Codecademy and The White House Announce Code Summer+ Youth Education Program

Codecademy Code Summer Plus

Today, Codecademy in conjunction with The White House announced a new program to educate the nation’s underprivileged and disconnected youth: Code Summer+.

The announcement was made at an event held by Twilio and hosted by US CTO Aneesh Chopra. There, Codecademy’s co-founder Zach Sims explained that as part of Obama’s larger Summer Jobs+ initiative, Code Summer+ will offer a “condensed version of our curriculum to get [youth] on track to become engineers.” Additionally, partners including Foursquare, Twilio, and any other company can work with Codecademy to create lessons that will be distributed to the kids.

Summer Jobs+ is designed to help the government connect young people with jobs. President Obama announced Summer Jobs+ earlier this month, describing it as “a joint initiative that challenges business leaders and communities to join my Administration in providing hundreds of thousands of summer jobs for America’s youth.”

Employers can sign up to offer jobs and add special Summer Jobs+ markup to their websites’ code. This tag will be crawled and the site will be included in the National Resource Directory’s Summer Jobs+ Bank that will launch in March. The program’s goal is to offer 250,000 employment opportunities by the beginning of the summer.

Summer Jobs+ and Code Summer+ will link to lead youth to jobs. For example Chopra explained how a student who built an app prototype as part of Code Summer+ could be connected to mentors or internships in technology.

During his presentation, Codecademy’s Sims said “coding is the new literacy” and officially announced that his company now supports 1 million students. Some speculated it had hit this milestone recently after signing up 300,000 would-be coders in one week through its Code Year program. To build on Code Year, the company is now allowing anyone to organize offline meetups, with the first ones occurring in New York and San Francisco.

Additionally, entrepreneur and philanthropist Mitch Kapor announced his commitment to expand the 8-years running SMASH Academy – Summer Math and Science Honors Academy. It’s a 3 year, 5 week summer residential program for high potential high school students of color in science, technology, engineering, and math. It includes media technology, coding, entrepreneurship, public speaking and other education that high schools aren’t providing.

Run by the Level Playing Field Institute and hosted at Stanford, Berkeley, UCLA, and USC, it will help 220 students. SMASH is backed primarily by Mitch Kapor as well as corporations and other sponsors. Applicant registration to enroll in SMASH is now open to current 9th graders.



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Codecademy and The White House Announce Code Summer+ Youth Education Program

Gillmor Gang 01.17.12 (TCTV)

Gillmore Gang test pattern

The Gillmor Gang — John Borthwick, John Taschek, Kevin Marks, and Steve Gillmor — on SOPA, Google +, and the End of Software Mayan 2012 Edition. Not one of my best efforts, but the Gang more than picked up the slack.

@stevegillmor, @borthwick, @kevinmarks, @jtaschek

Produced and directed by Tina Chase Gillmor @tinagillmor



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Gillmor Gang 01.17.12 (TCTV)

Reddit’s Alexis Ohanian On SOPA: “The Fight Isn’t Over”

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Supporters of the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) may be on the run in the face of growing online protests, but SOPA and its Senate counterpart, PIPA, is not dead yet. “The fight isn’t over,” Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian tells me in the TCTV video interview above.

Ohanian was scheduled to testify before Congress on Wednesday before that hearing was cancelled. But Reddit, along with Wikipedia and other sites, will observe a self-imposed blackout in protest. In the video above, he explains why Reddit is going ahead with its blackout plans and speaks more broadly against the acts.

Just before he showed up to the TCTV studio today, Rupert Murdoch tweeted out:

Nonsense argument about danger to Internet. How about Google, others blocking porn, hate speech, etc? Internet hurt?—
Rupert Murdoch (@rupertmurdoch) January 17, 2012

To which Ohanian commented: “This shows a serious misunderstanding of how the technology works.”

In New York City and San Francisco, anti-SOPA protestors (including Ron Conway) will take to the streets and protest outside their Senators’ offices. “I am just here in front of a camera because the whole Internet cannot fit in this room,” says Ohanian. “It has become an election issue.”

Read our full coverage of SOPA here.



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Reddit’s Alexis Ohanian On SOPA: “The Fight Isn’t Over”

MPAA CEO Chris Dodd: Blackouts Turn Users Into “Corporate Pawns”

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President and CEO of the Motion Pictures Association of America Chris Dodd has issued a strongly-worded statement regarding tomorrow’s planned outages and protests relating to the SOPA and PIPA legislation. If you didn’t already think the MPAA was a ship of fools, this will convince you once and for all.

It’s fairly brief, go ahead and read it. I’ve taken the liberty of pirating a copy for you (incidentally, under SOPA, Scribd would almost certainly be under fire for the duplication of private or copyrighted documents, or would at least have to prepare a legal defense against such allegations):

So, protests are “pranks,” websites like Wikipedia are only doing it “to further their corporate interests,” turning their users into “corporate pawns,” and are not “coming to the table.” Among other things.

We’ve seen some tone-deaf “official statements” in this industry, but this one has to be among the greatest.

Needless to say, his shaming is unlikely to sway the hundreds, if not thousands, of sites, services, and blogs that will be shuttering for a day in protest of what many credible authorities (to say nothing of millions of citizens) say is a gross affront to the freedoms that have made the web what it is.



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MPAA CEO Chris Dodd: Blackouts Turn Users Into “Corporate Pawns”

StartupPlays Offers An Affordable (Virtual) Alternative To Startup Accelerators

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Founders and entrepreneurs are likely familiar with some of the more well-established startup incubators and accelerators out there, like Y Combinator, TechStars, 500 Startups, Founder Institute, DreamIt — to name a few — all of which provide terrific opportunities and resources for their founding teams. Of course, many of these come with a price, requiring founders to hand over five to ten percent equity for seed investments of around $25,000.

Naturally, many young entrepreneurs with their eyes on the fast-track are eager to sign up because of the reach of these accelerators’ networks. However, Scott Annan, the founder of Network Hippo and Mercury Grove, believes that not all veteran entrepreneurs are looking for the type of hand-holding and guidance (or the level of time commitment, as they often run three-month programs) offered by incubators and accelerators.

That’s why Annan, through Mercury Grove, formed StartupPlays, which provides an online alternative to accelerators by offering a collection of “market-proven recipes” (or “plays”) that include targeted guidance written by successful entrepreneurs. While veteran entrepreneurs may be looking to avoid the cost of accelerators, Annan believes that they still want (and need) active mentorship and guidance in particular aspects of building a business, like fund raising, online marketing, or public relations.

So StartupPlays has partnered with veteran entrepreneurs and mentors to turn their experience into actionable guides. Through a collaborative virtual workspace, StartupPlays provides entrepreneurs with detailed tasks, file templates, and expert tips. For example, StartupPlays enlisted Adrian Salamunovic, the co-Founder of DNA 11 and CanvasPop and PR expert, to create a “play” that provides founders with everything they need to know about creating a professional PR engine. The template assures founders that, after reading, they will have “a media Calendar, press contact list, a killer pitch, and press in major publications.”

And, today, the virtual accelerator released its latest “Play”, which is authored by serial entrepreneur and CEO of TechCrunch Disrupt winner GetAround, Sam Zaid. Zaid’s Play focused on how founders can qualify for investor funding, including how to build a fundable company, how to evaulate the type of funding startups should look for, when to look for it, and how to increase the chances of closing a deal.

Other authors include Dan Martell of Clarity.fm, Jeremy Olson of Tapity (who authored a really cool Play on how to build and market a successful iOS app), Aaron Hall of DressRush, and Cameron Herold of BackPocketCOO. StartupPlays plans to release a new play every week through its official launch in February. While Plays aren’t free — they typically range from $75 to $300 — they provide great value for the price tag, especially in light of the alternative.

Entrepreneurs and founders are always looking for great resources that can help them stay ahead of the game and provide important tips on how to attract investors, approach term sheets, build a great product, find users, and hire. Seeing as there are over 4,200 early stage startups worldwide and launches this year are expected to increase, there’s plenty of competition for funding — and for eyeballs. The Web is filled with resources for entrepreneurs, but it’s often fragmented, difficult to navigate, and who wants to waste time searching online, parsing Q&A sites, or watching videos?

StartupPlays really does offer a great alternative, and a great complement to sites like TheFunded.com. It’s all about giving entrepreneurs the resources they need to execute on their ideas, and with virtual workplaces that offer task and check lists and document templates and center around specific projects, it can save you from wasting time researching and plotting and get you into execution.

The beginning “stealth” phase for StartupPlays has really focused on building out its content offerings, and with its official launch in mid-February, the virtual accelerator will start building out an ecosystem around (and within) that content. For example, the team will add a virtual, realtime forum for Plays that allow entrepreneurs to leave comments on different parts of the process, give feedback, and ask their fellow founders what’s working for them and what isn’t.

StartupPlays is also giving away five free Plays to readers, so jump into the comment section for a shot at yours. And then come on back and let us know what you think.

For more, check out StartupPlays at home here.



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StartupPlays Offers An Affordable (Virtual) Alternative To Startup Accelerators

Triangle Startup Factory Re-Launches Accelerator; Promises $50K To Each Founding Team

tsflogo

It’s a good day for accelerators. Earlier today we covered a nifty virtual startup accelerator called StartupPlays, which has partnered with veteran entrepreneurs and mentors to convert their experience into targeted, actionable guides to help startups build their businesses.

The startup provides an alternative approach to some of the more well-established startup incubators and accelerators out there, like Y Combinator, TechStars, 500 Startups, Founder Institute, and DreamIt — to name a few. These accelerators provide excellent opportunities and resources for their founding teams, with mentorship from experts, and far-reaching alumni and investor networks. Of course, investments can run $25,000 or less and can require founders to fork over up to 10 percent of the company in return for admission.

Today, serial entrepreneurs and mentors Chris Heivly and Dave Neal are kicking off the re-launch of their North Carolina-based startup accelerator, Triangle Startup Factory, in the hopes of providing entrepreneurs with a founder-friendly option for accelerating their early-stage tech businesses. To make Triangle Startup Factory an appealing alternative, the accelerator will run two three-month-long programs over the next four years.

Each batch will consist of five to seven startups, and founding teams will receive a $50,000 capital investment upon being accepted, the cost of which will be 7.5 percent equity going to the accelerator. But, perhaps the best part of the news for founders is that Triangle is promising an additional $20,000 to $150,000 in convertible notes to each startup that completes its three-month program. Where the startups fall within that range will be up to the Triangle leadership team, but it means that your startup could come out of the program with as much as $200,000 in pocket — not bad for 7.5 percent.

Triangle isn’t putting many limitations on the types of startups that can apply (nor geographic restrictions), though it will be focusing on consumer web and mobile, and Triangle Founder Chris Heivly tells me that they won’t be accepting pharma, biotech, medical devices — or rock bands. Sorry, Slash.

As part of its program, the Triangle Startup Factory will be offering its founding teams access to 75 local and national experts, advisors and mentors, some of whom include Robbie Allen of StatSheet, Taylor Mingos of Shoeboxed, James Avery of Adzerk, former Sequoia Partner Tom McMurray, and more. And, hey, Durham, North Carolina, where the accelerator is headquartered, is part of the so-called Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill “Research Triangle”, which includes Duke University, UNC, and NC State. Thus, it’s home to some great resources, and is an up-and-coming entrepreneurial hub in its own right.

In terms of background, beginning in 2008, Washington DC venture capital firm LaunchBox Digital saw some buzz around their newly launched early-stage startup accelerator. TechCrunch covered their first few batches, as well as a number of the companies that emerged from LaunchBox’s accelerator. In 2009, LaunchBox approached the young Triangle Startup Factory about working together, and not long after the two merged their operations. After running a successful session in 2010, the joint accelerator petered out, and LaunchBox went back to focusing on its own venture investments.

Thus, Heivly and Neal have decided to re-launch TSF in hopes of building it back into a reputed accelerator that can compete with the big boys. The accelerator is currently accepting applications for its first session, with the proposed deadline of February 12th. However, their site is not live yet, though it should be by the weekend. The first session will begin March 19th and continue through May, at which point Triangle will be holding its “Demo Day”.

Want to learn more? Check TSF out at home here.



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Triangle Startup Factory Re-Launches Accelerator; Promises $50K To Each Founding Team

Accel Leads $52.5M Round In Cloud-Based Data Storage And Backup Company Code 42

Code 42 Software, Inc.

Code 42 Software, a Minnesota-based online backup company for consumers, businesses and the enterprise, has raised $52.5 million in funding led by Accel Partners with participation from Split Rock Partners. This is the first major investment from Accel’s recently announced Big Data Fund, which is dedicated to funding infrastructure and application companies in “Big Data.” This is the first round of institutional investing for Code 42.

You may not have heard of Code 42, but the enterprise company should be on your radar. Founded by Brian Bispala, Mitch Coopet and Matthew Dornquast, Code 42 launched CrashPlan, a personal data protection and backup software, back in 2007. The intention of CrashPlan was to reinvent backup by developing an easy-to-use technology to protect data whenever and wherever it is created. After introducing CrashPlan to consumers, Code 42 decided to use this knowledge gained to develop and deliver a backup software that was enterprise-grade.

Just five years after launching CrashPlan, Code 42 now manages and protects over 100 petabytes of data globally. In addition to CrashPlan for consumers, Code 42’s product lineup includes online backup solutions for the SMB, CrashPlan PRO, and private and public cloud solutions for the enterprise, CrashPlan PROe. All of the company’s data storage and backup products are cross-platform, and provide continuous protection onsite, offsite and online.

The virtue of Code 42′s offering is that the software can be used for both public and private clouds. Dornquast explained to me in an interview that most large enterprises believe in a hybrid model, with four out of five of the company’s enterprise customers building their own private cloud as opposed to relying on an untrusted cloud.

Dornquast says that Code 42′s ‘secret sauce’ is the company has engineered its own storage technology, that allows businesses to build their own private clouds. As he explains, Code 42 is “part software company, part cloud storage company, and part managed appliance hardware company.”

Crashplan product has been deployed in over 4000 “big data” enterprise environments and customers include: Adobe, Google, Groupon, HP, Intuit, NASA, LinkedIn, Salesforce.com, and Stanford University. For example, Dornquast said Google has been is using Crashplan for internal data storage. While revenue was not disclosed, the company has seen 500 percent growth over the last three years, and is profitable.

Accel partner Ping Li explains that managing data on multiple devices is a challenge for both consumers and the enterprise, and being able to move this data safely and securely is becoming more and more important. With this in mind, there needs to be real technology behind this issue, he says. Li (and Accel) believes that device and information data management in the cloud is an example of a big data application ripe for disruption.

Code 42 provides a scalable and seamless multi-device “big data information management platform” to continuously protect and manage this growing data in real-time across any device.

What struck Li has being particularly unique about Code 42 (besides the technology itself) is that although the startup provides major infrastructure and helps manage massive amounts of data, the UI is lightweight and resonates with the trend of the consumerization of IT.

As Dornquast tells me, this clean, consumer product-like experience is one of the key reasons the company has been able to pull in customers like Google. The company has been able to back-up over 250 million files per day across multiple data centers  globally; and service customers from soccer moms to Fortune 100 companies.

Code 42 faces competition from Carbonite, Box and others.

The new funding will be will be used to accelerate multi-platform product development and increase sales and marketing efforts internationally.



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Accel Leads $52.5M Round In Cloud-Based Data Storage And Backup Company Code 42

The Day The LOLcats Died, A Song Against SOPA

Day The LOLcats Died SOPA Passes

Today people take to the streets and black out the web to protest unfair piracy legislation. To the tune of Don McLean’s ‘American Pie’ they’ll be singing:
 ”Why, why are laws a thing you can buy? / They got paid off, should be laid off, re-election denied / Our web means more than lawyers, lobbies and lies / So speak up before the internet dies / Speak up before the internet dies”.

Created by comedy team LaughPong, the video is silly enough to go viral but simple enough to make a difference. It urges viewers to fight back against SOPA/PIPA by finding their senators’ phone number at Cheezburger’s http://bit.ly/lifeaftersopa and telling them how they feel. Do it now, save the precious LOLcats.

For more serious TechCrunch coverage of SOPA / PIPA:

Reddit’s Alexis Ohanian On SOPA: “The Fight Isn’t Over”

Yes, Google Will Protest SOPA On Its Homepage

Wikipedia Will Go Dark On January 18 To Protest SOPA And PIPA

SOPA Supporters On The Run

and Reddit’s excellent primer on what SOPA and PIPA are and why they must be stopped.



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The Day The LOLcats Died, A Song Against SOPA

Daily Crunch: Another Castle

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Here are some recent TechCrunch Gadgets posts:

What Is A 3D Printer Good For? Stop-Motion Cartoons Featuring Princesses, Of Course!

BMW DesignworksUSA, Thermaltake Team Up For The Level 10 M Mouse

Kno Adds New Features To Smart Textbooks In Attempt To Head Off Apple

Try-Before-You-Buy Gadget Site YBUY Launches With $750K In Funding

Location, Location, Location: MIT Builds A Bracelet That Controls The Office Thermostat



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Daily Crunch: Another Castle

Ignite100 Showcases Nine Teams To Investors — Here’s A Quick Rundown

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Nine teams from the new Ignite100 accelerator based in the North East of the UK, which launched with a £1m fund that invests up to £100k per team – are presenting to investors in London today. Here’s a quick rundown.



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Ignite100 Showcases Nine Teams To Investors — Here’s A Quick Rundown