- Stephen Mease
- BTV Ignite executive director Dennis Moynihan with Social Sentinel team, 2018 Innovation Award winners
Social Sentinel, a Burlington-based company that identifies threatening content on social media, was among the winners of the 2018 Tech Jam awards, presented last Friday at the 12th Vermont Tech Jam. The prizes, given annually by the
Vermont Technology Alliance,
BTV Ignite and
Seven Days, recognize leaders in the state's tech ecosystem.
Social Sentinel won the Innovation award.
Burlington Code Academy, a 12-week coding bootcamp, won the Startup award after
triumphing in the LaunchVT competition in the spring.
Maureen McElaney, founder of the
Burlington Chapter of Girl Develop It, is the area's top tech ambassador.
Each received a statuette of the Tech Jam mascot, handcrafted by clay artist
John Brickels.
Also honored from the podium were the winners of BTV Ignite's first
Reverse Pitch award, who each received a $10,000 grant to pursue their work. The prizes went to
Code Shepherd, a teaching platform that brings subject matter experts, teachers and students together via a live video chat, and
Learning Portals, which uses augmented and virtual reality technologies to let learners join classrooms and other experiences remotely — in the case of extended illnesses, for example.
- Stephen Mease
- Tech Jam and Reverse Pitch award winners, L to R: Ben Corneau and Evan Gould of Code Shepherd (not pictured: Corey Andalora, Dave Davis and Adam Burnett); Maureen McElaney; Ben Boas and Alex Horner of Burlington Code Academy (not pictured, Alex Chafee); Gary Margolis, founder of Social Sentinel; Jake Blend of Learning Portals
"Both solutions show how gigabit internet infrastructures like that in Burlington can change the way we study, work and live," said BTV Ignite executive director Dennis Moynihan. "I hope with the support provided by these grants, both Code Shepherd and Learning Portals will one day be deployed to break down geographic barriers for education throughout Vermont.”
- Stephen Mease
- Tech Jam 2018
The awards ceremony was the culmination of a busy day at the free career and tech expo organized by
Seven Days and presented by
Vermont Works, an independent alternative investment firm supporting Vermont's job and economic development. Representatives from more than 50 companies and colleges talked with hundreds of attendees who walked the expo floor. Meanwhile, workshops and presentations in the conference rooms upstairs addressed artificial intelligence, building a career in Vermont and new innovation developments in Burlington and Springfield. Attorney General T.J. Donovan led a sold-out session on how to respond to a data breach.
- Stephen Mease
- Anatomy of a Data Breach panel with Attorney General T.J. Donovan at Tech Jam 2018
Jeff Couture, executive director of the Vermont Technology Alliance, said he talked with job seekers from across Vermont and outside the state at the event, "including someone, suitcase in hand, who visited from North Carolina."
- Stephen Mease
- Tech Jam 2018
“Tech Jam was a fantastic forum for sharing our members’ job openings, for individuals and businesses to discover our organization, and for us to shine a spotlight on a few of the leaders and innovators in Vermont’s tech ecosystem by presenting the Tech Jam Awards," he said. “We met business owners and newly arrived remote tech workers who want to join the vtTA as members to connect with the tech community.”
The Tech Jam was the final event of BTV Ignite's third annual Innovation Week. Said Moynihan: "Celebrating the links between our arts and tech community, attracting new investment, exploring emerging technologies like blockchain, and showcasing our innovators and entrepreneurs, Innovation Week shows how Burlington is emerging on the national stage.”
Find more information on Vermont's tech community — and next year's Innovation Week and Tech Jam — by
subscribing to
Seven Days' weekly tech newsletter.
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