Vote for our company, Words With Bears!

wumbly:

This Friday, I almost didn’t go to a Startup Weekend.

I almost didn’t get to hear Judy’s idea to create a language-learning game for the Kinect that would map movements to words. Like flashcards — but come to life.

In the hungry crowd of people busy building startup teams, I walked by Judy and told her that her idea was amazing. We gathered a team, and more importantly, we built on our chemistry and energy. On Saturday night when we were exhausted from hacking, compiling, and ideating, our teammate Jen, who has actually worked on the Kinect’s voice recognition team, told us that she thought we could win. I didn’t really let myself believe it. But we did it. We took the whole damn thing.

Please watch our 90 second demo video and vote for us if you like what you see. We’re Words With Bears and we’re in love with fusing education with absolutely groundbreaking technology.

theatlantic:

Introducing Start-Up Nation

We’re running a special report for the next few weeks focusing on innovation and invention across America. Technology editor Alexis Madrigal is road-tripping through the south in search of the next Silicon Valley south of the Mason-Dixon line. 

Click through to explore our interactive map (here’s a guide to getting the most out of it) and join the conversation with the tag #StartupSouth on Twitter and Tumblr. 

theatlantic:

Introducing Start-Up Nation

We’re running a special report for the next few weeks focusing on innovation and invention across America. Technology editor Alexis Madrigal is road-tripping through the south in search of the next Silicon Valley south of the Mason-Dixon line

Click through to explore our interactive map (here’s a guide to getting the most out of it) and join the conversation with the tag #StartupSouth on Twitter and Tumblr. 

I do have a hypothesis that New York investors want to see clear virality or clear line to revenue. Vision and engagement are not enough.

Vote for our company, Words With Bears!

wumbly:

This Friday, I almost didn’t go to a Startup Weekend.

I almost didn’t get to hear Judy’s idea to create a language-learning game for the Kinect that would map movements to words. Like flashcards — but come to life.

In the hungry crowd of people busy building startup teams, I walked by Judy and told her that her idea was amazing. We gathered a team, and more importantly, we built on our chemistry and energy. On Saturday night when we were exhausted from hacking, compiling, and ideating, our teammate Jen, who has actually worked on the Kinect’s voice recognition team, told us that she thought we could win. I didn’t really let myself believe it. But we did it. We took the whole damn thing.

Please watch our 90 second demo video and vote for us if you like what you see. We’re Words With Bears and we’re in love with fusing education with absolutely groundbreaking technology.

theatlantic:

Introducing Start-Up Nation

We’re running a special report for the next few weeks focusing on innovation and invention across America. Technology editor Alexis Madrigal is road-tripping through the south in search of the next Silicon Valley south of the Mason-Dixon line. 

Click through to explore our interactive map (here’s a guide to getting the most out of it) and join the conversation with the tag #StartupSouth on Twitter and Tumblr. 

theatlantic:

Introducing Start-Up Nation

We’re running a special report for the next few weeks focusing on innovation and invention across America. Technology editor Alexis Madrigal is road-tripping through the south in search of the next Silicon Valley south of the Mason-Dixon line

Click through to explore our interactive map (here’s a guide to getting the most out of it) and join the conversation with the tag #StartupSouth on Twitter and Tumblr. 

I do have a hypothesis that New York investors want to see clear virality or clear line to revenue. Vision and engagement are not enough.
"I do have a hypothesis that New York investors want to see clear virality or clear line to revenue. Vision and engagement are not enough."

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