logo
UNM alum competes for $1M, part of NFL draft

UNM alum competes for $1M, part of NFL draft

University of New Mexico Alumni Andreas Velten, co-founder of Ubicept is generating national recognition as part of TitletownTech's $1 Million Startup Draft hosted by Microsoft and the Green Bay Packers.
University of New Mexico alumus Andreas Velten, co-founder of Ubicept, is generating national recognition as part of TitletownTech's $1 Million Startup Draft hosted by Microsoft and the Green Bay Packers.
After competing against 1,000 other startups from across the nation, Ubicept, which operates out of Boston and Madison, Wisconsin, emerged as one of seven finalists.
On April 24, the Startup Draft will be broadcasted live, and the competition winner will be announced.
expand
Ubicept's Sebastian Bauer and Tristan Swedish meeting with a potential partner.
Courtesy of TitletownTech
The event is part of a collaboration with venture capital firm TitletownTech, a partnership between the Green Bay Packers and Microsoft, which has supported more than 30 startups since 2017.
Albuquerque Business First talked to Microsoft General Manager of U.S. Philanthropies, Mike Egan to gain insights into the collaborative effort and Microsoft's activities in the New Mexico region.
According to Egan, about a decade ago, Microsoft Vice Chair and President Brad Smith told him the company needed to think about community engagement on a less traditional level by abandoning the idea that New York and Los Angeles are the only places where technology ecosystems can be built.
The company chose six places originally, including El Paso and Juarez, where the company started the Bridge Accelerator program.
Last year, in an effort to expand, the company set out to find a nonprofit in every state and allow them to be a TechSpark fellow, and receive funding and resources from Microsoft.
Don't miss the latest Albuquerque business headlines! Sign up here for ABF newsletters and make sure to download the app.
In New Mexico, it's the Mycelia Foundation, based in Las Cruces, which aims to bridge the digital divide, or improve internet access and digital literacy through education and promotion of better rural broadband access.
'This can happen anywhere. And it's happening in little Green Bay, Wisconsin. … I love the creative thought here, that you can mix these two worlds together. … The two combine in many, many ways,' Egan said of the event's intersection of sports and technology.
Business First also spoke with TitletownTech Managing Partner Craig Dickman, who is going into his 13th season as part of the Green Bay Packers' board.
Prior to TitletownTech, Dickman founded a company called Breakthrough Fuel, which managed the energy used to move products. The company, based in Green Bay, scaled into 47 countries before it was ultimately sold.
Dickman, through his experiences, has learned the business of sport, which helped him as he worked on the board of directors for American Family Field that oversees the stadium that the Brewers operate in, or the time that that I owned a minor league baseball team.
'I've really been fascinated by the business of sports, but more by all business models,' he said.
Dickman said this 'unusual' partnership between the Packers and Microsoft, is both bring strong characteristics and credibility to the early venture space.
Founders, according to Dickman, might be naturally drawn to brands which are well known and have trusted marketplace engagement from viewers. The real magic, he added, is the engagement of Microsoft, which can help startups work through business problems and offer other valuable insights.
'I think what made this one special was that the NFL draft was coming to Green Bay, and so we really wanted to take advantage of the excitement and kind of the attention that was going to be focused on Green Bay this coming weekend, to highlight what we're doing at TitletownTech. The startup draft became a really, a really elegant way to do that,' Dickman explained.
Velten did not respond to a request for comment by the time of publication.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Apple needs an AI magic pill, but I'm not desperate for it on macOS
Apple needs an AI magic pill, but I'm not desperate for it on macOS

Digital Trends

time2 hours ago

  • Digital Trends

Apple needs an AI magic pill, but I'm not desperate for it on macOS

Over the past few months, all eyes have been fixated on Apple and what the company is going to do with AI. The pressure is palpable and well deserved. Google has demonstrated some really compelling AI tools, especially with Project Astra and Mariner, that turn your phone into something like an all-knowing, forever-present digital companion. The likes of Microsoft, OpenAI, Claude, and even Amazon have shown some next-gen AI chops that make Siri feel like an old prototype. But there is a fine distinction between using AI on phones and how they flesh out on a computing machine, like a MacBook Air. Recommended Videos You don't really talk to an assistant like Siri on a desktop I often run into scenarios where AI is useful on a phone, like Visual Intelligence, which can make sense of the world around you based on what you see through the camera feed. The Mac doesn't really need it, primarily because it lacks a world-facing camera. And second, you can't ergonomically point the Mac's webcam at an object — especially in a public place — like you would with a phone in your hand. But the problem with the whole 'Apple must do AI better' is suited well for mobile devices, and not really Macs, which rely on a fundamentally different mode of input-output, and how we get work done in apps and software. I've used my fair share of AI-first Copilot+ laptops running Windows, and I feel strongly that Apple's AI efforts don't need an urgent focus on macOS, as much as they do on mobile devices, for a few reasons. The Mac is already well fed Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, in the latest edition of his PowerOn newsletter, argued that Perplexity is a nice target for Apple to scoop up an AI lab of its own and get its hands on a ready-made AI stack. Perplexity's answering engine is pretty rewarding, it's not too expensive (by Apple standards), and it works beautifully on iPhones. Over the past couple of quarters, the company has launched a whole bunch of integrations across Telegram and WhatsApp, Deep Research mode, a reasoning AI model, a shopping hub in partnership with Amazon, media generation and image uploads, search through audio and video files, among others. There are just two problems, especially with accessing Perplexity on a Mac. First, it can already do everything in its role via the Mac app and web dashboard, so an integration at a deeper level with Mac won't be solving too many computing problems. Second, ChatGPT is already integrated deeply within Siri and the Apple stack, and it's only a matter of time before both of them step up. Let's be honest here. Perplexity is a cool product, but not exactly revolutionary in the sense that it can elevate the macOS experience significantly. Enterprise AI is a different beast, but for an average user, every AI tool out there — Gemini, ChatGPT, Copilot, Claude, or Perplexity — exists as its own web tool (or app) where you truly get the best out of it. So, what about integrations? Well, they would depend on the tools at hand. A huge chunk of the computing market either relies on Microsoft and its Office tools or Google's Workspace products, such as Docs, Drive, Sheets, and more. From Windows to Office, Copilot is now everywhere. Similar is the situation with Gemini and Google software. Now, millions of Mac users actually use these tools on a daily basis, and Apple doesn't offer a viable replacement of its own. Moreover, there isn't a chance that Google will allow Apple's AI to penetrate deeper into its Workspace than Gemini. Microsoft won't do any different with Copilot and Office. Plus, it's hard to imagine an external AI working better in Docs or PowerPoint than Gemini and Copilot, respectively. The space is already tight, but more importantly, well-fed. And let's not forget, OpenAI and its GPT stack are very much baked at the heart of macOS. If Apple wanted to build integrations, OpenAI offers arguably the most advanced AI tech stack out there. Adding any more AI at the system level would only add to the confusion for an average Mac user, without solving any real problems. The space of an extra AI player on the Mac is tighter for another reason: Apple's Foundation Model framework, which works on-device as well as in cloud-linked format, but with utmost privacy. Apple says it will allow developers to build a 'personal intelligence system that is integrated deeply into iPhone, iPad, and Mac, and enables powerful capabilities across language, images, actions, and personal context.' In a nutshell, Apple's own foundation models are available to developers so that they can build AI experiences in their apps. The best part? It's free. It's not nearly as powerful as the models from OpenAI or Google, but for getting work done locally — like cross-app workflow, intelligent file search, and more — they should come in handy without any privacy scares. The productivity question The M4 MacBook Air is my daily driver these days, and it's a fantastic machine. And I use AI tools heavily on a daily basis. Yet, I have never felt macOS to be an AI bottleneck for me. Every AI tool that I rely on is either already integrated within the software of my choice or available as its dedicated app or website. Yet, the whole notion of turning a product into an AI product baffles me. It makes sense for a phone, like the Pixel 9, but not so much for a laptop. I have tested five Copilot+ Windows machines so far. Yet, the core benefits they offer — snappy performance, instant wake, and long battery life — have little to do with user-facing AI. I was able to use Gemini or Copilot just as fine on a regular Windows laptop as I was able to extract their benefits on a Copilot+ machine with a minimum 45 TOPS AI capability. The Mac is no slouch, and interestingly, all the AI tools in my productivity workflow can be accessed just fine on macOS as they are available on Windows. There are a few exclusive perks, like Windows Recall, but they are not a must-have for the average computer user out there. And let's not forget that Apple already has the foundations ready, and we are going to see the results next year. When Apple introduced the M4 MacBook Air, the company focused on its AI chops, but what flew under the radar was Apple's App Intents Framework, which integrates effortlessly with Apple Intelligence. In simple terms, any app — whether AI or not — can embrace the benefits of on-device AI processing, such as awareness of on-screen content, in a native macOS environment. Now, it's valid to criticize Apple for its AI missteps. I am at a stage where I use Gemini everywhere on my iPhone, from the lock screen widgets to the dedicated app, instead of Siri. But that's not the situation with Macs. For my workflow, and a whole bunch of Mac users' out there, they're not gasping for a next-gen Apple AI. What they need is a reliable machine to run the AI of their choice. Even the cheapest Mac can meet those requirements.

OpenAI cofounder Greg Brockman says vibe coding has taken away some of the fun parts of being an engineer
OpenAI cofounder Greg Brockman says vibe coding has taken away some of the fun parts of being an engineer

Business Insider

time3 hours ago

  • Business Insider

OpenAI cofounder Greg Brockman says vibe coding has taken away some of the fun parts of being an engineer

OpenAI's cofounder said vibe coding has left human engineers to do quality control. On an episode of Stripe's "Cheeky Pint" podcast uploaded last week, OpenAI's cofounder and president, Greg Brockman, said that AI coding will only get better. But until then, it's taking away some parts of software engineering that he said are enjoyable. "What we're going to see is AIs taking more and more of the drudgery, more of this like pain, more of the parts that are not very fun for humans," Brockman said. He added, "So far, the vibe coding has actually taken a lot of code that is actually quite fun." He said that the state of AI coding has left humans to review and deploy code, which is "not fun at all." Brockman added that he is "hopeful" for progress in these other areas, to the point that we end up with a " full AI coworker" that could handle delegated tasks. Changing engineering landscape Using AI to write code, dubbed " vibe coding" by OpenAI cofounder Andrej Karpathy, has skyrocketed this year. Engineers and novices alike are using tools like Microsoft's Copilot, Cursor, and Windsurf to write code, develop games, and even build websites from scratch. Vibe coding has already started changing how much Big Tech and venture capital value people with software engineering expertise. In March, Y Combinator's CEO, Gary Tan, said that vibe coding is set to transform the startup landscape. He said that what would've once taken "50 or 100" engineers to build can now be accomplished by a team of 10, "when they are fully vibe coders." Earlier this month, Business Insider reported that AI coding is no longer a nice-to-have skill. Job listings from Visa, Reddit, DoorDash, and a slew of startups showed that the companies explicitly require vibe coding experience or familiarity with AI code generators like Cursor and Bolt. Still, some in tech circles say leaning on it heavily is short-sighted and the job is being trivialized. Bob McGrew, the former chief research officer at OpenAI, said that while product managers can make "really cool prototypes" with vibe coding, human engineers will still be brought in to "rewrite it from scratch." "If you are given a code base that you don't understand — this is a classic software engineering question — is that a liability or is it an asset? Right? And the classic answer is that it's a liability," McGrew said of software made with vibe coding. GitHub's CEO, Thomas Dohmke, said that vibe coding may also slow down experienced coders. On a podcast episode released last week, he said that a worst-case scenario is when a developer is forced to provide feedback in natural language when they already know how to do it in a programming language. That would be "basically replacing something that I can do in three seconds with something that might potentially take three minutes or even longer," Dohmke said.

5 must-use Microsoft Edge browser features to save time and money
5 must-use Microsoft Edge browser features to save time and money

Fast Company

time5 hours ago

  • Fast Company

5 must-use Microsoft Edge browser features to save time and money

You'd be forgiven for forgetting that there was a time when Microsoft Edge was basically the web browser that opened when you accidentally clicked a link that didn't default to opening in Chrome or Firefox. But something shifted in 2020 when Microsoft switched Edge's digital drivetrain to Chromium, the technology that powers the Google Chrome browser and others like it. Edge suddenly shed its awkward skin and emerged as a genuinely competent—nay, pleasant—browsing experience. And if you use Edge during your workday, there are some wonderfully useful time-savers built right into its core. Here are the ones I find most excellent. Split Screen: 2 for the price of one Want to browse to your heart's content while keeping an eye on your email? Try a neat little Edge feature called 'Split Screen.' Click on the three little dots in the upper-right corner and select this menu option, and the browser will split into two panes and you can open different sites. It even handles multiple tabs for each pane as well. It's perfect for always-on email, social media, or anything you need to keep a constant watch over without disrupting your main workflow. It's like having a mini-browser within your browser and is especially helpful if you're working off a laptop without multiple monitors to plug into. Collections: Your digital idea board If you often find yourself researching something, opening a few dozen tabs, and then realizing you'll need to revisit all of them later . . . then you and I are kindred, unorganized spirits. Yes, bookmarks exist, but they're meant to be reasonably permanent and they're a bit clunky for quick idea gathering. 'Collections,' on the other hand, act like digital project managers for you to reference later. Click the three-dot menu and choose Collections to get started. You can drag and drop links, images, even snippets of text into a themed collection. Planning a trip? Researching a new gadget? Building a shopping list? Collections keep it all tidy and easily accessible. Imagine: actual organization! Performance Settings: Nobody likes a laggy browser Even the best browser can bog down the beefiest system when you have a gazillion tabs open and a dozen extensions running, and you're streaming 4K resolution video. Edge's 'Performance' settings section is a quiet hero. It aims to save CPU, RAM, and battery by saving system resources, including a handy feature that puts inactive tabs to sleep. It doesn't close them, but rather simply pauses them, freeing up resources for stuff you're actively working on. You can enable and tweak various efficiency features in Settings > System and Performance. Your CPU fan will thank you. Web Capture: Screenshots made simple If ever you're feeling down about the state of the world, just know that it's never been a better, easier era to grab screenshots. So there's that. What once involved a delicate dance of Print Screen, pasting into Paint, cropping, and then realizing you missed a pixel is now as easy as right-clicking in the open space of a web page, selecting 'Screenshot,' and grabbing what you need. You can grab a specific area, the full page, or exactly what you see in the browser. You can annotate directly on the capture, too. Shopping Features: Save some bucks, save some time I'm not usually one for built-in shopping assistants, but Edge's are surprisingly unobtrusive and genuinely helpful. If you're on a site that sells stuff, look for a blue price tag icon to appear on the right-hand side of the address bar. Click it, and the feature can automatically find coupons, compare prices, show you historical price trends, and let you track the item and get alerted if it goes on sale. It's like having a miniature, nonjudgmental personal shopper living in your browser.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store