#VivaTech networking guide
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olivergisttv · 2 days ago
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7 Proven Ways to Get Hired by Innovative Startups at VivaTech 2025
Attending VivaTech 2025? Smart move. It’s not just Europe’s largest startup and tech gathering—it’s a serious launchpad for careers. But walking in with just your badge and hopes won’t cut it. If you’re looking to land a job at a startup, you’ll need a strategy that blends preparation, presence, and professional follow-up. This guide breaks down how to go from attendee to candidate—and possibly…
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janebush08-blog · 3 years ago
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Top B2B Conferences of 2022
Eventible - Business Event Reviews Find better events faster and meet your learning and networking objectives with Eventible - the world's first platform for event reviews from real attendees. Ad World Ad World is the world's largest online advertising event happening on 11-12 October 2022. Join 25000+ of the world's brightest minds in advertising Google IO Try Google's new products and features through a sandbox experience. Grow your knowledge in the I/O 2022 Learning Lab with resources about the Google technology. Adobe Max The Adobe MAX conference is an annual event held by Adobe Systems in North America, Europe and Japan. With 400+ sessions and hundreds of inspiring speakers, MAX is an amazing event. DX Summit We're bringing the top CX conference series to you in 2022! Learn more about the FREE DX Summit Series, presented by CMSWire. Web Summit Web Summit brings together the people and companies redefining the global tech industry. Web Summit will return to Lisbon this year. Join us in November. AWS re:Invent AWS re:Invent is a learning conference for the global cloud computing community. Browse the high-level schedule for AWS re:Invent 2022. Check back soon for more updates and information on programming at this year's event. Microsoft Ignite Microsoft Ignite is an annual conference for developers and IT professionals hosted by Microsoft. It has taken place in several locations around the world. VivaTech VivaTech, Europe's biggest startup and tech event, returns for its 6th edition both in-person in Paris and online worldwide. Dreamforce Read reviews from real attendees, speakers & sponsors and decide if you want to attend the next edition of Dreamforce 2022. OMR Festival Read reviews from real attendees, speakers & sponsors and decide if you want to attend the next edition of OMR Festival. Here you will find all exhibitors, speakers, masterclasses and guided tours on the topic SOCIAL. Microsoft Build Microsoft Build is an annual conference event held by Microsoft, aimed at software engineers and web developers using Windows, Microsoft Azure. DMEXCO DMEXCO is Europe's leading digital marketing & tech event. We are the meeting place and a community for key players in digital business, marketing and innovation. Adobe Summit Read reviews from real attendees, speakers & sponsors and decide if you want to attend the next edition of Adobe Summit 2022. Brand minds Read reviews from real attendees, speakers & sponsors and decide if you want to attend the next edition of Brand minds. BrightonSEO Read reviews from real attendees, speakers & sponsors and decide if you want to attend the next edition of brightonSEO 2022. London Tech Week The London Tech Week event will return on 13-17 June bringing 20,000+ global government and corporate leaders, inspirational start-up founders, senior investors and tech rising stars together to discuss the power of technology for
societies. Outdoor Retailer Read reviews from real attendees, speakers & sponsors and decide if you want to attend the next edition of Outdoor Retailer 2022. Sibos Sibos is the global financial services networking event organised by SWIFT. The annual conference and exhibition connects more than 8000 executives. Singapore FinTech Festival Interact with FinTech policymakers and regulators. Buy SFF 2022 Tickets now and save 25%! Unlimited networking opportunities in person at Singapore EXPO for SFF 2022 VMware Explore Read reviews from real attendees, speakers & sponsors and decide if you want to attend the next edition of VMware Explore 2022. Code 2022 Read reviews from real attendees, speakers & sponsors and decide if you want to attend the next edition of Code 2022. Inbound 2022 INBOUND is an annual event, powered by HubSpot, that unites thought leaders from various industries. Content Marketing World Join us at CMWorld and gain materials and knowledge you need to take a content marketing strategy back to your team.
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un-enfant-immature · 6 years ago
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Meet the TC Hackathon at Vivatech 2019 judges & hackmaster
In just three short days, some of the best hackers, coders, programmers and creative tech geniuses in the world will arrive in Paris to compete in the TechCrunch Hackathon at VivaTech 2019 on 17-18 May.
After the participants pour their heart, soul and skills into creating something amazing out of nothing, it will all come down to the judges. They’ll determine the best overall project of the hackathon — and select the one team that deserves to win the TechCrunch €5,000 grand prize.
You deserve to know more about the people who will judge your products, so, here’s the lowdown on the talented experts who stand ready to be impressed.
Dr. Aurélie Jean has been working for more than 10 years as a research scientist and an entrepreneur in computational sciences, applied to engineering, medicine, education, economy, finance and journalism. In the past, Aurélie worked at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and at Bloomberg. Today, Aurélie works and lives between USA and France to run In Silico Veritas, a consulting agency in analytics and computer simulations. Aurélie is an advisor at the Boston Consulting Group and an external collaborator for The Ministry of Education of France. Aurélie is also a science editorial contributor for Le Point, teaches algorithms in universities and conducts research.
Julien Meraud has a solid track record in e-commerce after serving international companies for several years, including eBay, PriceMinister and Rakuten. Before joining Doctolib, Julien was CMO of Rakuten Spain, where he improved brand online acquisition, retention, promotions and campaigns. Julien joined Doctolib at the very beginning (2014), becoming the company’s first CMO and quickly holding CPO functions additionally. At Doctolib, Julien also leads Strategy teams that are responsible for identifying and sizing Doctolib’s potential new markets. Julien has a Master’s degree in Marketing, Statistics and Economics from ENSAI and a specialized Master in Marketing Management from ESSEC Business School.
Laurent Perrin is the co-founder and CTO of Front, which is reinventing email for teams. Front serves more than 5,000 companies and has raised $79 million in venture funding from investors such as Sequoia Capital, DFJ and Uncork Capital. Prior to Front, Laurent was a senior engineer at various startups and helped design scalable real-time systems. He holds a Master’s in Computer Science from École Polytechnique and Télécom ParisTech.
Neesha Tambe is the head of Startup Battlefield, TechCrunch’s global startup launch competition. In this role she sources, recruits and vets thousands of early-stage startups per year while training and coaching top-tier startups to launch in the infamous Startup Battlefield competition. Additionally, she pioneered the concept and launched CrunchMatch, the networking program at TechCrunch events that has facilitated thousands of connections between founders, investors and the startup community at-large. Prior to her work with TechCrunch, Neesha ran the Sustainable Brands’ Innovation Open — a startup competition for shared value and sustainability-focused startups with judges from Fortune 50 companies.
Renaud Visage is the technical co-founder of San Francisco-based Eventbrite (NYSE: EB), the globally leading event technology platform that went public in September 2018. Renaud is also an angel investor, guiding founders that are solving challenging technical problems in realizing their global ambitions, and he works closely with seed VC firm Point Nine Capital as a board partner, representing the fund on the board of several of their portfolio companies. Renaud also serves on the board of ShareIT, the Paris-based tech for good acceleration program launched in collaboration with Ashoka, and is an advisor to the French impact investing fund, Ring for Good. In 2014, Renaud was included in Wired UK’s Top 100 digital influencers in Europe.
In addition to our judges, here’s the hackmaster who will be the MC for the event.
Romain Dillet is a senior writer at TechCrunch. Originally from France, Romain attended EMLYON Business School, a leading French business school specialized in entrepreneurship. He covers many things, from mobile apps with great design to privacy, security, fintech, Apple, AI and complex tech achievements. He also speaks at major tech conferences. He likes pop culture more than anything in the world. He now lives in Paris when he’s not on the road. He used to live in New York and loved it.
The TC Hackathon at VivaTech 2019 takes place on 17-18 May and you can still sign up to hack on one of our fantastic challenges by EDHEC, Eramet, Sanofi–Cegedim–IBM, Galeries Lafayette / Publicis Sapient and Corvid by Wix.
Don’t miss this opportunity — sign up right now!
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benychamp · 7 years ago
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CommerceDNA wins the TechCrunch Hackathon at VivaTech
It’s been a long night at VivaTech. The building hosted a very special competition — the very first TechCrunch Hackathon in Paris.
Hundreds of engineers and designers got together to come up with something cool, something neat, something awesome. The only condition was that they only had 24 hours to work on their projects. Some of them were participating in our event for the first time, while others were regulars. Some of them slept on the floor in a corner, while others drank too much Red Bull.
We could all feel the excitement in the air when the 64 teams took the stage to present a one-minute demo to impress fellow coders and our judges. But only one team could take home the grand prize and €5,000. So, without further ado, meet the TechCrunch Hackathon winner.
Winner: CommerceDNA
CommerceDNA autofills the details of the product, when the seller uploads the image of the product he wants to sell.
Runner-Up #1: AID
AID is an application to predict strokes and provide first aid guide using visual recognition.
Runner-Up #2: EV Range Meter
EV Range Meter predicts your currently reachable area based on your current car battery level and energy consumption.
Judges
Nicolas Bacca, CTO, Ledger Nicolas worked on card systems for 5 years at Oberthur, a leader in embedded digital security, ultimately as R&D Solution Architect. He left Oberthur to launch his company, Ubinity, which was developing smartcard operating systems.
He finally co-founded BT Chip to develop an open standard, secure element based hardware wallet which eventually became the first version of the Ledger wallet.
Charles Gorintin, co-founder & CTO, Alan Charles Gorintin is a French data science and engineering leader. He is a cofounder and CTO of Alan. Alan’s mission is to make it easy for people to be in great health.
Prior to co-founding Alan, Charles Gorintin was a data science leader at fast-growing social networks, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter, where he worked on anti-fraud, growth, and social psychology.
Gorintin holds a Master’s degree in Mathematics and Computer Science from Ecole des Ponts ParisTech, a Master’s degree in Machine Learning from ENS Paris-Saclay, and a Masters of Financial Engineering from UC Berkeley – Haas School of Business.
Samantha Jérusalmy, Partner, Elaia Partners Samantha joined Elaia Partners in 2008. She began her career as a consultant at Eurogroup, a consulting firm specialized in organisation and strategy, within the Bank and Finance division. She then joined Clipperton Finance, a corporate finance firm dedicated to high-tech growth companies, before moving to Elaia Partners in 2008. She became an Investment Manager in 2011 then a Partner in 2014.
Laure Némée, CTO, Leetchi Laure has spent her career in software development in various startups since 2000 after an engineer’s degree in computer science. She joined Leetchi at the very beginning in 2010 and has been Leetchi Group CTO since. She now works mainly on MANGOPAY, the payment service for sharing economy sites that was created by Leetchi.
Benjamin Netter, CTO, Lendix Benjamin is the CTO of Lendix, the leading SME lending platform in continental Europe. Learning to code at 8, he has been since then experimenting ways to rethink fashion, travel or finance using technology. In 2009, in parallel with his studies at EPITECH, he created one of the first French applications on Facebook (Questions entre amis), which was used by more than half a million users. In 2011, he won the Foursquare Global Hackathon by reinventing the travel guide with Tripovore. In 2014, he launched Somewhere, an Instagram travel experiment acclaimed by the press. He is today reinventing with Lendix the way European companies get faster and simpler financing.
And finally here were our hackmasters that guided our hackers to success:
Emily Atkinson, Software Engineer / MD, DevelopHer UK Emily is a Software Engineer at Condé Nast Britain, and co-founder & Managing Director of women in tech network DevelopHer UK. Her technical role involves back-end services, infrastructure ops and tooling, site reliability and back-end product. Entering tech as an MSc Computer Science grad, she spent six years at online print startup MOO – working across the platform, including mobile web and product. As an advocate for diversity and inclusion in STEM & digital in 2016 Atkinson launched DevelopHer, a volunteer-run non-profit community aimed at increasing diversity in tech by empowering members to develop their career and skills through events, workshops, networking and mentoring.
Romain Dillet, Senior Writer, TechCrunch Romain attended EMLYON Business School, a leading French business school specialized in entrepreneurship. He covers many things from mobile apps with great design to fashion, Apple, AI and complex tech achievements. He also speaks at major tech conferences. He likes pop culture more than anything in the world.
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myfinancialguideme-blog · 6 years ago
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Myneral.me wins the TechCrunch Hackathon at VivaTech
New Post has been published on https://financeguideto.com/awesome/myneral-me-wins-the-techcrunch-hackathon-at-vivatech/
Myneral.me wins the TechCrunch Hackathon at VivaTech
It’s been a long night at VivaTech. The house hosted a very special competition — the TechCrunch Hackathon in Paris.
Hundreds of engineers and designers got together to come up with something cool, something neat, something awesome. The only condition was that they only had 36 hours to work on their projects. Some of them were involved in our event for the first time, while others were regulars. Some of them slept on the floor in a corner, while others drink too much Red Bull.
We could all feel the exhilaration in the air when the 64 squads took the stage to present a one-minute demo to impress fellow coders and our judges. But only one squad could take home the grand award and EUR5, 000. So, without further ado, satisfy the TechCrunch Hackathon winner.
Winner: Myneral.me
Current mining operations lack transparency and clarity in the way they are monitored. In order to understand how a material ran from initial discovery in the mine to end product, a new tool is necessary to monitor operations. Myneral.me offers an all-encompassing platform for the metal and mining sector that showcases CSR to both industry partners and end user. Find out more on Myneral.me.
Runner-Up# 1: Vyta
Vyta takes patient information and helps doctors understand which patient needs to be treated first. A simple tool like this could induce things smoother for everyone at the emergency room and improve treatments.
Runner-Up# 2: Scrub
SCRUB= SCRUM+ BUGS. Easily track your mistakes across applications and fix them utilizing our algorithmic suggestions and code samples. Our open-source bug tracker automagically collects all errors for you. Find out more on GitHub.
Runner-Up# 3: Chiche
Finding the future upcoming brand depends on the situated of data you are using to see it. First, they do a simple quantification of the most famous brands on social medias to identify three newcomers. Second, they use Galerie Lafayette’s website as a personal shopping tool to propose clients the most adequate product within the three newcomers.
Judges
Dr. Aurelie Jean has been working for more than 10 years as a research scientist and an entrepreneur in computational sciences, applied to engineering, medicine, education, economy, finance and journalism. In the past, Aurelie ran at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and at Bloomberg. Today, Aurelie works and lives between USA and France to run In Silico Veritas, a consulting bureau in analytics and computer simulations. Aurelie is an advisor at the Boston Consulting Group and an external collaborator for The Ministry of Education of France. Aurelie is also a science editorial contributor for Le Point, teaches algorithms in universities and conducts research.
Julien Meraud has a solid track record in e-commerce after serving international companies for several years, including eBay, PriceMinister and Rakuten. Before joining Doctolib, Julien was CMO of Rakuten Spain, where he improved brand online acquisition, retention, promotions and campaigns. Julien joined Doctolib at the beginning( 2014 ), becoming the company’s first CMO and quickly holding CPO functions additionally. At Doctolib, Julien also leads Strategy squads that are responsible for identifying and sizing Doctolib’s potential new marketplaces. Julien has a Master’s degree in Marketing, Statistics and Economics from ENSAI and a specialized Master in Marketing Management from ESSEC Business School.
Laurent Perrin is the co-founder and CTO of Front, which is reinventing email for squads. Front serves more than 5,000 companies and have given rise to $79 million in venture funding from investors such as Sequoia Capital, DFJ and Uncork Capital. Prior to Front, Laurent was a senior engineer at various startups and helped design scalable real-time systems. He holds a Master’s in Computer science from Ecole Polytechnique and Telecom ParisTech.
Neesha Tambe is the head of Startup Battlefield, TechCrunch’s global startup launch competition. In this role she sources, recruits and vets thousands of early-stage startups per year while training and coaching top-tier startups to launch in the infamous Startup Battlefield competition. Additionally, she pioneered the concept and launched CrunchMatch, the networking program at TechCrunch events that has facilitated thousands of connections between founders, investors and the startup community at-large. Prior to her work with TechCrunch, Neesha ran the Sustainable Brands’ Innovation Open — a startup competition for shared value and sustainability-focused startups with judges from Fortune 50 companies.
Renaud Visage is the technological co-founder of San Francisco-based Eventbrite( NYSE: EB ), the globally resulting event technology platform that ran public in September 2018. Renaud is also an angel investor, guiding founders that are solving challenging technological problems in realizing their global ambitions, and he works closely with seed VC firm Point Nine Capital as a board partner, representing the fund on the board of several of their portfolio companies. Renaud also serves on the board of ShareIT, the Paris-based tech for good acceleration program launched in collaboration with Ashoka, and is an advisor to the French impact investing fund, Ring for Good. In 2014, Renaud was included in Wired UK’s Top 100 digital influencers in Europe.
In addition to our judges, here’s the hackmaster who was the MC for the event :P TAGEND
Romain Dillet is a senior writer at TechCrunch. Originally from France, Romain attended EMLYON Business School, a leading French business school specialized in entrepreneurship. He covers many things, from mobile apps with great design to privacy, security, fintech, Apple, AI and complex tech accomplishments. He also speaks at major tech meetings. He likes pop culture more than anything in the world. He now lives in Paris when he’s not on the road. He used to live in New York and loved it.
Read more: techcrunch.com
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financingideas-blog · 6 years ago
Text
Myneral.me wins the TechCrunch Hackathon at VivaTech
New Post has been published on https://financeqia.com/awesome/myneral-me-wins-the-techcrunch-hackathon-at-vivatech/
Myneral.me wins the TechCrunch Hackathon at VivaTech
It’s been a long night at VivaTech. The building hosted a very special competition — the TechCrunch Hackathon in Paris.
Hundreds of engineers and decorators got together to come up with something cool, something neat, something awesome. The only condition was that they only had 36 hours to work on their projects. Some of them were involved in our event for the first time, while others were regulars. Some of them slept on the floor in a corner, while others drink too much Red Bull.
We could all feel the excitement in the air when the 64 teams took the stage to present a one-minute demo to impress fellow coders and our magistrates. But merely one team could take home the grand prize and EUR5, 000. So, without further ado, gratify the TechCrunch Hackathon winner.
Winner: Myneral.me
Current mining operations lack transparency and clarity in the way they are monitored. In order to understand how a material went from initial discovery in the mine to end product, a new tool is necessary to monitor operations. Myneral.me offers an all-encompassing platform for the metal and mining sector that showcases CSR to both industry partners and end user. Find out more on Myneral.me.
Runner-Up# 1: Vyta
Vyta takes patient information and assists physicians understand which patient needs to be treated first. A simple tool like this could make things smoother for everyone at the emergency room and improve treatments.
Runner-Up# 2: Scrub
SCRUB= SCRUM+ BUGS. Easily track your mistakes across applications and fix them using our algorithmic suggestions and code samples. Our open-source bug tracker automagically collects all errors for you. Find out more on GitHub.
Runner-Up# 3: Chiche
Finding the future upcoming brand depends on the decide of data you are using to see it. First, they do a simple quantification of the most famous brands on social medias to identify three newcomers. Second, they use Galerie Lafayette’s website as a personal shopping tool to propose clients the most adequate product within the three newcomers.
Judges
Dr. Aurelie Jean has been working for more than 10 years as a research scientist and an entrepreneur in computational sciences, applied to engineering, medication, education, economy, finance and journalism. In the past, Aurelie ran at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and at Bloomberg. Today, Aurelie runs and lives between USA and France to run In Silico Veritas, a consulting agency in analytics and computer simulations. Aurelie is an advisor at the Boston Consulting Group and an external collaborator for The Ministry of Education of France. Aurelie is also a science editorial contributor for Le Point, teaches algorithms in universities and conducts research.
Julien Meraud has a solid track record in e-commerce after serving international companies for several years, including eBay, PriceMinister and Rakuten. Before joining Doctolib, Julien was CMO of Rakuten Spain, where he improved brand online acquisition, retention, promotions and campaigns. Julien joined Doctolib at the beginning( 2014 ), becoming the company’s first CMO and quickly holding CPO functions additionally. At Doctolib, Julien also leads Strategy squads that are responsible for identifying and sizing Doctolib’s potential new marketplaces. Julien has a Master’s degree in Marketing, Statistics and Economics from ENSAI and a specialized Master in Marketing Management from ESSEC Business School.
Laurent Perrin is the co-founder and CTO of Front, which is reinventing email for squads. Front serves more than 5,000 companies and have given rise to $79 million in venture funding from investors such as Sequoia Capital, DFJ and Uncork Capital. Prior to Front, Laurent was a senior engineer at various startups and helped design scalable real-time systems. He holds a Master’s in Computer Science from Ecole Polytechnique and Telecom ParisTech.
Neesha Tambe is the head of Startup Battlefield, TechCrunch’s global startup launch competitor. In this role she sources, recruits and vets thousands of early-stage startups per year while training and coaching top-tier startups to launch in the infamous Startup Battlefield competition. Additionally, she pioneered the concept and launched CrunchMatch, the networking program at TechCrunch events that has facilitated thousands of connections between founders, investors and the startup community at-large. Prior to her work with TechCrunch, Neesha operated the Sustainable Brands’ Innovation Open — a startup competition for shared value and sustainability-focused startups with judges from Fortune 50 companies.
Renaud Visage is the technical co-founder of San Francisco-based Eventbrite( NYSE: EB ), the globally leading event technology platform that went public in September 2018. Renaud is also an angel investor, guiding founders that are solving challenging technological problems in realizing their global aspirations, and he works closely with seed VC firm Point Nine Capital as a board partner, representing the fund on the board of several of their portfolio companies. Renaud also serves on the board of ShareIT, the Paris-based tech for good acceleration program launched in collaboration with Ashoka, and is an advisor to the French impact investing fund, Ring for Good. In 2014, Renaud was included in Wired UK’s Top 100 digital influencers in Europe.
In addition to our magistrates, here’s the hackmaster who was the MC for the event :P TAGEND
Romain Dillet is a senior novelist at TechCrunch. Originally from France, Romain attended EMLYON Business School, a resulting French business school specialized in entrepreneurship. He covers many things, from mobile apps with great design to privacy, security, fintech, Apple, AI and complex tech accomplishments. He also speaks at major tech conferences. He likes pop culture more than anything in the world. He now lives in Paris when he’s not on the road. He used to live in New York and loved it.
Read more: techcrunch.com
0 notes
endenogatai · 6 years ago
Text
Myneral.me wins the TechCrunch Hackathon at VivaTech
It’s been a long night at VivaTech. The building hosted a very special competition — the TechCrunch Hackathon in Paris.
Hundreds of engineers and designers got together to come up with something cool, something neat, something awesome. The only condition was that they only had 36 hours to work on their projects. Some of them were participating in our event for the first time, while others were regulars. Some of them slept on the floor in a corner, while others drank too much Red Bull.
We could all feel the excitement in the air when the 64 teams took the stage to present a one-minute demo to impress fellow coders and our judges. But only one team could take home the grand prize and €5,000. So, without further ado, meet the TechCrunch Hackathon winner.
Winner: Myneral.me
Current mining operations lack transparency and clarity in the way they are monitored. In order to understand how a material went from initial discovery in the mine to end product, a new tool is necessary to monitor operations. Myneral.me offers an all-encompassing platform for the metal and mining sector that showcases CSR to both industry partners and end users. Find out more on Myneral.me.
Runner-Up #1: Vyta
Vyta takes patient information and helps doctors understand which patient needs to be treated first. A simple tool like this could make things smoother for everyone at the emergency room and improve treatments.
Runner-Up #2: Scrub
SCRUB = SCRUM + BUGS. Easily track your errors across applications and fix them using our algorithmic suggestions and code samples. Our open-source bug tracker automagically collects all errors for you. Find out more on GitHub.
Runner-Up #3: Chiche
Finding the future upcoming brand depends on the set of data you are using to detect it. First, they do a simple quantification of the most famous brands on social medias to identify three newcomers. Second, they use Galerie Lafayette’s website as a personal shopping tool to propose customers the most adequate product within the three newcomers.
Judges
Dr. Aurélie Jean has been working for more than 10 years as a research scientist and an entrepreneur in computational sciences, applied to engineering, medicine, education, economy, finance and journalism. In the past, Aurélie worked at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and at Bloomberg. Today, Aurélie works and lives between USA and France to run In Silico Veritas, a consulting agency in analytics and computer simulations. Aurélie is an advisor at the Boston Consulting Group and an external collaborator for The Ministry of Education of France. Aurélie is also a science editorial contributor for Le Point, teaches algorithms in universities and conducts research.
Julien Meraud has a solid track record in e-commerce after serving international companies for several years, including eBay, PriceMinister and Rakuten. Before joining Doctolib, Julien was CMO of Rakuten Spain, where he improved brand online acquisition, retention, promotions and campaigns. Julien joined Doctolib at the very beginning (2014), becoming the company’s first CMO and quickly holding CPO functions additionally. At Doctolib, Julien also leads Strategy teams that are responsible for identifying and sizing Doctolib’s potential new markets. Julien has a Master’s degree in Marketing, Statistics and Economics from ENSAI and a specialized Master in Marketing Management from ESSEC Business School.
Laurent Perrin is the co-founder and CTO of Front, which is reinventing email for teams. Front serves more than 5,000 companies and has raised $79 million in venture funding from investors such as Sequoia Capital, DFJ and Uncork Capital. Prior to Front, Laurent was a senior engineer at various startups and helped design scalable real-time systems. He holds a Master’s in Computer Science from École Polytechnique and Télécom ParisTech.
Neesha Tambe is the head of Startup Battlefield, TechCrunch’s global startup launch competition. In this role she sources, recruits and vets thousands of early-stage startups per year while training and coaching top-tier startups to launch in the infamous Startup Battlefield competition. Additionally, she pioneered the concept and launched CrunchMatch, the networking program at TechCrunch events that has facilitated thousands of connections between founders, investors and the startup community at-large. Prior to her work with TechCrunch, Neesha ran the Sustainable Brands’ Innovation Open — a startup competition for shared value and sustainability-focused startups with judges from Fortune 50 companies.
Renaud Visage is the technical co-founder of San Francisco-based Eventbrite (NYSE: EB), the globally leading event technology platform that went public in September 2018. Renaud is also an angel investor, guiding founders that are solving challenging technical problems in realizing their global ambitions, and he works closely with seed VC firm Point Nine Capital as a board partner, representing the fund on the board of several of their portfolio companies. Renaud also serves on the board of ShareIT, the Paris-based tech for good acceleration program launched in collaboration with Ashoka, and is an advisor to the French impact investing fund, Ring for Good. In 2014, Renaud was included in Wired UK’s Top 100 digital influencers in Europe.
In addition to our judges, here’s the hackmaster who was the MC for the event:
Romain Dillet is a senior writer at TechCrunch. Originally from France, Romain attended EMLYON Business School, a leading French business school specialized in entrepreneurship. He covers many things, from mobile apps with great design to privacy, security, fintech, Apple, AI and complex tech achievements. He also speaks at major tech conferences. He likes pop culture more than anything in the world. He now lives in Paris when he’s not on the road. He used to live in New York and loved it.
from RSSMix.com Mix ID 8204425 https://tcrn.ch/2VzSTiC via IFTTT
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goarticletec-blog · 7 years ago
Text
Zuckerberg conspicuous in his absence at international hearing
New Post has been published on https://www.articletec.com/zuckerberg-conspicuous-in-his-absence-at-international-hearing/
Zuckerberg conspicuous in his absence at international hearing
Where’s Zuck?
UK Parliament
Lawmakers from nine parliaments around the world met Tuesday in London to discuss the problem of disinformation on Facebook.
But there was seat at the table that remained starkly vacant. Behind the nameplate “Mark Zuckerberg” was an empty chair.
Zuckerberg declined repeated invitations to attend the inaugural session of the International Grand Committee on Disinformation, which took place at the UK’s Parliament. His decision irked the 24 politicians in attendance, some of who had flown from as far as South America and Asia to attend. 
It’s far from the first time the Facebook CEO has been conspicuous by his absence this year.
When the Cambridge Analytica data misuse revelations came to light in March, Zuckerberg failed to address the scandal for multiple days — either with his own employees, or in public. The social network chief was nowhere to be seen and cries of “where’s Zuck?” echoed around the world and trended on social media. Even though Zuckerberg has since spoken publicly about the scandal, including testifying before the US Congress, there are still many politicians who say he hasn’t answered for his company’s failures.
Zuckerberg rejected multiple invitations to come to London and provide evidence to UK Parliament’s fake-new inquiry over the past year. He also declined opportunities to appear via web link. The Facebook boss has spoken twice publicly in Europe this year — once for a short session in front of the European Parliament and once onstage at Vivatech (a conference organized by a PR agency) in Paris, where he was not asked a single direct question about Cambridge Analytica.
His absence at Tuesday’s session sparked outrage among the politicians in attendance, who repeatedly referred to his failure to attend throughout the day. 
Richard Allan, who is Facebook’s policy director for Europe and also sits as a British politician in the House of Lords, sat in the chair alongside Zuckerberg’s empty seat. (Allan is the third Facebook executive to give evidence this year to Parliament, following evidence sessions featuring UK Public Policy Director Simon Milner and CTO Mike Schroepfer. Both left the committee underwhelmed by their answers, and were required to follow up on many points.)
Belgian politician Nele Lijnen asked Allan if he knew the Flemish phrase “sending your cat.” “It means not showing up,” she told him. “You are sitting next to the cat,” she said, nodding to Zuckerberg’s empty seat. Other politicians took a less humorous approach to addressing Zuckerberg’s absence.
“In this room we represent over 400 million people, and to not have your CEO sit in front of us is an offense to all of them,” Canadian member of Parliament Bob Zimmer told Allan. In addition to Canada, Belgium and the UK, the other countries represented were Argentina, Brazil, France, Ireland, Latvia and Singapore.
“Who gave Mr. Zuckerberg advice to blow off this committee?” asked Canadian politician Charlie Angus. Angus added that democracy had been “upended by frat boy billionaires from California,” while citizens were distracted by apps and phones.
“Were you sent because, in the whole of the Facebook empire, you were believed to be best placed to answer this committee’s questions, or you were best placed to defend your company?” said British member of Parliament Brendan O’Hara to Allan. “Who decided you were the best person to come?”
“I volunteered myself,” Allan replied, describing the extent to which he’d been following the disinformation discussions in parliaments around the world. “This is the stuff I work on,” he said. “Our working assumption was this is the stuff that you wanted.”
This didn’t satisfy the committee, and every time Allan said that he did not know the answer to a question or that he would follow up, the lawmakers reiterated that this was proof they needed Zuckerberg to attend.
“These are decisions that are made at a level that it appears you don’t operate at within Facebook,” British member of Parliament Clive Efford told Allan. “Which is why we need to speak to Mr. Zuckerberg.”
Battle of wills
In a press conference following the session, Zimmer said that he believed Facebook’s strategy had been to deflect, and that Allan had been successful in doing so on the company’s behalf. “He’s weathered the storm and he’s taken one for Mr. Zuckerberg,” he said.
Chair of disinformation committee, British MP Damian Collins, said that he felt Allan had failed to answer questions satisfactorily and said he isn’t giving up on getting Zuckerberg in front of the committee. 
Of all the voices calling for Zuckerberg to appear in the UK, Collins’ has been the most persistent. He has repeatedly expressed dismay whenever Zuckerberg declines to attend. Right now there is something of a standoff between the pair, and Zuckerberg doesn’t appear have the upper hand. 
At the present moment the Facebook chief cannot visit the UK for any reason without also agreeing to appear before Parliament. If he does attempt to visit the UK, he risks being issued a formal summons the minute he touches down in the country. This could involve the embarrassment of being escorted to Westminster by Parliament’s serjeant-at-arms. It seems unlikely that Zuckerberg would take this risk, which means that unless he gives in, or unless the risk subsides, he must avoid the UK completely.
The same is true of Canada, where if Zuckerberg sets foot in the country but refuses to appear before politicians, he may be held in contempt of Parliament.
Unfortunately for him, it doesn’t look like the scrutiny will subside anytime soon. The UK’s parliamentary fake-news inquiry has concluded its evidence gathering, but it’s not decreasing pressure on the Facebook chief to appear. If anything, the pressure is ramping up. By bringing in other governments from around the world, the voices calling for Zuckerberg to appear are only getting louder.
“Ultimately the buck stops with Zuck,” Collins said in the press conference. “These issues aren’t going to go away and the pressure will continue to grow.”
CNET’s Holiday Gift Guide: The place to find the best tech gifts for 2018.
Cambridge Analytica: Everything you need to know about Facebook’s data mining scandal.
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abckidstvyara · 7 years ago
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CommerceDNA wins the TechCrunch Hackathon at VivaTech
CommerceDNA wins the TechCrunch Hackathon at VivaTech
It’s been a long night at VivaTech. The building hosted a very special competition — the very first TechCrunch Hackathon in Paris.
Hundreds of engineers and designers got together to come up with something cool, something neat, something awesome. The only condition was that they only had 24 hours to work on their projects. Some of them were participating in our event for the first time, while others were regulars. Some of them slept on the floor in a corner, while others drank too much Red Bull.
We could all feel the excitement in the air when the 64 teams took the stage to present a one-minute demo to impress fellow coders and our judges. But only one team could take home the grand prize and €5,000. So, without further ado, meet the TechCrunch Hackathon winner.
Winner: CommerceDNA
Runner-Up #1: AID
Runner-Up #2: EV Range Meter
Judges
Nicolas Bacca, CTO, Ledger Nicolas worked on card systems for 5 years at Oberthur, a leader in embedded digital security, ultimately as R&D Solution Architect. He left Oberthur to launch his company, Ubinity, which was developing smartcard operating systems.
He finally co-founded BT Chip to develop an open standard, secure element based hardware wallet which eventually became the first version of the Ledger wallet.
Charles Gorintin, co-founder & CTO, Alan Charles Gorintin is a French data science and engineering leader. He is a cofounder and CTO of Alan. Alan’s mission is to make it easy for people to be in great health.
Prior to co-founding Alan, Charles Gorintin was a data science leader at fast-growing social networks, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter, where he worked on anti-fraud, growth, and social psychology.
Gorintin holds a Master’s degree in Mathematics and Computer Science from Ecole des Ponts ParisTech, a Master’s degree in Machine Learning from ENS Paris-Saclay, and a Masters of Financial Engineering from UC Berkeley – Haas School of Business.
Samantha Jérusalmy, Partner, Elaia Partners Samantha joined Elaia Partners in 2008. She began her career as a consultant at Eurogroup, a consulting firm specialized in organisation and strategy, within the Bank and Finance division. She then joined Clipperton Finance, a corporate finance firm dedicated to high-tech growth companies, before moving to Elaia Partners in 2008. She became an Investment Manager in 2011 then a Partner in 2014.
Laure Némée, CTO, Leetchi Laure has spent her career in software development in various startups since 2000 after an engineer’s degree in computer science. She joined Leetchi at the very beginning in 2010 and has been Leetchi Group CTO since. She now works mainly on MANGOPAY, the payment service for sharing economy sites that was created by Leetchi.
Benjamin Netter, CTO, Lendix Benjamin is the CTO of Lendix, the leading SME lending platform in continental Europe. Learning to code at 8, he has been since then experimenting ways to rethink fashion, travel or finance using technology. In 2009, in parallel with his studies at EPITECH, he created one of the first French applications on Facebook (Questions entre amis), which was used by more than half a million users. In 2011, he won the Foursquare Global Hackathon by reinventing the travel guide with Tripovore. In 2014, he launched Somewhere, an Instagram travel experiment acclaimed by the press. He is today reinventing with Lendix the way European companies get faster and simpler financing.
And finally here were our hackmasters that guided our hackers to success:
Emily Atkinson, Software Engineer / MD, DevelopHer UK Emily is a Software Engineer at Condé Nast Britain, and co-founder & Managing Director of women in tech network DevelopHer UK. Her technical role involves back-end services, infrastructure ops and tooling, site reliability and back-end product. Entering tech as an MSc Computer Science grad, she spent six years at online print startup MOO – working across the platform, including mobile web and product. As an advocate for diversity and inclusion in STEM & digital in 2016 Atkinson launched DevelopHer, a volunteer-run non-profit community aimed at increasing diversity in tech by empowering members to develop their career and skills through events, workshops, networking and mentoring.
Romain Dillet, Senior Writer, TechCrunch Romain attended EMLYON Business School, a leading French business school specialized in entrepreneurship. He covers many things from mobile apps with great design to fashion, Apple, AI and complex tech achievements. He also speaks at major tech conferences. He likes pop culture more than anything in the world.
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theinvinciblenoob · 7 years ago
Link
It’s been a long night at VivaTech. The building hosted a very special competition — the very first TechCrunch Hackathon in Paris.
Hundreds of engineers and designers got together to come up with something cool, something neat, something awesome. The only condition was that they only had 24 hours to work on their projects. Some of them were participating in our event for the first time, while others were regulars. Some of them slept on the floor in a corner, while others drank too much Red Bull.
We could all feel the excitement in the air when the 64 teams took the stage to present a one-minute demo to impress fellow coders and our judges. But only one team could take home the grand prize and €5,000. So, without further ado, meet the TechCrunch Hackathon winner.
Winner: CommerceDNA
Runner-Up #1: AID
Runner-Up #2: EV Range Meter
Judges
Nicolas Bacca, CTO, Ledger Nicolas worked on card systems for 5 years at Oberthur, a leader in embedded digital security, ultimately as R&D Solution Architect. He left Oberthur to launch his company, Ubinity, which was developing smartcard operating systems.
He finally co-founded BT Chip to develop an open standard, secure element based hardware wallet which eventually became the first version of the Ledger wallet.
Charles Gorintin, co-founder & CTO, Alan Charles Gorintin is a French data science and engineering leader. He is a cofounder and CTO of Alan. Alan’s mission is to make it easy for people to be in great health.
Prior to co-founding Alan, Charles Gorintin was a data science leader at fast-growing social networks, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter, where he worked on anti-fraud, growth, and social psychology.
Gorintin holds a Master’s degree in Mathematics and Computer Science from Ecole des Ponts ParisTech, a Master’s degree in Machine Learning from ENS Paris-Saclay, and a Masters of Financial Engineering from UC Berkeley – Haas School of Business.
Samantha Jérusalmy, Partner, Elaia Partners Samantha joined Elaia Partners in 2008. She began her career as a consultant at Eurogroup, a consulting firm specialized in organisation and strategy, within the Bank and Finance division. She then joined Clipperton Finance, a corporate finance firm dedicated to high-tech growth companies, before moving to Elaia Partners in 2008. She became an Investment Manager in 2011 then a Partner in 2014.
Laure Némée, CTO, Leetchi Laure has spent her career in software development in various startups since 2000 after an engineer’s degree in computer science. She joined Leetchi at the very beginning in 2010 and has been Leetchi Group CTO since. She now works mainly on MANGOPAY, the payment service for sharing economy sites that was created by Leetchi.
Benjamin Netter, CTO, Lendix Benjamin is the CTO of Lendix, the leading SME lending platform in continental Europe. Learning to code at 8, he has been since then experimenting ways to rethink fashion, travel or finance using technology. In 2009, in parallel with his studies at EPITECH, he created one of the first French applications on Facebook (Questions entre amis), which was used by more than half a million users. In 2011, he won the Foursquare Global Hackathon by reinventing the travel guide with Tripovore. In 2014, he launched Somewhere, an Instagram travel experiment acclaimed by the press. He is today reinventing with Lendix the way European companies get faster and simpler financing.
And finally here were our hackmasters that guided our hackers to success:
Emily Atkinson, Software Engineer / MD, DevelopHer UK Emily is a Software Engineer at Condé Nast Britain, and co-founder & Managing Director of women in tech network DevelopHer UK. Her technical role involves back-end services, infrastructure ops and tooling, site reliability and back-end product. Entering tech as an MSc Computer Science grad, she spent six years at online print startup MOO – working across the platform, including mobile web and product. As an advocate for diversity and inclusion in STEM & digital in 2016 Atkinson launched DevelopHer, a volunteer-run non-profit community aimed at increasing diversity in tech by empowering members to develop their career and skills through events, workshops, networking and mentoring.
Romain Dillet, Senior Writer, TechCrunch Romain attended EMLYON Business School, a leading French business school specialized in entrepreneurship. He covers many things from mobile apps with great design to fashion, Apple, AI and complex tech achievements. He also speaks at major tech conferences. He likes pop culture more than anything in the world.
via TechCrunch
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endenogatai · 7 years ago
Text
CommerceDNA wins the TechCrunch Hackathon at VivaTech
It’s been a long night at VivaTech. The building hosted a very special competition — the very first TechCrunch Hackathon in Paris.
Hundreds of engineers and designers got together to come up with something cool, something neat, something awesome. The only condition was that they only had 24 hours to work on their projects. Some of them were participating in our event for the first time, while others were regulars. Some of them slept on the floor in a corner, while others drank too much Red Bull.
We could all feel the excitement in the air when the 64 teams took the stage to present a one-minute demo to impress fellow coders and our judges. But only one team could take home the grand prize and €5,000. So, without further ado, meet the TechCrunch Hackathon winner.
Winner: CommerceDNA
Runner-Up #1: AID
Runner-Up #2: EV Range Meter
Judges
Nicolas Bacca, CTO, Ledger Nicolas worked on card systems for 5 years at Oberthur, a leader in embedded digital security, ultimately as R&D Solution Architect. He left Oberthur to launch his company, Ubinity, which was developing smartcard operating systems.
He finally co-founded BT Chip to develop an open standard, secure element based hardware wallet which eventually became the first version of the Ledger wallet.
Charles Gorintin, co-founder & CTO, Alan Charles Gorintin is a French data science and engineering leader. He is a cofounder and CTO of Alan. Alan’s mission is to make it easy for people to be in great health.
Prior to co-founding Alan, Charles Gorintin was a data science leader at fast-growing social networks, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter, where he worked on anti-fraud, growth, and social psychology.
Gorintin holds a Master’s degree in Mathematics and Computer Science from Ecole des Ponts ParisTech, a Master’s degree in Machine Learning from ENS Paris-Saclay, and a Masters of Financial Engineering from UC Berkeley – Haas School of Business.
Samantha Jérusalmy, Partner, Elaia Partners Samantha joined Elaia Partners in 2008. She began her career as a consultant at Eurogroup, a consulting firm specialized in organisation and strategy, within the Bank and Finance division. She then joined Clipperton Finance, a corporate finance firm dedicated to high-tech growth companies, before moving to Elaia Partners in 2008. She became an Investment Manager in 2011 then a Partner in 2014.
Laure Némée, CTO, Leetchi Laure has spent her career in software development in various startups since 2000 after an engineer’s degree in computer science. She joined Leetchi at the very beginning in 2010 and has been Leetchi Group CTO since. She now works mainly on MANGOPAY, the payment service for sharing economy sites that was created by Leetchi.
Benjamin Netter, CTO, Lendix Benjamin is the CTO of Lendix, the leading SME lending platform in continental Europe. Learning to code at 8, he has been since then experimenting ways to rethink fashion, travel or finance using technology. In 2009, in parallel with his studies at EPITECH, he created one of the first French applications on Facebook (Questions entre amis), which was used by more than half a million users. In 2011, he won the Foursquare Global Hackathon by reinventing the travel guide with Tripovore. In 2014, he launched Somewhere, an Instagram travel experiment acclaimed by the press. He is today reinventing with Lendix the way European companies get faster and simpler financing.
And finally here were our hackmasters that guided our hackers to success:
Emily Atkinson, Software Engineer / MD, DevelopHer UK Emily is a Software Engineer at Condé Nast Britain, and co-founder & Managing Director of women in tech network DevelopHer UK. Her technical role involves back-end services, infrastructure ops and tooling, site reliability and back-end product. Entering tech as an MSc Computer Science grad, she spent six years at online print startup MOO – working across the platform, including mobile web and product. As an advocate for diversity and inclusion in STEM & digital in 2016 Atkinson launched DevelopHer, a volunteer-run non-profit community aimed at increasing diversity in tech by empowering members to develop their career and skills through events, workshops, networking and mentoring.
Romain Dillet, Senior Writer, TechCrunch Romain attended EMLYON Business School, a leading French business school specialized in entrepreneurship. He covers many things from mobile apps with great design to fashion, Apple, AI and complex tech achievements. He also speaks at major tech conferences. He likes pop culture more than anything in the world.
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abckidstvyara · 7 years ago
Text
Meet the judges and hackmasters for the TC Hackathon at VivaTech
Meet the judges and hackmasters for the TC Hackathon at VivaTech
On May 25-26, hundreds of Europe’s best and brightest coders, hackers, tech makers and programmers will descend upon Paris to take part in TechCrunch Hackathon at VivaTech and compete for a €5,000 grand prize. But who are the people who will determine who gets that prize? Without further ado the judges for the TC Hackthon:
Nicolas Bacca, CTO, Ledger Nicolas worked on card systems for 5 years at Oberthur, a leader in embedded digital security, ultimately as R&D Solution Architect. He left Oberthur to launch his company, Ubinity, which was developing smartcard operating systems.
He finally co-founded BT Chip to develop an open standard, secure element based hardware wallet which eventually became the first version of the Ledger wallet.
    Charles Gorintin, co-founder & CTO, Alan Charles Gorintin is a French data science and engineering leader. He is a cofounder and CTO of Alan. Alan’s mission is to make it easy for people to be in great health.
Prior to co-founding Alan, Charles Gorintin was a data science leader at fast-growing social networks, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter, where he worked on anti-fraud, growth, and social psychology.
Gorintin holds a Masters degree in Mathematics and Computer Science from Ecole des Ponts ParisTech, a Masters degree in Machine Learning from ENS Paris-Saclay, and a Masters of Financial Engineering from UC Berkeley – Haas School of Business.
  Samantha Jérusalmy, Partner, Elaia Partners Samantha joined Elaia Partners in 2008. She began her career as a consultant at Eurogroup, a consulting firm specialized in organisation and strategy, within the Bank and Finance division. She then joined Clipperton Finance, a corporate finance firm dedicated to high-tech growth companies, before moving to Elaia Partners in 2008. She became an Investment Manager in 2011 then a Partner in 2014.
  Laure Némée, CTO, Leetchi Laure has spent her career in software development in various startups since 2000 after an engineer’s degree in computer science. She joined Leetchi at the very beginning in 2010 and has been Leetchi Group CTO since. She now works mainly on MANGOPAY, the payment service for sharing economy sites that was created by Leetchi.
      Benjamin Netter, CTO, Lendix Benjamin is the CTO of Lendix, the leading SME lending platform in continental Europe. Learning to code at 8, he has been since then experimenting ways to rethink fashion, travel or finance using technology. In 2009, in parallel with his studies at EPITECH, he created one of the first French applications on Facebook (Questions entre amis), which was used by more than half a million users. In 2011, he won the Foursquare Global Hackathon by reinventing the travel guide with Tripovore. In 2014, he launched Somewhere, an Instagram travel experiment acclaimed by the press. He is today reinventing with Lendix the way European companies get faster and simpler financing.
    And finally here are our hackmasters that will guide our hackers to success:
Emily Atkinson, Software Engineer / MD, DevelopHer UK Emily is a Software Engineer at Condé Nast Britain, and co-founder & Managing Director of women in tech network DevelopHer UK. Her technical role involves back-end services, infrastructure ops and tooling, site reliability and back-end product. Entering tech as an MSc Computer Science grad, she spent six years at online print startup MOO – working across the platform, including mobile web and product. As an advocate for diversity and inclusion in STEM & digital in 2016 Atkinson launched DevelopHer, a volunteer-run non-profit community aimed at increasing diversity in tech by empowering members to develop their career and skills through events, workshops, networking and mentoring.
  Romain Dillet, Senior Writer, TechCrunch Romain attended EMLYON Business School, a leading French business school specialized in entrepreneurship. He covers many things from mobile apps with great design to fashion, Apple, AI and complex tech achievements. He also speaks at major tech conferences. He likes pop culture more than anything in the world.
  There are a hand full of free tickets left to participate but you must register, so sign up now before it’s too late.
0 notes
theinvinciblenoob · 7 years ago
Link
On May 25-26, hundreds of Europe’s best and brightest coders, hackers, tech makers and programmers will descend upon Paris to take part in TechCrunch Hackathon at VivaTech and compete for a €5,000 grand prize. But who are the people who will determine who gets that prize? Without further ado the judges for the TC Hackthon:
Nicolas Bacca, CTO, Ledger Nicolas worked on card systems for 5 years at Oberthur, a leader in embedded digital security, ultimately as R&D Solution Architect. He left Oberthur to launch his company, Ubinity, which was developing smartcard operating systems.
He finally co-founded BT Chip to develop an open standard, secure element based hardware wallet which eventually became the first version of the Ledger wallet.
    Charles Gorintin, co-founder & CTO, Alan Charles Gorintin is a French data science and engineering leader. He is a cofounder and CTO of Alan. Alan’s mission is to make it easy for people to be in great health.
Prior to co-founding Alan, Charles Gorintin was a data science leader at fast-growing social networks, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter, where he worked on anti-fraud, growth, and social psychology.
Gorintin holds a Masters degree in Mathematics and Computer Science from Ecole des Ponts ParisTech, a Masters degree in Machine Learning from ENS Paris-Saclay, and a Masters of Financial Engineering from UC Berkeley – Haas School of Business.
  Samantha Jérusalmy, Partner, Elaia Partners Samantha joined Elaia Partners in 2008. She began her career as a consultant at Eurogroup, a consulting firm specialized in organisation and strategy, within the Bank and Finance division. She then joined Clipperton Finance, a corporate finance firm dedicated to high-tech growth companies, before moving to Elaia Partners in 2008. She became an Investment Manager in 2011 then a Partner in 2014.
  Laure Némée, CTO, Leetchi Laure has spent her career in software development in various startups since 2000 after an engineer’s degree in computer science. She joined Leetchi at the very beginning in 2010 and has been Leetchi Group CTO since. She now works mainly on MANGOPAY, the payment service for sharing economy sites that was created by Leetchi.
      Benjamin Netter, CTO, Lendix Benjamin is the CTO of Lendix, the leading SME lending platform in continental Europe. Learning to code at 8, he has been since then experimenting ways to rethink fashion, travel or finance using technology. In 2009, in parallel with his studies at EPITECH, he created one of the first French applications on Facebook (Questions entre amis), which was used by more than half a million users. In 2011, he won the Foursquare Global Hackathon by reinventing the travel guide with Tripovore. In 2014, he launched Somewhere, an Instagram travel experiment acclaimed by the press. He is today reinventing with Lendix the way European companies get faster and simpler financing.
    And finally here are our hackmasters that will guide our hackers to success:
Emily Atkinson, Software Engineer / MD, DevelopHer UK Emily is a Software Engineer at Condé Nast Britain, and co-founder & Managing Director of women in tech network DevelopHer UK. Her technical role involves back-end services, infrastructure ops and tooling, site reliability and back-end product. Entering tech as an MSc Computer Science grad, she spent six years at online print startup MOO – working across the platform, including mobile web and product. As an advocate for diversity and inclusion in STEM & digital in 2016 Atkinson launched DevelopHer, a volunteer-run non-profit community aimed at increasing diversity in tech by empowering members to develop their career and skills through events, workshops, networking and mentoring.
  Romain Dillet, Senior Writer, TechCrunch Romain attended EMLYON Business School, a leading French business school specialized in entrepreneurship. He covers many things from mobile apps with great design to fashion, Apple, AI and complex tech achievements. He also speaks at major tech conferences. He likes pop culture more than anything in the world.
  There are a hand full of free tickets left to participate but you must register, so sign up now before it’s too late.
via TechCrunch
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