

people stay informed and participate fully in

the life of their communities.

Our Technology for Engagement Initiative

funds innovative ways to help people take

action for the good of their neighbors and city.

Knight Foundation is looking to support more

people with big ideas for using technology for

engagement. If you have an idea, let us know.

Find out more at TechForEngagement.org.

Informed and engaged communities.

Informed & Engaged Communities

13952 KF Ad TED 7x9.625.indd 1 3/13/12 12:11 PM

20 P h i l ly t e c h w e e k . c o m • t e c h n i c A l ly P h i l ly. c o m

Presented by

now, a technology teacher leader and robot-ics instructor at her old middle school alma mater, as Technically Philly first reported on in february, Cruz’s passion for teaching and giving back to her own community shows her dedication and promise to the neighborhood she grew up in.

“i’m a product of this school. i was one of them. i am a product of this neighborhood. i’m homegrown.” Cruz said.

Cruz acknowledges the problems with advanced education in her community, noting that some kids do not have the resources or even knowledge to excel in an advanced field, such as engineering. some of

her students may not have basic tools at home, such as books or internet to even understand there are greater opportunities. having grown up in a similar situation to many of her students, Cruz has a unique perspective.

“some of my students tell me ‘ms. Cruz, you don’t understand’. and i tell them, ‘i don’t understand? i don’t understand what it’s like to come home to no working heat or no food on the table?” Cruz said.

she considers herself a successful product of her neighborhood, attending Potter Thomas elementary school, roberto Clemente middle school and olney high school in north Philadelphia. Cruz obtained a

Meet evelyn Cruz: teacher and robotics group organizer at roberto Clemente Middle school in hunting Park // by mAtthew AlbASi And ericA dePAScAle of PhilAdelPhiA neighborhoodS

Philly Robotics expoMonday, april 2312:00pm – 5:00pm@ Bossone center, 3140 market St.; http://ph.ly/ptw_robotics; Free w/ RSVp

Philadelphia’s premiere exhibition of robotics and advanced technology. meet the companies on the cutting edge of tech. Learn, play and build robots with tomorrow’s tech leaders.

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e velyn Cruz did not always want to be a robotics teacher or even dabble in tech-nology. in fact, she started out as a bus attendant at roberto Clemente middle school in hunting Park, making a meager salary.

bus attendant to robotics instructor

Bachelor’s degree in elementary edu-cation from Temple university in 1984.

now, Cruz is a Technology Teacher Leader at roberto Clemente, coaching other teachers in technology such as smarT boards and

computer science. her robotics classes range from 5th to 8th graders, where she teaches technology as a significant art. Cruz’s after-school robotics club also demonstrates her dedication to teaching, where she coaches students on how to build working robotics and to work in teams.

her robotics team has participated in various competitions over the years, including the Boosting engineering science and Technology competition, first Lego League and the marine advance Technol-ogy education. roberto Clemente has won awards in all three of these competitions.

“one of the main reason why i enjoy doing these competitions,” Cruz said, “is because it brings up real world situations where kids come in with some level of background knowledge, they apply it, then they use it.”

students at roberto Clemente Middle school in hunting Park work together during their after school robotics club

t e c h n I c A l ly p h I l ly. c O m • p h I l ly t e c h W e e k . c O m 21

22 P h i l ly t e c h w e e k . c o m • t e c h n i c A l ly P h i l ly. c o m

Presented by

it was there that he learned computer-aided draft-ing, using an emerging software package called au-toCad, which would shape the course of his career.

after graduating in 1989, he got a job as a techni-cian at a small polymer processing plant in Phila-delphia. five years in, outsourcing of industrial jobs

began to impact the plant. But the computer skills that smallwood had learned in school made him an indispensable asset to the company.

Today, smallwood’s success, of graduating from Philadelphia’s public school system as an african-american and earning a degree at a two-year techni-cal school in a field related to science, technology, en-gineering and mathematics, known as sTem, would be considered a statistical anomaly.

despite an aggressive federal push to prepare students for 21st century jobs, reformers say that the school district’s lagging prioritization of math and science education was amplified this summer by a budget crisis that is tearing down fledgling and disparate sTem efforts, leaving concerned citizens and stakeholders to move outside the system to fix the problem. Without improvement, they say, Phila-

Lack of citywide sTeM education vision leaves Philly’s skilled workforce in jeopardy // by briAn JAmeS kirk

a fter graduating from murrell dobbins Career and Technical education high school while living in a working-class neighborhood in West Philadelphia during the 1980s, myreon-michael smallwood had a decision to make. ¶ he didn’t have

an interest in attending a four-year college, but his father, who worked as an inspec-tor for the Philadelphia Water department, wanted better for his son. They agreed to meet in the middle. ¶ having always liked to take things apart, smallwood enrolled in a two-year electronic technology associates program at the Pennsylvania institute of Technology outside the city in media.

The STaTe of STeM

t e c h n I c A l ly p h I l ly. c O m • p h I l ly t e c h W e e k . c O m 23

p r o g r a m & m a g a z i n ePresented by

delphia will have a hard time assembling a 21st cen-tury workforce that can rely on math, science and technology skills.

according to a report obtained by Technically Philly, between 2005 and 2010, less than one per-cent of black students — who make up more than half of the school district of Philadelphia’s enrollment of 146,000 — graduated high school and went on to earn college degrees in a sTem-related major. The percentage of degree earners who are asian or white are more than double their percentage share of total district enrollment.

about 13 percent of school district graduates earn four-year degrees in a sTem-related field, according to that report. To be fair, the statistics are on par with national averages: between 2003 and 2007, 15% of bachelor degrees were awarded in sTem-related fields, accord-ing to analysis by the Business-higher education forum.

still, education reform-ers and technology industry leaders interviewed for this story found the racial dispar-ity alarming, given its impact on the lives of students and the regional and global conse-quences of a technologically-untrained workforce.

“at a level where it’s left to a single percentage point, you have to round to zero,” says Chad Womack, a black science and technology entrepreneur, who is Principal and managing director of the america21 Project, a Philadelphia nonprofit focused on empow-ering urban centers and communities through sTem

education and workforce development.“it means that the school district of Philadelphia

doesn’t make a difference in terms of a student’s ability for post-secondary success in sTem.”

school district spokesperson fernando gallard says that district officials had not yet seen the report and were not prepared to comment on it.

for now, the future of sTem education policy in the school district remains in limbo. With a new su-perintendent expected to start this summer, gallard says that sTem priorities are something the district will be wresting with.

“i can tell you that there is a committment that sTem plays a larger role in public education. We un-derstand the importance of it. We also know that we need a greater focus on it,” gallard says.

The draft report — put together by the school district’s office of accountability and provided to Technically Philly by an anonymous source close to the report — tracked 846 students known to have graduated from a four-year or two-year college in a sTem field between 2005 and 2010. Those sTem degree earners were tracked out of a pool of 7,058

students who graduated a two-year or four-year col-lege during that period.

“in essence, you have large swaths of the city that don’t have a bridge for their children into the 21st century,” says Womack.

Complicating the issue, consequences of the $700 million budget gap crisis have impacted ex-tracurricular sTem programming in the district, which is intended to increase graduation rates and interest in sTem education.

There’s never been a central office for sTem activi-ties, which has historically limited its ability to plan or to lobby math and science policy across the district.

for advocates of the issue, that lack of system-wide policy is as detrimental to students as it is the region’s workforce. experts say that sTem is crucial for the global and urban economy, and that the field of technology resonates with students in substantial and impactful ways. for the many involved, sTem education is a beacon in the storms of urban renewal and education reform.

it is for these reasons that unlikely and inspiring advocates for sTem continue to fight inside of and outside the school system because they believe it can make Philadelphia a competitive environment for 21st century jobs.

at the alliance for Progress Charter school, just west of Temple university along Cecil B. moore av-enue, technology teacher mary Beth hertz runs the school’s first all-girl robotics club.

it’s an upstart team, funded by a $640 online donation campaign and hertz’s own dime, which brought the purchase of a $1,000 robot kit last summer.

on an early evening last october, sixth grader Karizma L. plugged a Lego mindstorms robot into an imac computer and began to fix the ‘bot’s light sensor.

after using a kid-friendly software package to pro-gram the light sensor by herself, Karizma crouched down beside a white mat nearby and watched as the robot automatically followed a circular black line by comparing the color values of the white and black pixels underneath it.

Karizma gasped and threw her hands up in the air in celebration. “i just followed the instructions!,”

she yelled to hertz, who watched nearby.

“it’s the epitome of what learning looks like. They’re working through a problem. You can see the light bulbs go off,” hertz says.

it’s a familiar story across public school sTem programs: children learn-ing the values of problem-

solving, the impact of technology and the math and science that make it possible.

sTem education reform could be a powerful way to rejuvenate the urban core of Philadelphia, advo-cates say, where the loss of manufacturing jobs in the last half-century and the recent global recession have led to an unemployment rate larger than the na-

70%

60%

50%

40%

30%

20%

10%

0%

32.2%34.0%

30.7%

0.3%0.1%2.7%

58.3%

0.2%

7.0%

18.0%

2.0%

13.8%

African American

native American

Asian latino other white

Comparison of racial breakdowns of sDP Overall enrollment and Four-Year sTeM Degree earnersn district enrollment, 2010-11 n four-year Stem degree earners, 2005-2010

“ In essence, you have large swaths of the city that don’t have a bridge for their children into the 21st century.” — chAD WOmAck , Principal and Managing Director of the America21 Project

24 P h i l ly t e c h w e e k . c o m • t e c h n i c A l ly P h i l ly. c o m

Presented by

tional average. in december, Philadelphia reported a 10.1 percent unemployment rate

compared to the national average of 8.3 percent. The city unemployment rate continues to lag behind its suburban counties and other big cities.

a decade ago, the possibility of sTem education priorities helping to reform schools might have only concerned technologists. But today, science, tech-nology, engineering and mathematics issues are gaining mainstream interest and federal backing.

in 2011, calling it the nation’s sputnik moment, President obama spoke highly of education reform in his state of the union address to address the quality of math and science learning.

“if we want to win the future — if we want inno-vation to produce jobs in america and not overseas — then we also have to win the race to educate our kids,” the President said.

on a local level, as part of drexel university’s com-munity development vision in university City, Vice Provost of university and Community Partnerships Lucy Kerman is helping to envision how technology education can impact a neighborhood plan, preserve history and empower existing residents.

Kerman co-chairs the community-focused por-tion of drexel’s oft-writ 2012 strategic plan under new President John fry, using her experience in a similar role at the university of Pennsylvania during its West Philadelphia initiatives.

“in trying to solve brain drain,” she says, “one problem is that it’s not creating jobs for the massively unemployed. how do you create that new economy that stretches across high- and low-skill jobs?”

“When we’re talking about giving youth the tools they need, technology is the medium that is so em-powering,” Kerman says.

ensuring that kids have the right skills for the job market isn’t just theoretical. for manufacturers in

the region that seek highly-skilled workers, it’s an actionable gain, too.

at the delaware Valley industrial resource Cen-ter, project manager gary hines helps small and medium-sized manufacturing companies identify staff competency needs, and coordinates training and education to keep them strong, competitive and growing.

a few years ago, “when companies started saying ‘we can’t find workers, our workforce is aging, and we don’t have anyone to take their places,’” he says the organization started advocating for and organizing around sTem talent development.

“all of the things that happened with the district [last] summer, i think their priorities have shifted from focusing on sTem programs,” hines says. “There are so many other critical issues going on.”

efforts to improve sTem education standards in the region have manifested in a number of ways since 2005. The Philadelphia education fund’s math + science Coalition pushes for teacher prepa-ration and training. The 21st Century Partnership for sTem education works to create programming for students. at the america21 Project, the focus is on sTem education and workforce development in urban communities.

at the heart of each effort is a sense of civic duty to ensure that the united states, and Philadelphia, can create a competitive, 21st century workforce.

Last november, acting superintendent Leroy nunery presented the district’s new sTem priorities to the Philadelphia education fund’s math + science Coalition. he stressed a need for a more comprehen-sive sTem strategy starting at the elementary level, the expansion of extracurricular sTem clubs and the ability to tap into regional resources for teacher preparation, according to a Coalition summary.

it was a departure from the sTem policies of for-mer superintendent arlene ackerman, “who didn’t

want to be bothered with it,” says Chad Womack of the america21 Project.

But nunery’s “acting” status is just that. The school district is currently seeking a permanent superintendent to be installed this summer, and of-ficials can’t say what will be that leader’s approach to sTem education.

Joseph merlino, President of the 21st Century Partnership for sTem education, who attended nunery’s presentation, says that despite the sin-cere picture painted, change will have to come from outside of the district.

“There have been very few districts that can pull off improvement on their own,” merlino says.

“it’s not about the next superintendent, it’s about having a citywide vision.”

“ It’s the epitome of what learning looks like. They’re working through a problem. You can see the light bulbs go off.” — mAry Beth hertz , Technology Teacher and Robotics Club Founder at the Alliance for Progress Charter School

(above) Mary beth hertz works with alliance for Progress Charter student Karizma at an iMac workstation; (right) Karizma watches her LegO robot automatically follow a black line.

t e c h n I c A l ly p h I l ly. c O m • p h I l ly t e c h W e e k . c O m 25

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t e c h n I c A l ly p h I l ly. c O m • p h I l ly t e c h W e e k . c O m 31

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