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Atlanta Tech Village Welcomes the Iron Yard!

February 19, 2014

We are excited to announce that the Iron Yard is bringing their code academy to Atlanta, and they've chosen to house it at Atlanta Tech Village. The Iron Yard teaches intensive, three-month courses that mentor students into professional junior-level programmers. The program goes far beyond tactical skills and teaches students to think like a software engineer, showing you how to learn so that you remain highly valuable for the rest of your career. The Iron Yard is all about creating professional-grade engineers who can tackle real-world problems on day one.Being housed at the Village offers a culture and ecosystem that perfectly aligns with the mission of the Iron Yard. With hundreds of founding teams of tech startups all under the same roof, students of the Iron Yard will learn both inside and outside the classroom. What's more, the Iron Yard guarantees you'll get a job after going through their program (yes, guarantees!). Each class runs in a three-month cohort. An array of courses are offered:Front End EngineeringLearn Front End Engineering using HTML, CSS and JavaScript and basic server-side tech. At the end of the class you’ll have the skills to create beautiful, fully functional websites and web applications.Rails EngineeringLearn Ruby on Rails, one of the most popular server-side frameworks in the world. At the end of class you’ll know how to build rock-solid servers, manage databases and know the basics of front end app development.Mobile EngineeringLearn iOS app development using Xcode 5 and a whole lot of Objective-C. At the end of the class you’ll have the skills to create beautiful, fully functional iOS apps and the foundation to pursue building Mac apps.SOUNDS AWESOME, RIGHT? SIGN UP TODAY!

Atlanta as a Top Startup Hub

February 13, 2014

Today's post is written by guest blogger, David Clements. David is a Village member who is currently working on his 4th startup, Restaurant Report – the first app that lets you pick restaurants with good grades on their health inspection before you eat out. Atlanta has the ninth largest Metropolitian Statistical Area in the United States. It has the world’s largest airport. Big companies like The Home Depot, UPS, Coca Cola, Delta Air Lines, and Aflac have their homes here.Atlanta is also a startup hub; and when it comes to startups the place to be is Atlanta Tech Village (the Village). There isn’t anything like the Village in the southeast. Established in 2013 by David Cummings, the Atlanta Tech village is a community of 138 companies and 373 members (as of January 20, 2014) inside a 103,000 square foot building in Atlanta (Buckhead).Almost all of the members are startup founders or early hires and most of the operations in the Village are tech oriented. The Village is really a campus of like-minded individuals designed for technology and technology-related companies.The Mission of Atlanta Tech Village is to support and inspire entrepreneurs to achieve success through a community to at promotes faster connections between talent, ideas and capital. David Cummings recently posted pictures of the new Standard Floor at the Atlanta Tech Village. It’s worth a look for anyone interested in seeing why it will be this type of innovation that moves Atlanta above other cities in the startup world.I think that Atlanta has a solid shot at making the top five list of cites for tech startups. But we’re going to have to earn it. To give you an idea of who we’re up against and what we’ve got to accomplish, I just got the 2013 numbers from Channa Brooks at NVCA before they were published anywhere else. The data below is from Thomson Reuters and the Money Tree Report by PwC.Top Cities for Tech Startups 2013 (based on number of deals)RankingTop Cities for Tech StartupsNumber of Deals1San Fran/Berkeley4912San Jose4733New York Metro3574Boston2005Los Angeles1466Great Lakes1277Washington Metroplex1258Seattle899Philadelphia7310Chicago7211Austin6012Denver5213Pittsburgh/Tristate5114San Diego Metro3415Atlanta32 Top Cities for Tech Startups 2013 (based on sum of equity invested in USD Mil)RankingTop Cities for Tech StartupsSum of Equity invested (USD Mil)1San Jose4,826.632San Fran/Berkeley4,380.553New York Metro2,494.144Boston1,254.165Washington Metroplex990.766Los Angeles848.727Seattle617.428Dallas540.059Atlanta375.8410Chicago362.72 So, depending on which of following two metrics you want to use, Atlanta was either 15th in the US or 9th in the US in 2013 for Tech Startups. Either way, to get into the top 5 we really have to increase the number of deals and the amount of equity invested. Atlanta is more than capable of this.

Data Science for Social Good

February 10, 2014

Today's guest post is written by Travis Turney, co-founder of Data Science ATL.Last year something incredible happened at the University of Chicago. Thirty-six aspiring data scientists spent their summer working in small teams on challenging real-world problems in education, health, energy, transportation, and more to directly benefit their local communities in need. They applied their coding and analytics skills under guidance of mentors from industry, academia, and the chief data scientist from the 2012 Obama campaign, Rayid Ghani (@rayidghani).These graduate and undergraduate fellows came from quantitative and computational fields spanning computer science, machine learning, statistics, and public policy. The results were simply amazing and changed the lives of the fellows forever as leaders in data science with the skills and passion to change their local communities for the better.This summer the Data Science for Social Good (DSSG) Summer Fellowship program is coming to Atlanta through the support of Georgia Tech and the City of Atlanta! DSSG will be a landmark event for data science in our city. Our hope is that Fellows, mentors, and project partners will be able to benefit from national exposure of their works through a demo day at the end of the summer and that the efforts of Fellows will be implemented by some of the project partners to benefit the Atlanta Metro Area. Also, our hope is that DSSG becomes an annual event going forward and builds into a premier showcase for Georgia Tech and Atlanta.The long term benefit of a program like this to Atlanta is to foster a concentration of data scientists and data-savvy business and non-profit leaders to come to and remain in Atlanta. These leaders are likely to become professors, non-profit leaders, or start new data-centric businesses to grow and foster economic development in Atlanta.If you are interested in applying to be a DSSG fellow, mentor, project partner, or just to be updated about future events please go to DSSG-ATL.io to join our mailing list.

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