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Start your business in Ann Arbor, Silicon Valley entrepreneur says

Ann Arbor's down-to-earth talent and quality of life means entrepreneurs don't have to try to make a dent in the stratospheric competition and cost of living in Silicon Valley. In fact, they're being advised to stay put.

Excerpt:

"Silicon Valley is so yesterday. Ann Arbor is the place to be for technology and entrepreneurship these days.

True?

Or wishful thinking?

It sure was the gist of some online buzz after this recent quote from Silicon Valley serial entrepreneur (and University of Michigan graduate) Steve Blank bounced around the Twitterverse:

"Silicon Valley is out of A players. Don't start your company here," Blank said March 6 at the Weather Underground Startup Trek, an annual two-day tour of the San Francisco Bay area technology scene by students for U-M's Center for Entrepreneurship."

More here.

Showbiz soulmates in exotic places recall days in Ann Arbor

Many lifelong friendships are cemented in Ann Arbor, from those who still religiously do football Saturdays, to those who've earned stardom in Parkistan.

Excerpt:

Publishing editor of Paper Magazine Meher Tareen and Khadijah Shah of Élan need no introduction. They have been friends since college, when they attended University of Michigan-Ann Arbor together. "Meher has always been very creative when it comes to making collages and using Photoshop," says Khadijah. "She always wanted to work for a magazine or own one — I don't see a better suited career for her."

More here.

Washtenaw County is 5th healthiest county in Michigan

Turns out that biking, walking, parks, and the B2B Trail in Washtenaw County are good for something!

Excerpt:

"Washtenaw County is among the healthiest counties in Michigan for the fourth year in a row, according to a report released Wednesday.
 
A study sponsored by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the University of Wisconsin ranked counties across the country by state according to factors including tobacco and alcohol use, diet and exercise, access to quality health care, education, employment, income and environmental quality."

More here.

Come one, come all, to Ann Arbor

Anyone considering whether to live in, or at least visit, Ann Arbor should do more than look twice at this video. Food, arts and culture, transit, parks, a healthy citizenry, the largest canoe livery in the state – you got it!

See the video here.

Techno-SLAM is "The Matrix" & March Madness for techies

Entre-SLAM and SPARK Central will be co-hosting Techno-SLAM, a celebration of technology in the life of an entrepreneur. The event is themed on the sci-fi hit, The Matrix. Be there, 7 p.m. on March 28th at LIVE A2 on 1st and Huron.

Click here for more details.

Ann Arbor Film Festival boasts appearance by Ken Burns

It's the 51st annual Ann Arbor Film Festival (the oldest independent film fest in the U.S.) and over its six day run it will present more than 200 experimental and indie shorts and features. Chances are this will be your only chance to see many of these films. PBS documentarian star Ken Burns brings his latest, The Central Park 5, to the festival and will be on hand afterward to answer questions.
 
Excerpt:
 
"Acclaimed documentarian (and former Ann Arborite) Ken Burns will appear at 5:10 p.m. March 21 as part of the Penny W. Stamps lecture series. A showing of his latest work, "The Central Park 5," about a heavily publicized 1989 rape case in New York, will take place at noon March 23; Burns is set to attend."
 
Read the rest here.
 
The festival runs through Sunday, Mar. 24. You can learn more about screenings, tickets, and events here

Read my review of The Central Park 5 here.

U-M grad student braids books

You really have to see what Matt Monahan has created to appreciate why we're including it in Concentrate. Just beautiful!
 
Excerpt:
 
"Matt Monahan braids the pages of a book, similar to the way a french braid is done, adding a few more pages to each group as it gets folded into the braid. The result is an awesomely clean looking design that unfolds itself over time. One of his circular installations is in the Penny Stamps Graduate Studio and the other in the Hatcher Graduate library of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, where he is currently working toward a Master of Fine Arts."
 
Read and see the rest here.
 
Or check out Monahan website here.
 

U-M research unlocks iridescence to evolve e-reader displays

File this under "really cool." University researchers have found a way to create light relective displays, which will not only give e-reader and electronic paper colors sheen but can also eliminate the need for a light source.
 
Excerpt:
 
"In a peacock's mother-of-pearl tail, precisely arranged hairline grooves reflect light of certain wavelengths. That's why the resulting colors appear different depending on the movement of the animal or the observer. Imitating this system—minus the rainbow effect—has been a leading approach to developing next-generation reflective displays.
 
The new U-M research could lead to advanced color e-books and electronic paper, as well as other color reflective screens that don't need their own light to be readable. Reflective displays consume much less power than their backlit cousins in laptops, tablet computers, smartphones and TVs. The technology could also enable leaps in data storage and cryptography. Documents could be marked invisibly to prevent counterfeiting."
 
Read the rest here.
 

Could libraries serve as start-up incubators?

Sometimes moving forward means adopting the practices of the past, or going old school. Way way old school.
 
Excerpt:
 
"This old idea of the public library as co-working space now offers a modern answer – one among many – for how these aging institutions could become more relevant two millennia after the original Alexandria library burned to the ground. Would-be entrepreneurs everywhere are looking for business know-how and physical space to incubate their start-ups. Libraries meanwhile may be associated today with an outmoded product in paper books. But they also happen to have just about everything a 21st century innovator could need: Internet access, work space, reference materials, professional guidance.
 
Why not, Lea suggests, put these two ideas together? Arizona State is planning in the next few months to roll out a network of co-working business incubators inside public libraries, starting with a pilot in the downtown Civic Center Library in Scottsdale. The university is calling the plan, ambitiously, the Alexandria Network."
 
Read the rest here.
 

Could Minecraft be the next educational frontier?

For those of you who have been living in a cave (or don't have children), Minecraft is a game that lets players do and build essentially anything they want. It also offers educators a unique opportunity to create programs that simultaneously teach and engage kids. What a concept!
 
The A2 Public Library already recognizies how Minecraft is more than just the latest substitution for Mario Brothers, offering programs and events
 
Watch why below.



And take a tour of Ann Arbor in Minecraft below.

 

Silicon Valley entrepreneur revises opinion about A2 investment scene

Entrepreneur Steve Blank has revised his opinion about Ann Arbor's investment landscape... slightly. He still says we still suffer from a risk-adverse culture that is akin to 'one hand clapping' and chastise governor Rock Snyder for not doing more to change that.

Excerpt:

"Blank told me what's changed in Ann Arbor is that there are venture capitalists and 'angels' in the city who are willing to invest, and who don't have to put up huge amounts of capital to get things going.

Blank said there's an enormous talent pool in Ann Arbor from the University's engineering and medical schools.
"And you don't need a lot of money to get some of these ideas off the ground. You don't need to put up $10 million to get things going. Basically you just need a couple hundred thousand dollars and a laptop," said Blank."

Read/listen to the rest here.

Ann Arbor library offers more than books, part of a national trend

To the editors at USA Today it might seem "weird" that a public library would offer seeds, energy meters, microscopes, and skeletal models. To others it looks like a beloved public institution is evolving its mission. 
 
Excerpt:
 
"American Library Association President Maureen Sullivan considers the seed collections a powerful way to help people pursue "self-directed learning and education." Sullivan, interim dean of the Graduate School of Library and Information Science at Simmons College in Boston, said she has been encouraging librarians "to get out of the four walls of the library and really be out and about in the community." Seed libraries, she said, are perhaps the most visible sign that libraries get it.
 
Choate, of the Ann Arbor library, said seed libraries and skeletons aren't necessarily a sign that libraries are trying to stay relevant — it's in the very nature of libraries to change. Many of the items we now take for granted — paperback books, pulp fiction and children's books, for instance — were novelties, or worse, when libraries first introduced them. "Back in the day," she said, "having fiction was scandalous.""
 
Read the rest here.
 

Quack! Media's Al McWilliams is poster child for public transport

Al McWilliams of Quack! Media takes the bus or bike to whereever he wants to go. And he's not alone. More and more young professionals are choosing to live where they can either walk, bus or  take the train to work.
 
Excerpt:
 
"McWilliams represents a growing segment of America that has embraced public transit from coast to coast in communities like Seattle, Dallas, Nashville and Los Angeles.
 
And the numbers are bearing that out. Statistics released Monday from the American Public Transportation Association show that 2012 ranks as the second-highest transit ridership year since 1957. Only 2008 was higher."
 
 
Read the rest here.
 

Willow Run's B-24 bomber factory gets PBS doc

A documentary about the Ypsilanti Willow Run airport's reknown B-24 bomber plant will hit the airwaves... well, ride the cable signal... Sunday on PBS. 
 
Excerpt:
 
"According to the Michigan Aerospace Foundation, the documentary recounts the building of the massive assembly plant, and the production process of more than 8,000 B-24 heavy bombers. The bombers were built at the plant from 1942 to 1945."
 
The program will air at 4 p.m. Sunday on Channel 56.
 
Read the rest here.

 

Ann Arbor's impending Literati Bookstore is real news to some

We're not sure we should be tickled or depressed that the opening of a bookstore in Ann Arbor's downtown should be regarded as feature-worthy big news. No one seems to blink an eye when a new cupcake joint moves in. 
 
Excerpt:
 
"The last few years haven't been easy for book lovers in the college town of Ann Arbor, Mich. Not only did they lose Borders Books' flagship store, which closed when the company went out of business in 2011, but they've also suffered the departure of the campus retailer Michigan Book & Supply and the Shaman Drum bookstore. Fortunately, there's a happy twist to this sad tale; a new independent bookstore will soon be opening its doors near the University of Michigan in the city's downtown."
 
Read the rest here.
 
 
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