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NextSpace

Do you know someone in Santa Cruz that you’d call a trailblazer, an innovator, or whose work or passion inspires you? Santa Cruz NEXT is accepting nominations for the 1st Annual NEXTie Awards.

Submit Your NEXTie Award Nominations!

The NEXTies honor young people in Santa Cruz who are doing amazing things locally or globally. These inspiring individuals could live anywhere, but they choose Santa Cruz to apply their talent and passion. These individuals might include entrepreneurs, artists or volunteers who are leaders in their chosen field and are making an impact on the community or the world. Nominees live or work in Santa Cruz County, are between the ages of 22 and 45, and have an inspiring story to tell.

(*) Jeremy Neuner

Why Jeremy Neuner?

1. Jeremy is one of the co-founders of Nextspace (see http://nextspace.us) a fantabulous co-working space in downtown Santa Cruz that is one year old as of mid-October 2009.

2. Jeremy is a light hearted but incredibly effective leader of the Nextspace organization.  The community respects him.

3. Nextspace is not only vital to the Santa Cruz community, it’s a great place — interesting and fun, feels like the entrepreneurial epicenter of Santa Cruz — for an entrepreneur, or solopreneur, or techie — or anybody else — to work.

4. Jeremy frequently credits the members of Nextspace for its success, rather than claiming that success for himself.  However, much of the environment of Nextspace is due to Jeremy’s style of leadership.  He’s been the right guy at the right time.

5. Many local success stories have come out of NextSpace:

http://nextspace.us/2009/05/nextspace-members-in-the-news/

6. Nextspace puts Santa Cruz on the map (in a good way):

http://nextspace.us/2009/08/more-than-just-surf-city/

7. Nextspace has good connections with UCSC:

http://nextspace.us/2009/06/nextspace-and-ucsc/

8. Want more? Watch this video:

NextSpace: 1 Year of Success in an Economic Downturn

http://vimeo.com/7102787

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It’s time to blog!  I’m here at the first official Blog and Breakfast Thursdays at NextSpace (Thursdays, 8-9:30am).  Nice folks and great idea!  Never blog alone.

Some folks have been asking about getting started on WordPress.  Here are some great resources for WordPress beginners…


WordPress for Beginners:

http://www.wpbeginner.com/


WordPress.tv is your visual resource for All Things WordPress:

http://wordpress.tv


And, to learn more about the difference between WordPress.com and WordPress.org, go to:

http://support.wordpress.com/com-vs-org/

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When I saw the recent Huffington Post video about “Sarah Palin vs. That Crazy Santa Cruz Lady” my gut reaction was… Santa Cruz is receiving another 15 minutes of fame with the same old stereotype.  How to counter this?  Jeremy Neuner, CEO of NextSpace, has written a great article in response.

More Than Just Surf City, Jeremy Neuner, August 4, 2009

By now, almost everyone in the entire known universe has seen the Huffington Post’s mashup of “Sarah Palin vs. That Crazy Santa Cruz Lady.” Whatever you may think of the former Veep candidate, the young Santa Cruzan in the video—ranting to the city council about pesticides and slavery in an attempt to, um, participate in our local democracy—doesn’t do much to dispel a popular stereotype of Santa Cruz: that ours is a quirky, un-serious town.

I won’t try to deny that Santa Cruz is a quirky place.  In fact, I wouldn’t want it any other way.  What the rest of the world may see as quirky, most of us Santa Cruzans see as tolerant, welcoming, creative, and innovative.  Still, I’m troubled by the possibility that the viral spread of the Huffington Post video is giving our fair seaside town a bad rap.  So in the interest of providing a more complete version of the character of Santa Cruz, please take a spin through the following few items:

–In this short video, Greg Gumble (yep, THE Greg Gumble) from “The Economic Report” shows why Santa Cruz is a unique ecosystem that boasts a balanced lifestyle, a history of innovation, a strong entrepreneurial spirit, and a highly educated workforce.  These are the exact ingredients for a strong, vibrant economy and we’ve got more than our fair share of those ingredients in Santa Cruz.

–Santa Cruz is loaded with creative designers, scrappy entrepreneurs, and savvy business people. This video, produced and directed by NextSpace member Dusty Nelson, features a who’s who of local educators, engineers, bankers, designers, government officials, and CEOs, all offering their pitch on why Santa Cruz is a great place to work, live, and play.  Take 10 minutes and watch the whole thing.  It’s an awfully damn impressive piece of filmmaking and showcases some of the world-class talent in this town.

–Speaking of world-class talent, check out this Business Week article about Santa Cruz-based Plantronics and Altec Lansing.  Together, these companies racked up six innovation awards at this year’s Consumer Electronics Show.  Tens of millions of people all over the world use their award-winning products and every one of those products was designed right here in Santa Cruz.

–What about the money?  You need a pile of it to build great companies, not an easy task in these cash-strapped times.  But local social networking start-up UserVoice recently landed $800,000 in seed stage capital.  AlgaeOMEGA, a bio-fuels company spun out of research at NASA and UC Santa Cruz, received another $800,000.  NextSpace member Carmen Kubas led her company, Lightfoot Industries, to a third place finish in a regional venture capital competition.  And local heroes12seconds.tv are luring investors with their new iPhone app and their huge community of users.  Want to invest in some of the hottest new companies across a range of industries?  Look no further than “quirky” Santa Cruz.

Like any city, Santa Cruz has lots of faces.  We’re a surfing town, a tourist town, and a university town.  Despite our depiction in the Huffington Post, Santa Cruz is a town that’s building an enviable ecosystem of business, lifestyle, and innovation.  What’s our secret?  We take ourselves seriously, just not too seriously.

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On deck for our May 6th event:

LinkedIn – the pioneer and premier social network for business professionals. LinkedIn’s unique approach enables contact with any network member or networked connection, and builds trust and interaction among the service’s users. Learn more about how to get the most out of this essential business tool, the trends in the Web 2.0, social media, and social networking. Scott Roberts

Spare Change – while advertising revenues have been disappointingly low for most web applications, another option developers are increasingly turning towards is micropayments for virtual goods or premium features. A year after launch, more than 700 apps across Facebook, MySpace, and Bebo use Spare Change for micropayments. Spare Change is processing $2.5 million a month in micropayments, which is a $30 million annual run-rate. Mark Rose

UserVoice.com – the pride & joy of Santa Cruz tech startups and shining star, UserVoice is the fastest way to turn feedback into innovation. Improve your site or product with the bright ideas from your customers. UserVoice is currently powering both web startups and companies from the Fortune 500. Richard White

UCSC Business Plan Contest – UCSC is stimulating entrepreneurial activity by conducting a business plan competition for students. Entrants have a chance to win $15,000 in prizes. Three teams from the “final six” will present rapid fire (2 minutes each) their plans to our members, for feedback and mentoring.

Please remember that this event will be held in the downstairs of NextSpace. There is a $5 donation fee at the door, to help pay for the food and beverages. This event will have record attendance, so don’t wait to RSVP at http://www.meetup.com/newtech-86/. See you soon!

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Here is a must read article for anybody who is interested in the state of the Tech Scene in Santa Cruz.  Jeremy Neuner give a great overview here:

http://nextspace.us/2009/04/state-of-the-santa-cruz-tech-scene/

Here is the complete article by Jeremy Neuner:

The other day, I spent the morning hanging out with Margaret Rosas, Founder and Chief Strategist at the strategic web consultancy Quiddities. The Santa Cruz Sentinel had just run a story on Margaret and her team (we lovingly call them The Q-Mamas) about how their company—and our town—thrive on collaboration. As we washed coffee cups (a morning ritual at NextSpace), Margaret and I reminisced about the first time we spoke to each other over the phone in October 2007 and how we both lamented the lack of a vibrant, collaborative tech scene here in Santa Cruz. And then we marveled at how far our town and our amazingly innovative tech community have come lately.

So, inspired by my conversation with Margaret, here’s a quick (okay, not so quick!) run-down of what’s happened over the past 18 months regarding the tech scene in Santa Cruz. Please take a look. And if I’ve missed something, please drop a comment and let me know. Meanwhile, I think you’ll be pretty damn impressed with the state of the tech community in Santa Cruz….

Geek Dinners

It all started on November 30, 2007 with the inaugural Santa Cruz Geek Dinner. Local visionaries Margaret Rosas, Sean Tario, and Sol Lipman decided to put a stake in the ground, gather some talented people, and start building a community. One of the attendees, David Beach, predicted that this dinner would be the first of a series of events that would put Santa Cruz back on the tech map.  Beach’s words proved prophetic.Through the Geek Dinners, Beach met Sol Lipman. Together, along with Jakey Knobel, they started 12seconds.tv, the hottest social media start-up on the planet. I think that counts as “putting Santa Cruz back on the tech map.” The Geek Dinners continue to draw dozens of talented Santa Cruzans every month.

Santa Cruz Geeks

Hard on the heels of the Geek Dinners came the Santa Cruz Geeks, a virtual and physical community of local techies. Now over 250 strong, the Geeks form the backbone of the Santa Cruz tech community. Most important, the Geeks prove that this town is chock full of talented, innovative, successful tech professionals who are passionately committed to building great companies in Santa Cruz.

Santa Cruz Design + Innovation Center

January 2008 marked the official launch of the Santa Cruz Design + Innovation Center. Recognizing that Santa Cruz is a hub of world-class design talent, the SCD+IC was formed as an advocacy group to promote that talent to the rest of the world. Over 300 people packed into an auditorium at Plantronics for the SCD+IC’s launch event, proving that the design and technology community in Santa Cruz was hungry for opportunities to organize, network, and collaborate. Aside: Plantronics is one of Santa Cruz’s great home-grown companies. They designed the headset that Neil Armstrong wore on the moon in 1969 and have been designing great products in Santa Cruz ever since.Rockstar/Boy-Genius Darrin Caddes is Plantronics VP of Design and is a huge (and remarkably humble) fixture in the Santa Cruz tech scene.

Santa Cruz New Technology Alliance MeetUp

Another local visionary, Doug Erickson, started the Santa Cruz New Tech Alliance MeetUp in February 2008. Like many of us in Santa Cruz, Doug has deep professional connections in Silicon Valley. But he knew very few of his fellow Santa Cruzans. Yet, he had a pretty strong hunch that there was a community-in-waiting of local techies in this town. So Doug started the New Tech MeetUp. He had three goals: create a monthly networking event for Santa Cruz high tech professionals, increase our exposure to new technologies that would tickle our geek gears, and stimulate beachhead startups. With humble beginnings (39 attendees crammed into the police department’s community room with no Internet access), Doug has grown the MeetUp into an organization nearly 600 strong.

Approval of the Delaware Addition

In July 2008, the Santa Cruz City Council unanimously approved the Delaware Addition project. Designed by local architect Mark Primack and spearheaded by Craig French from Redtree Properties, this 20 acre, LEED-certified, mixed-use, live/work development on the city’s Westside will provide the infrastructure that the next generation of Santa Cruz companies will need. Most important, the approval of Delaware Addition is the first major piece of public policy indicating that this community understands the direction that the local economy is heading: towards smaller, collaborative, environmentally-minded, high-tech businesses.

Freelance Camp

For a long time, the Santa Cruz tech scene has been famously decentralized. Many Santa Cruzans work as consultants, independent contractors, or telecommuters for larger companies in Silicon Valley and throughout the rest of the world. But independents lack opportunities for community, collaboration, and connection. So Shane Pearlman and Peter Chester (they run a company called, you guessed it, Shane & Peter, Inc.) decided to herd the cats. In August 2008, they hosted Freelance Camp for over 125 freelancers and independent consultants. This barcamp-style unconference provided yet another community-building opportunity as local freelancers shared ideas on how to run a one-person shop. Even better, Freelance Camp has become a home-grown national phenomenon, with similar conferences popping up in places like Miami, Houston, and Austin. Hey, just one more step in putting Santa Cruz back on the tech map.

Digital Media Factory

Santa Cruz is building a new digital information industry. And Marty Collins, CEO of the Digital Media Factory and thirty-year industry veteran, is leading the charge. In Marty’s words, “the Digital Media Factory is a multi-business facility for the design, development, production, replication, management, and distribution of digital information products.” In my words, DMF is pure genius. Why? Because Marty believes in community. He’s gathered over a dozen digital media businesses under one roof to share resources, talent, and opportunities. Even more important, Marty is leveraging the immense talent pool at UC Santa Cruz. He’s developed partnerships with UC Santa Cruz’s Digital Arts and New Media program, as well as the UCSC Baskin School of Engineering. Which brings me to…..

UC Santa Cruz/City of Santa Cruz Legal Settlement

Universities are amazing repositories of talents, ideas, and innovations. From an economic perspective, universities are fertile ground for new companies that can boost the economies of their host cities. Heck, Silicon Valley was practically built by Stanford spin-outs. Why can’t that phenomenon happen with UC Santa Cruz and the City of Santa Cruz? It can. And it will, especially now that the UCSC and the City have stopped suing the bejeezus out of each other over UCSC’s long-range development plan. The legal settlement, announced in August 2008, marks the beginning of what I call “The Great Thaw.” It’s high time for the UCSC to show some leadership in using its pool of talent to help build local business and the local economy. And it’s even higher time for the citizens of Santa Cruz to recognize that UCSC is a tremendous asset to the community, rather than a liability. I’m incredibly optimistic.

NextSpace Grand Opening

Amidst all of this excitement, NextSpace Coworking + Innovation, Inc. officially opened its doors on October 1, 2008. We started with a handful of true-believing early adopters.  But in six short months, our community of innovators has grown to over 100 strong.  What’s happening at NextSpace?  A lot.  Take a look at this post on The NextSpace Effect for a quick rundown. Mostly, I want to acknowledge that NextSpace would not be possible without the vision, passion, and hard work of all of the people mentioned in this post.

Radio Engage

New media? Old media? The smart ladies at Quiddities think you can have both.  They received a Knight News Challenge grant from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation to fund their new project Radio Engage.  In their words, Radio Engage is a platform allowing public radio stations to create a web presence that will draw their local community in and invite them to participate through social media.  In my words, Radio Engage will totally revolutionize how public radio stations interact with their listeners.  Quiddities teamed up with Santa Cruz’s own KUSP as a test platform for Radio Engage.  As part of the project, Quiddities hosted Public Media Camp in November 2008, bringing  public media and social media experts from around the country to Santa Cruz to discuss the future of public radio.  Are you catching the themes that we’re building here: high tech, collaborative, community-based business and innovation.

Pilot Project for Innovation and Entrepreneurship

Remember how I said a minute ago that I was incredibly optimistic about the emerging relationship between the City of Santa Cruz and UC Santa Cruz? Here’s the first proof point: The Pilot Project for Innovation and Entrepreneurship. Hatched in December 2008 by Bonnie Lipscomb (City of Santa Cruz Director of Economic Development) and Nirvikar Singh (Special Assistant to the Chancellor at UCSC), PPIE brings together undergraduate business teams from UCSC with local business mentors. The first round of projects focused on bicycles and other forms of alternative transportation, a perfect fit for the tech-savvy, sustainability-focused crowd in Santa Cruz.

Launch of CruzBusiness.com

Peter Koht, the economic development coordinator for the City of Santa Cruz, is a man on a mission. Peter knew that the City offered plenty of economic development resources, but those resources were often disparate and hard to find. Seemingly overnight, Peter launched CruzBusiness.com, an interactive, community-based portal for information about starting and sustaining a business in Santa Cruz. Peter’s work is an important step in accomplishing his—and the City’s—mission of recruiting, attracting, and retaining great businesses in Santa Cruz.

The Envision Santa Cruz Summit

In March 2009, Sean Tario (man, that guy is everywhere!) hosted the first Envision Santa Cruz Summit at the UCSC University Center. Sean’s objectives for the Summit were to assemble thought leaders in local entrepreneurship and economic development, to celebrate the amazing companies and resources in Santa Cruz, and to inspire Santa Cruzans to take a more active role in building their local economy. Over 150 people showed up to discuss the economic future of our community. Decades from now, when someone writes a book about the economic history of Santa Cruz, Sean’s summit will definitely be one of the highlights.

Girls in Tech

The latest group on the scene is the Santa Cruz chapter of Girls in Tech.  Founded by Seana Sullivan and Victoria Crimmins, this group focuses on “engagement, education and empowerment of like-minded, professional, intelligent and influential women in technology.”  Their first event brought author and journalist Sarah Lacy to town. More important, this group provides a much-needed acknowledgement and celebration of the critical contributions that women make to our local tech scene.

UC Santa Cruz Business Plan Competition

Right now, as I type, as you read, 16 business teams from UCSC are going head-to-head in the first-ever UCSC Business Plan Competition. The semi-finals are on April 17, 2009, and the finals are in late May 2009. Local investors, bankers, and business leaders are judging the competition. Remember how I said a minute ago that I was incredibly optimistic about the emerging relationship between the City of Santa Cruz and UC Santa Cruz? The UCSC Business Plan Competition is proof point #2. Stay tuned….

Right, so, that’s the low-down. This has been a long post, mostly because so many cool things are happening in Santa Cruz around high tech, entrepreneurship, sustainability, and community-based economies. We’ve come a long way as a community in the past 18 months. So where are we now?  I think the best benchmark is the number of companies that have started up or are ready to scale here in Santa Cruz.  Here’s a quick list of just a handful:  12secondsUserVoicePergamum SystemsProductOpsIntuvoRideSpringZoomPool, VerdaferoZazengoStudio Cruz, and Digital Media Factory.  Not too shabby for this beautiful, brilliant, creative, innovative little seaside town.

As I said at the top, please comment if I’ve missed something in this lengthy round-up.Meanwhile, what’s next? I have some ideas. What are yours?

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April 29, 2009, 7-9 PM, at NextSpace, Santa Cruz

NextSpace, Bookshop Santa CruzSanta Cruz Geeks and Girls in Tech are proud to bring Prof. Tina Seelig, Executive Director, Stanford Technology Ventures Program and acclaimed author to NextSpace for a reading and signing of her latest book: WHAT I WISH I KNEW WHEN I WAS TWENTY: A Crash Course on Making Your Place in the World.

One crucial bit of career advice that Tina Seelig offers her students at Stanford University is this—never listen to career advice. This may seem odd, coming from the woman charged with teaching the best and the brightest to succeed in the business world. And yet this tip, together with the other insights she’s shared in her highly popular course at Stanford, has allowed Seelig’s students to become leading figures in the most innovative and successful business in the world, from Google to Intel to Adobe to Apple.

Now, in Seelig’s WHAT I WISH I KNEW WHEN I WAS TWENTY: A Crash Course on Making Your Place in the World (HarperOne; April 2009; Hardcover; $23.99; ISBN 9780061735196), we can all get inside access to one of the most sought after business school professors in the country. With provocative lessons gleaned from Seelig’s tenure in both the corporate and academic worlds, and with some untraditional advice inspired by leading business figures like Apple creator Steve Jobs (his Mac design was based on a calligraphy course he took as a college dropout) and JetBlue founder David Neeleman (it took being fired by Southwest to come up with his new airline), the book provides tangible skills and invaluable guidance that will allow readers to achieve unprecedented success in any field.

Tina Seelig has a Ph.D. in Neuroscience from Stanford and is the Executive Director of the Stanford Technology Ventures Program, which is the entrepreneurship center at Stanford University School of Engineering. In addition, she also teaches a course in the 
Department of Management Science & Engineering on Creativity and Innovation, and has written several popular science books for adults and children.

The smartest business school students in the world take Tina Seelig’s classes to learn how to transform their creativity into credibility and their ideas into business realities. And now that her course is available in the form of WHAT I WISH I KNEW WHEN I WAS TWENTY, readers of all ages, and at any point in their careers, we can do the same.

“Tina Seelig is one of the most creative and inspiring teachers at Stanford. Her book ought to be required reading. I wish I had read it when I was 20 . . . and again at 50.” — Robert Sutton, Stanford University Professor and author of The No-Asshole Rule

“Anybody who wants to live an entrepreneurial life filled with purpose and passion needs to read this book. It’s chockfull of practical tools and tips to bring out the best in each of us.” — 
Steve Case, Chairman of Revolution and The Case Foundation, and co-founder of AOL

*You will be able to purchase Tina’s book at the event.

**Please RSVP for this event

News Update:

The 2009 Bernard M. Gordon Prize is awarded to Thomas H. Byers and Tina L. Seelig “for promoting engineering leadership by developing and disseminating technology entrepreneurship educational resources for engineering students and educators around the world.”

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I Joined NextSpace

by Sara Isenberg on March 13, 2009

in NextSpace,Santa Cruz,Sara Isenberg

As many of you know, I’ve been a NextSpace groupie.  However, I’ve just joined.  Yeah!  Right now it’s too exciting to actually consider getting work done there, and I’ve got a quiet home office nearby, but when cabin fever strikes, I’ll consider NextSpace to be my second office. 

My page is here: 
http://nextspace.us/sara-isenberg/

Who are NextSpace members?  
http://nextspace.us/membership/

Who are NextSpace companies?   
http://nextspace.us/companies-at-nextspace/

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The next Santa Cruz Tech Meetup…
Feb 4, 2009 at 7 PM at NextSpace, 101 Cooper St, Santa Cruz, CA 95060, 831 420 0710 
See raffle details below. On deck for the February meetup are:       

  • Pixim - the CTO of Pixim will discuss and demonstrate Pixim’s Digital Pixel System ® technology that has been adopted by over 250 models of video cameras. The technology enables individual pixels to act like constantly self-adjusting individual cameras, to improve color and clarity, while automatically eliminating visual noise (e.g., glare, reflections). One of Pixim’s key applications is video security cameras. Ricardo Motta 
  • Eye.Fi - this company is dedicated to building products and services that help consumers navigate, nurture and share their visual memories. Eye-Fi’s patent-pending technology works with Wi-Fi networks to automatically send photos from a digital camera to online, in-home and retail destinations. Ziv Gillat 
  • 12seconds.tv - recent runner up at the Crunchies for Best Bootstrapped StartUp, and the darling startup of Santa Cruz , find out how to micro-communications are breaking new ground in social networking, social media. Sol Lipman 
  • Pelican Imaging - Pelican Imaging is a startup developing Computational Cameras for mass markets. CEO Robert Mullis will present the general concept of a Computational Camera, with some examples that illustrate the diversity and unique features of such devices. He will explain why these novel cameras, some of which have been around for decades, are now poised to change the world of imaging forever. Robert Mullis Sponsored by:
  • Santa Cruz Imaging - SCI formed in Santa Cruz after 2001. We are interested in a wide range of consumer and industrial imaging problems and products ranging from high volume CMOS image sensors to multispectral image capture such as IR or acoustic. Our experience ranges from silicon design, image acquisition and processing algorithms for high volume consumer products to system design of specialty imaging applications. Kathleen Duncan 

 

We are adding a raffle to the February event. The lucky winner will receive one free month of NextSpace Cafe membership. Raffle tickets will be sold at the event: 1 for $3, 2 for $5. All proceeds are applied to MeetUp costs: food, beverage, , etc. Be sure to RSVP for this event so that we know how much food and beverages to bring.

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Santa Cruz Tech Meetup – Jan 7, 2009

by Sara Isenberg on December 28, 2008

in Events,Santa Cruz,Sara Isenberg

The next Santa Cruz Tech Meetup…
Jan 7, 2009 at 7 PM at NextSpace, 101 Cooper St, Santa Cruz, CA 95060, 831 420 0710 

How to find us
“We will be on the second floor, accessed from Cooper St.”

  • Crossloop - Vikram Subramanim, vice president of products will demonstrate CrossLoop, an online services marketplace that enables individuals to seek out and obtain services such as technical support, translation, web design from experts. Vikram will discuss the latest release of CrossLoop which adds online estimation, billing and payment in a manner appropriate for services transactions. 
  • The Armada Group – learn about the 2008 high tech employment marketplace, emerging trends in 2009, and where you need to be. The Armada Group is the premiere Santa Cruz based IT consulting and technical staffing firm, specializing Web Application Development and next generation IT infrastructure implementation. Honored by INC. Magazine’s list of Fastest Growing Privately Held Companies in America the last 2 years running, it was recognized with Staffing Industry Analyst’s National Award for Excellence in Customer Service in Q4 2008. Major enterprise customers include Cisco, eBay, VMware, and Interactive Corporation (IAC). Jeff Tavanga. 
  • RideSpring - An easy way to find carpool partners at work. RideSpring is a web service focused on enabling client companies to achieve their sustainability goals, as well as providing a popular employee benefit to improve the daily commute. Find out more about this Santa Cruz, clean tech startup that applies group theory to transform the daily commute into a game where co-workers compete to win valuable prizes every month by biking, carpooling, using transit, or walking to work. Clients include eBay, the City and the County of Santa Cruz, and Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati. Paul McGrath. 
  • Harmonic - Harmonic is a leader in digital TV compression and delivery solutions, serving major Cable, Satellite, Broadcast, IPTV and Internet service providers worldwide. The TV industry is undergoing a major transformation as viewers shift from broadcast to broadband viewing options. This talk will describe what Harmonic is doing to improve both the traditional and broadband TV experience and identify some untapped opportunities in the space. Marty Picco. 

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A new reason not to commute –

Check out today’s Santa Cruz Sentinel front page article “Startup gives freelancers, entrepreneurs a chance to work in downtown Santa Cruz” about NextSpaceNextSpace is a new downtown co-working space for freelancers, entrepreneurs and home office workers to work and cross paths at the proverbial coffee pot.  Place like this are one of the reasons I love Santa Cruz.  Santa Cruz can also be proud of Santa Cruz Next, the relatively new local organization committed to providing a fun, hip and diverse environment to discuss issues affecting the next generation of our community. 

This is great press is just in time for tomorrow’s Freelance Camp in downtown Santa Cruz.

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