THIS WEEK IN TECTORIA

A community blog celebrating Victoria's booming tech sector

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Got a cool story about technology and creativity in Victoria? Email stories, tips, pictures, links and anything of interest to Tessa Bousfield at: tectoria@viatec.ca

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Mary Chiappetta

February 26, 2015 by Tectoria

tectorian_of_the_week mary

Mary Chiappetta, a District Learning Coach at School District 61 and tireless champion working to help more even more teams across Victoria participate in the VIATeC Food Bank Challenge is our Tectorian of the Week.

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This year is the first year the VIATeC Food Bank Challenge has been opened to the wider Greater Victoria community. The 2015 VIATeC Food Bank Challenge ends on February 27th, and it is turning out to be yet another great year thanks to the contributions of dedicated community members like Mary Chiappetta.

Mary Chiappetta is one of our community members responsible for its success this year.

Mary doesn’t work at a tech company. Instead, she works as a learning coach with Greater Victoria School District.

She championed introducing the VIATeC Food Bank Challenge to the community by introducing the event to her Learning Initiatives team at School District 61.

Mary didn’t stop there.

She has continued to rally the other employees who work at School District 61 to contribute to the challenge.  Making inroads into the Victoria comunity was a key objective of this year’s VIATeC Food Bank Challenges.

Champions like Mary are essential to help the Food Bank Challenge to spread further into the Tectoria community from year to year.

Mary is indeed a true Tectorian in other ways, too.

In her role as a District Learning Coach with Learning Initiatives, Mary provides professional development opportunities for teachers all across the Greater Victoria School District #61.  Mary and the other members of the Learning Initiatives Team (let’s give a shout-out to Petra and Jessica!) aim to provide teachers with insights about the latest teaching methods to help students learn.

Effective teaching is the cornerstone of the Tectoria knowledge economy.

If we want to continue to build an economy based on innovation, we need innovative, creative students willing to explore new technology.

Teachers need to be able to understand and effectively wield new technologies, and then use these new tools in the classroom. The Learning Initiatives team helps teachers not only learn about new innovative tools and technology, but they also implement them immediately with their students.

In short, it’s all part of helping Victoria students be better prepared to participate in the global community, and become future Tectorians themselves.

Filed Under: Tectorian of the Week

Tectorian of the Week: David Fissel

February 18, 2015 by Tectoria

tectorian_of_the_week david fissel

Our Tectorian of the Week is David Fissel, who serves as Chair & Senior Scientist of ASL Environmental Services and has been a longtime tech community supporter, booster  and cheerleader.

ASL Environmental Sciences provides scientific oceanographic services, specializing in physical oceanography. The company develops technologies and processes aimed at measuring currents, waves, sea ice, and sediment. Applications include everything from offshore energy exploration and production to understanding climate change and salmon spawning.

The company currently is currently based at a large facility just off Keating X Road in Saanichton, and has grown to 50 employees. Many of ASL employees are UVic grads who now work as engineers, computer scientists, and physicists to create cutting-edge technologies.

Setting out with a vision and a desire to make things happen

David is our  Tectorian of the Week because he represents the potential of what can be achieved by setting out equipped with a vision and the desire to make things happen.

Over the course of David’s career he has helped play a role building BC’s ocean technology sector, which David estimates generates annual provincial revenues of $1.1 billion while employing nearly 5,500 people. And many of those people work on the Saanich Peninsula at companies like ASL.

After completing an M. Sc. in physical oceanography at the University of British Columbia in 1975, David worked on contract as a research oceanographer at the Institute of Ocean Sciences of the Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) in Sidney, on the Saanich Peninsula.

Two years later, in 1977, David co-founded ASL Environmental Sciences (originally Arctic Sciences Ltd.), and has held a number of senior positions in the company as it has grown to become Canada’s largest physical oceanographic company and a trusted name internationally.

Cool ocean technologies developed on the Saanich Peninsula

Two recent, incredibly cool technologies developed by ASL include the Ice Profiler Sonar, and the Acoustic Zooplankton and Fish Profiler.

The Ice Profiler Sonar is used for polar science, climate studies,  environmental assessment, and to help design offshore oil and gas platform to operate in challenging environments.

The Acoustic Zooplankton and Fish Profiler is used by research labs to observe the vertical migration of zooplankton.

ASL has been involved with the the VENUS and NEPTUNE projects from the very beginning. Other ASL customers and partners include the world-famous Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, and the British Antarctic Survey.

In another interesting project, ASL is working with the University of Georgia to build an instrument that will be installed in 2016 at the Ocean Networks Canada NEPTUNE cabled observatory at the Endeavour hydrothermal vent site, approximately 300 km off the west coast of Vancouver Island, 2200 meters beneath the surface of the ocean.

The instrument will measure the rise velocity of the plume and its turbulent properties in real time.  The goal of the project is to better understand the interaction between hydrothermal vent fluids and the surrounding ocean and how that supports the unique ecosystem found at the vents.

A strong booster for the tech sector

David Fissel also deserves credit for tirelessly supporting Greater Victoria’s advanced technology sector.

Besides helping develop and foster collegial atmosphere among the various ocean technology companies that call the Saanich Peninsula and Greater Victoria home, David also has long supported the Sidney Breakfast Club. The Sidney Breakfast Club has acted as an event where entrepreneurs, inventors and others can come together to make connections, share ideas, and support one another.

This desire to help each other out is part of our collective DNA in Victoria, and David Fissel has helped foster this sense of community.

Filed Under: Tectorian of the Week

Thomas Binsl, ClinicaGeno

February 11, 2015 by Tectoria

thomas binsl

Our Tectorian of the Week is Thomas Binsl, a recent transplant to Victoria by way of London and, before that, the Netherlands.

Thomas is the quintessential Tectorian: he discovered Victoria, fell in love with the place, and has figured out a way to relocate here to live.

And, like many Tectorians, Thomas has brought with him to Victoria considerable technical skills and insights.

He’s the co-founder of ClinicaGeno and director of ClinicaGeno Analytics, which  support diagnostic companies with data analysis, software development and software validation services during the development of diagnostic tests.

It’s all part of  helping diagnostic companies accelerate the deployment of their medical diagnostic applications.

Thomas holds a Bioinformatics PhD from the VU University Amsterdam and has extensive experience in the development of data-based solutions, the analysis of biological/medical as well as developing validated software for new medical diagnostic products.

Currently, Thomas is in charge of the planning, development and management of the analysis and IT infrastructure for Microbiome’s bacterial diagnostic product. In addition, Thomas is also responsible for the implementation of the Quality Management System at ClinicaGeno.

Thomas is new in town and is looking to make connections, so be sure to connect with him on LinkedIn.

 

Filed Under: Tectorian of the Week

Mustard Seed Food Bank

February 6, 2015 by Tectoria

mustard seed

Our Tectorian of the Week is the Mustard Seed Food Bank.

The Mustard Seed is a well-known non-profit organization fighting hunger and restoring faith in Greater Victoria.

Besides running the largest Food Bank on Vancouver Island, the Bay Street organization provides nutritious hampers to neighbours in need throughout the week.

Their skilled staff offer advocacy, counseling, addictions recovery, and many other resources.

From food to friendship, the Mustard Seed aims to meet the physical, relational, and spiritual needs of the whole person.

They have an active weekday drop-in centre that offers all sorts of services such as chapel, hair cutting, nursing, a clothing bank, access to home starter kits, and more.

The Mustard Seed regularly serves weekend meals and offer a host of other weekend activities.

Above all, the Mustard Seed is a place of acceptance and unconditional love. It’s a true fellowship aimed at cultivating a community of compassion where all are welcome.

Not only that, the Mustard Seed is the cornerstone of the Tectoria community, providing a home away from home to many people who need someplace to go.

2015 VIATeC Food Bank Challenge

It’s really easy for you to help out the Mustard Seed right now.

The VIATeC Food Bank Challenge runs right now from February 2nd to February 27th (the Food Bank Challenge is now open to companies outside of the Tech sector too).

A large percentage of our community members are employed families struggling to make ends meet.  Many families need our help.

Have your company sign up now to participate in this week to week points competition that raises food and cash for your local Mustard Seed.  This year, ALL greater Victoria companies are welcome!  Since its inception in 2002, $1,633,354.22 worth of food and cash has been donated from Greater Victoria Technology companies.

Email Devan at dmccannel@viatec.ca to accept the challenge, complete details can be found here.

Filed Under: Tectorian of the Week

Leo Spalteholz

January 28, 2015 by Tectoria

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Leo Spalteholz, engineering manager at CanAssist, is our Tectorian of the Week.

Leo has been involved with CanAssist since 2004, when he started as a volunteer (at the then-University of Victoria Assistive Technology Team writing an on-screen keyboard to be used with an eye tracking system.

Over the past decade, Leo has worked on and managed hundreds of projects for people with disabilities from simple equipment mounts to software apps for people with brain injuries and systems to prevent seniors with dementia from wandering.

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 “Leo has taught me a great deal not only about how technology can be created and deployed to truly open doors to the world and provide a person with barriers the ability to do that which they had previously never thought possible.” – Mike Shannon

These days, Leo manages the engineering team at CanAssist, developing assistive technology for people with disabilities.

“Leo has dedicated his engineering career to the assistance of those less fortunate: the disabled,” says Mike Shannon, another noted tireless cheerleader for Tectoria who now serves as Director of Operations and Business Development at CanAssist.

“Leo has taught me a great deal not only about how technology can be created and deployed to truly open doors to the world and provide a person with barriers the ability to do that which they had previously never thought possible,” says Mike. “He has a broad spectrum of interests and always brings a unique point of view to any discussion be it technical or philosophical.”

CanAssist – formerly the University of Victoria Assistive Technology Team (UVATT) – was established in 1999 by long-time Tectorian Dr. Nigel Livingston.

Dr. Livingston was introduced to the disability community after his daughter, Hannah, was diagnosed with Angelman syndrome.

During his interactions with health-care practitioners and those with disabilities, he discovered the great need for assistive technologies that could be customized to meet the sometimes highly specific challenges of individuals. Such devices were not readily available due to factors such as the complex challenges involved in developing them, the cost of production and the limited market for them.

UVATT was formed to address this need by making use of the outstanding resources at the University of Victoria.

UVATT’s first project dates back to 1999, when Dr. Livingston and a volunteer staff member developed a finger-activated switch to control a cassette player.

Their client was a young man who had suffered a near-drowning accident as a child. Then a resident at the Queen Alexandra Centre for Children’s Health, he was blind, unable to talk or walk, and only able to partially move one finger. The device created allowed the young man to turn his tape recorder on and off independently.

By 2003, UVATT was receiving about 75 requests from the community for assistive technologies annually.

By 2014, the organization had engaged almost 6,000 students, through co-op, graduate and work study placements, presentations, course instruction, overseas study programs and volunteer opportunities. Likewise, many members of UVic faculty have engaged in CanAssist activities over the years, in areas such as research, classroom instruction, requests for technology development and the ongoing sharing of ideas and expertise.

CanAssist still regularly responds to requests from individuals in the community, but in recent years has also provided customized technology solutions to a number of organizations.

Filed Under: Tectorian of the Week

Reyna Jenkyns

January 21, 2015 by Tectoria

rwyba

Reyna Jenkyns, leader of Ocean Networks Canada‘s Data Stewardship & Operations Support team (and a Giant Jenga competitor to be reckoned with) is our Tectorian of the Week.

Ocean Networks Canada is based at UVic and operates the  NEPTUNE and VENUS cabled ocean observatories. These underwater observatories collect data on physical, chemical, biological, and geological aspects of the ocean over long periods of time periods, supporting research on complex Earth processes in ways not previously possible.

Jenkyns is well-regarded by collaborators all over the world for creating and managing tools with other ocean data providers, for participating in cruise expeditions and collaborating with the oceanographic community, and for just generally helping wire the abyss.

Equally importantly we were very impressed with Reyna Jenkyns’ Giant Jenga skills.

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After an intense, prolonged battle at the 2015 VIATeC New Year’s Party last week, Jenkyns narrowly missed winning two tickets to a Canucks game in Vancouver. It was all for a good cause, however – by playing in the tournament Jenkyns helped raise a ton of cash for the Mustard Seed Food Bank. That alone makes her and her partner prime candidates for a Tectorian nomination.

Jenkyns also has another common key Tectorian trait: she’s not from here originally, but moved to Victoria to take part in our booming tech scene.

She received her Bachelor of Mathematics in the Applied Mathematics Co-operative Program from the famed University of Waterloo. What to do next? Travel to Canada’s second largest oceans cluster to pursue a Master of Science in Ocean Physics at UVic, of course!

Jenkyns’ research area at UVic was “the transfer of momentum between internal tides and subinertial flow at a dissipating surface reflection.”

As a graduate student, she had the opportunity to collect oceanographic data on research cruises in coastal BC and the East Pacific Ocean. This fascination with water originates from childhood summers at Lake Winnipeg, Manitoba.

Prior work experience spans companies specializing in oceanographic monitoring systems, aerospace engineering, and information technology.

One interesting perk of her job: Jenkyns has gone snorkeling in Iceland’s chilly waters.

 

 

Filed Under: Tectorian of the Week

Mark Grambart, Contech

January 16, 2015 by Tectoria

mark

Mark Grambart and the team at Contech are our Tectorians of the Week.

Working with researchers from Simon Fraser University, Mark Grambart and the folks at Contech may have found a solution to the plague of bedbugs that gathered momentum in North America over the past twenty years.

Contech, a member of the VIATeC 25 is a long-time supporter of Greater Victoria’s tech community, and the company based just above Fisherman’s Wharf has been working with the researchers to develop a set of chemical attractants, or pheromones, that lure the bedbugs into traps, and keep them there.

In December 2014, after a series of successful trials in bedbug-infested apartments in Metro Vancouver, they have published their research, “Bedbug aggregation pheromone finally identified in Angewandte Chemie, a leading general chemistry journal.

This trap will help landlords, tenants, and pest-control professionals determine whether premises have a bedbug problem so that they can treat it quickly. It will also be useful for monitoring the treatment’s effectiveness

Over the last two decades the common bedbug (Cimex lectularius), once thought eradicated in industrialized countries, has reappeared as a global scourge. These nasty insects are infesting not just low-income housing but also expensive hotels, apartments and public venues such as stores, movie theatres, libraries and even public transit.

And while these blood-sucking pests were previously not considered a carrier of disease, scientists have recently discovered they can transmit the pathogen that causes Chagas disease, which is prevalent in Central and South America. Yet, until now, tools for detecting and monitoring these pests have been expensive and technically challenging to use.

Bedbugs have proven to be a pest in many places all over the world that’s hard to eradicate. So it’s good to see that a Tectoria company is playing a key role potentially solving a problem experienced by millions of people.

Thanks Mark!

In 2004 Mark Grambart joined Contech as an investor and as the CEO. The UVic engineering grad came back to Tectoria after roles with Mercedes-Benz and JM Huber in Germany, South Africa, Switzerland, and the United States.

 

Filed Under: Tectorian of the Week

Chris Campbell

January 8, 2015 by Tectoria

chris campbell

Our Tectorian of the Week is Chris Campbell.

Why Chris? It’s because we think he represents the latent technical talent, creativity, spirit, hard work and dedication to building community that makes Tectoria what it is.

First, a bit of Chris Campbell’s backstory:

Chris Campbell is a Mercurial Communications alumnus that worked in Victoria on a high-profile web browser project that eventually transformed into Flock, the world’s first social browser. As senior software engineer with that project, Campbell moved with Flock to San Francisco (and being sure to stay firmly connected with his home town) when the highly sought-after Victoria team was recruited by Zynga.

Zynga, a game company, needed the know-how of this skilled Victoria software team to build the complicated backend tools that powered its business.

Over the course of time, a couple of the Victoria peeps who worked at Zynga in San Francisco got jobs at Change.org.

One thing led to another, and five Zynga employees in Victoria plus one in San Francisco (who was moving back to Canada) accepted offers to start on just this past August.

There were six Change.org local employees when the Victoria office opened, and the since then three more Victoria employees.

And, true to form for a Victoria tech company, a UVic student will be starting a co-op term in January.

So that’s the backstory.

But the long and short of it is that Chris Campbell proves that Tectorians have wicked chops when it comes to designing and building software or just about any other technical product. Chris competes (and works with) the best in the business. And on the planet.

On top of that, Chris is a true Tectorian because he remains connected to and supports his home, Victoria. Chris could live anywhere, really, but he always chooses to come back to Tectoria.

He is able to put his amazing skills and mad passion to use by putting Victoria on the map. So we can nurture and attract more Chris Campbells and more Tectorians.

Filed Under: Tectorian of the Week

This Week in Tectoria: the Top 10 Stories of 2014

December 25, 2014 by Tectoria

Here are the top 10 stories about Tectorians most shared and celebrated by other Tectorians in 2014:

 

1. Victoria’s Own Ho Kim Recognized as Top Entrepreneur

Ho Kim, President and CEO of local tech company CAMACC and volunteer chair of VIATeC’s board of directors, named Ernst and Young’s 2014 Entrepreneur of the Year in the Information Technology category for Canada’s Pacific region.

Read more.

2. Desert Bus Shows Tectoria Cares

This November, Victoria’s Desert Bus team smashed a record, and they did it all with a bit of song and dance, a lot of social media savvy, and a preternatural ability to withstand punishing amounts of tedium.

Read more.

3. Erin Athene & LLC Introduce Young Women to Coding

Helping create new technology entrepreneurs and high-growth businesses is Erin’s passion. With this in mind, she helped encouraged Ladies Learning Code (LLC) to launch in Victoria. LLC is a Canada-wide not-for-profit group that is working to empower everyone to feel comfortable learning beginner-friendly technical skills in a social, collaborative way.

Read more.

4. TinyMob Engages in Global Warfare

It’s hard to believe TinyMob, led by Tectorians Chris Hoefgen, Alex Mendelev and Jamie Toghill, opened their Langley Street studio just over a year ago after quickly raising a whopping $2 million in seed funding. And that was just the start of their success.

Read more.

Image Courtesy of Photographer Sama Jim Canzian

5. Pretio & Tap for Tap

Pretio, the first graduate of VIATeC’s Accelerator Program, acquired the 2012 VIATeC Award Recipient for Online Strategy of the Year, Tap for Tap.

Read more.

6. Graham Baroday: the Quintessential Tectorian

“When I thought about life in Victoria, I knew I would be getting healthier and happier,” Kiind’s Graham Baradoy writes on his excellent blog. But since settling here Graham has also become a leader and driving force in our community of Tectorians.

Read more.

7. Technology Awards: Our Biggest and Best Yet

The 756 attendees wasn’t the only record broken at the sold-out 2014 VIATeC Technology Awards. This year there was also a record number of 100 nominations. It was an amazing night.

Read more.

8. Economic Impact Study

The numbers came in and we were astounded by the results.

Read more.

9. VIATeC 25

We were also startled by the year-over-year growth of the 25 highest revenue tech companies headquartered on Vancouver Island. These 25 companies generate $1.16 billion in combined revenues and employee an astounding 3,630 employees.

Read more.

10. Warren Brown: Where We’ve Been, and Where We’re Going

Warren Brown and the team at Procura together represent the potential of Victoria’s tech community, and show where we’ve been and where we’re going.

Read more.

And that’s it for 2014! What a year! And 2015 looks like it’s only going to be better!

Filed Under: Tectoria, Tectorian of the Week, VIATeC Community

Tectorian of the Week – Clayton Lainsbury

December 18, 2014 by Tectoria

clayton

Clayton Lainsbury, founder and CEO of Victoria’s Crowd Content, is our Tectorian of the Week.

After making the move with us to Fort Tectoria this past fall, VIATeC Accelerator program participant Crowd Content has grown so much they need new digs. The startup company has just moved out from Fort Tectoria, but we’re not too sad – Clayton and his expanding team have found new digs just across the street.

Clayton and his team at Crowd Content make it easier for businesses to easily work with top writers in order to create higher quality, more engaging content to help them sell online.

There are so many successful tech companies in Victoria that it’s often difficult to remember that success is no sure thing. Each and every one of the technology companies that directly employ 15,000 people in Victoria started out as an idea. And it took a lot of hard work, perseverance, smarts and teamwork to achieve success.

A Royal Roads grad, Clayton joined the Accelerator program in 2012. He’s one of a number of talented, visionary Neverblue alumni that are helping Victoria gain recognition as a hub for e-commerce and web marketing. Thanks to people like Clayton, Victoria has become well-known name in the marketing community everywhere from New York to Boulder to San Francisco.

Clayton has grown his startup to ten employees, with plans to hire more – Crowd Content is currently looking for developers and account managers.

It takes drive, commitment and leadership skills to build a successful technology company in Victoria, which is why Clayton Lainsbury is our Tectorian of the Week.

 

Filed Under: Tectorian of the Week

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