Innovation and Entrepreneurship News
- The 16th annual New Venture Challenge (NVC) finals took place on April 12. This high-energy public event filled «Ƶ Theater on an unseasonably warm spring evening, where the audience watched five startup ventures compete for a portion of $100K in prize money to help them reach the next step in their success.
- Ten startups brought ideas to the stage, including how to live and garden more sustainably, how to deal with the downsides of social media, how to offer practical prosthetics for kids—and sustainable water filters and hydroponic produce for all. Eight teams took home a total of $20K to develop their ideas further.
- The internet’s freedom of connectivity and information is plagued by real and mounting challenges. Blake Reid, clinical professor of law specializing in technology policy and telecom and disability law at CU «Ƶ, offers a deeper look at how possible solutions could alter the web as we know it today.
- The hotel industry saw bookings sink and costs rise during lockdowns, while the Great Resignation has made it harder to recoup staff as tourism rebounds. Omni Interlocken in Broomfield engaged teams of first-year students at the Leeds School of Business to bring in fresh perspectives on associate retention.
- Vitro3D, a CU «Ƶ startup pioneering volumetric 3D printing for life sciences, just closed its first investment round of $1.3 million. The hard-won vote of confidence from the investment community will allow the promising new venture to pursue ambitious technical advances while continuing to build critical business capacity.
- John Melanson (ElEngrCompSci'74) just hit the 500 patent milestone, putting him among the top 100 most prolific inventors. Many of those patents are in the field of audio and electronics, particularly in analog-to-digital signal processing technologies that are instrumental in today’s digital devices.
- Five startup ventures, led by CU «Ƶ students and faculty, competed for more than $100K in prize money at the 14th annual New Venture Challenge championship. Since its inception in 2009, more than 900 CU «Ƶ startups have participated, with over $700K in NVC funding awarded.
- At the NVC15 Cross-Campus Collaboration Prize Night, first-place winner Delta Horizons was awarded $5K for a newly-developed braking system for four-wheeled walkers; other winners included tissue-based biomaterials company TissueForm and Birk, an all-natural yerba mate.
- At the NVC15 Female Founders Prize Night, many attendees braved the snow while others joined remotely for presentations from five ventures founded and developed by female-identifying entrepreneurs. Each team pitched to a panel of judges, competing for a share of $10K in prize money.
- Imagine a world where shoppers can purchase “methane free” beef at the grocery store, landfills are no longer needed and cheese puffs come packaged in bags containing no plastic whatsoever. These and other possible futures were showcased at the NVC15 Climate Prize Night on March 8.