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MetaCenter Global Week a great start – now what?

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Well, that was fun.

It has been less than 24 hours since Orlando’s tech industry shut down Church Street Station, dancing along with the popular DJ Lost Frequencies into the night, unwinding to cap off three days of the inaugural MetaCenter Global Week conference.

But I have to say I am already looking forward to seeing what MCGW has in store for next year.

I know, I know.

It’s too early to start thinking about that too deeply.

Or is it?

Sure, let’s give the organizing team some time to breathe. They pulled off what I consider a productive and potentially formative week for Orlando’s tech community.

However, speaking to its leaders and learning of the vision for this event, there is a lot to be excited about.

Before we go too far into next year, however, we should take a moment and acknowledge the efforts of the teams that put this together.

The people behind Innovate Orlando, Synapse Florida and Immerse Global Summit put together a solid conference. The event brought some hard-hitting industry folks into the community alongside the talent we already have.

Just by casual observation, probably around half, if not more, of the speakers had their base here in Orlando or Central Florida.

That’s a not-so-subtle way of showing those from outside of this community that we do have subject matter experts in some of the more exciting emerging technologies around.

That will help build Orlando’s reputation in tech.

Meanwhile, kudos, as well, to Orlando’s Waterfall Ventures. That group planned and organized two nights of fun music events, starting with an open mic live band on Wednesday and into the DJ set on Thursday.

Let’s not forget how much of a connection there is between music and tech.

Of course, the obvious example has some parallels with what’s going on here.

In 1987, South by Southwest debuted in Austin, Texas, as a conference meant to showcase the city’s dynamic music scene.

For the initial event, attendance sat at about 700.

But that number was enough to convince the leaders to bring it back another year.

You know where that led.

In 1994, tech was added in the form of the SXSW Interactive Festival.

In 2022, Year 35, the event drew about 350,000 to the central Texas city situated less than 200 miles from Houston, Dallas and San Antonio.

I am not sure of the official numbers when it comes to attendees for MetaCenter Global Week, which is held within 230 miles of Miami, Tampa, Daytona, Jacksonville and the Space Coast.

But I do know that Wednesday felt like it attracted more traffic than Tuesday, which seemed busier than Thursday … until the block party, that is.

What a cap to the week that was.

Hundreds of exhausted conference attendees, exhibitors and supporters brought some energy to a party that likely had enough just with the performers.

Before Lost Frequencies, the rapper MIMS – yes, the “This is Why I’m Hot” guy – started things out.

At the block party, it was refreshing to see the tech community, from executives to developers to artists and government tech leads, nodding along, let their collective hair down and celebrate Orlando tech.

Already, I’m told that the city and county were thrilled with Year 1 results. In addition, other community leaders and giants like Meta and Google have reached out to send their kudos.

That’s a good sign for the potential sustainability of the event.

A sustainable event of this kind run by Orlando’s tech leaders is one thing that has been missing from this region since I arrived in 2014.

It’s exciting that this could be the one that sticks.

Orlando exec named to national VRARA leadership position

A leading Orlando tech official has been named a top executive for a national consortium of advocates of augmented and virtual reality.

John Cunningham, a longtime Orlando-based tech executive, has been named the chief operating officer for the national Virtual Reality/Augmented Reality Association.

Cunningham made the announcement on LinkedIn Tuesday evening, breaking the news at a post-event party for MetaCenter Global Week’s first official day in Orlando.

“This appointment is as much of a recognition of this community and illustrates how we can be a leader across the world in VR and AR,” said Cunningham, who most recently led Unity’s Florida-based operations and efforts.

Across the VRARA, Central Florida’s chapter has been one of the more active ones.

The region has long been known as one of the more cutting edge areas in several industries that implement VR, including gaming, defense and others.

MetaCenter Global Week has brought together Orlando’s tech community for a weeklong showcase of technology in the region and across the globe.

Cunningham said has enjoyed the event because it gives local companies a chance to network and show off what they do.

“We have a lot of great small companies that have never worked on a global stage,” he said. “We needed this catalyst but we have work to do.”

Moving forward, Cunningham said his goal with the VRARA is to offer other chapters around the globe a pathway to succeed.

“We are just going to keep on building it,” he said. “We want to continue what we have been doing here and grow it because it brings value to the community.”

At MetaCenter Global Week, Orlando tech leader talks emerging tech, education

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The technologies are not necessarily new.

Gaming has been around for decades, as has artificial intelligence.

However, Luis Garcia says that these technologies along with the emergence of the Metaverse concept offers an unprecedented opportunity for the education industry.

“The promise of the digitization of education has been interesting,” Garcia said during his one-man panel at MetaCenter Global Week on Wednesday.

The three-day event has brought in dozens of expert speakers on a variety of technology topics, including AI, gaming, virtual and augmented reality, and many more across a variety of industries to downtown Orlando.

Garcia was one of many local experts able to share the stage with others from major companies like Meta, Google and others.

He said he appreciated that his speech had an overflow crowd.

“It was refreshing to see so many people interested in listening to a talk about education, said Garcia, a former Full Sail University VP who recently became president of the local AI company PETE, which was formerly known as Senseily.

Garcia has been an education advocate for years.

At Full Sail, he helped develop curriculum for a time and then helped establish Full Sail Labs.

“The experience of learning doesn’t have to be limited to a classroom,” he said. “A learner can have a lesson in a classroom then go to a small lab that is gamified to master that knowledge.”

While gaming and artificial intelligence has certainly matured to a point where its use cases for several industries like education have already been proven, the wild card might be the Metaverse.

The technology has been emergent but has drawn criticism from some who say it may have limited appeal in some circles.

Garcia doesn’t disagree but he also believes the concept will survive those doubters.

“Regardless of whether it will be what people think it will be, it’s undeniable it will be a technology we can (use) in education,” he said.

PICTURES: Opening night at MetaCenter Global Week

One of the biggest events in recent Orlando tech history is underway.

It all started with a mixer.

Here are some sights from the MetaCenter Global Week’s opening night party, which kicked off the three-day event.

Orlando tech experts set to take stage alongside national leaders

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For the next 3 days, MetaCenter Global Week will send experts from some of the biggest tech companies in the U.S. on stage to push conversations forward about emerging technologies.

However, on alongside these industry leaders will be a healthy dose of Orlando-based experts who, collectively, will show off Central Florida’s deep tech ecosystem.

It’s a chance to plant a flag globally, illustrating Orlando’s emergence as a tech hub, industry leaders say.

“This is a testament to the incredible talent we have in our city,” said former Full Sail VP Luis Garcia, now president at AI-powered learning platform PETE. “It’s an exciting opportunity for the world to witness our innovation and expertise firsthand.”

A scan of the agenda shows Orlando companies and experts leading or sitting on a good portion of panels during the event.

These panels involve emerging technologies like generative AI, extended reality, clean energy, sports tech, medical training and digital twins.

Oh, yeah: and that’s just on the first day.

Garcia will sit on a panel that tackles how artificial intelligence will play a role in the future of education.

“This speaks volumes about our city’s potential to evolve into a major innovation hub, underlining the depth of talent and expertise Orlando possesses,” Garcia said.

Ever since the business community emerged from the coronavirus pandemic, there has been a more concerted effort to unite the tech ecosystem.

In fact, that’s one of the motivating factors behind Innovate Orlando’s creation this year.

“This tech community. has always had a wealth of untapped potential,” said Joshua Walker, founder of Black Orlando Tech. “But thanks to the recent unification of local tech leaders, we now have a platform to make a real statement.”

Walker said he is hopeful that he will find other groups in Orlando during the week who want to partner with Black Orlando Tech to create meaningful diversity in the sector.

However, he also wants to contribute to a message that shows outside tech leaders that Orlando has the ability to become a thriving tech hub.

“I want locals to leave the event feeling empowered, knowing that we have all the talent and resources we need to create world-changing innovation,” he said. “I want visitors to leave the event feeling excited about Orlando’s potential as a tech hub, and confident that their investment would be well-placed here.”

Orlando has long been recognized as a leader in modeling and simulation. 

The region is, after all, the home of the modeling, simulation and training arms of all but one of the major Armed Forces.

Its ability to regularly host conferences also brings some top military brass to town each year for I/ITSEC.

That high-profile conference brings businesses that show off advanced technologies as they try to land military contracts,.

However, beyond modeling and simulation, it has recently become more known in other emerging technologies.

Doing that has been seamless because skills needed to build concepts like the Metaverse and digital twins has been here for years, said Carolina Cruz-Neira.

Adding in collaboration between government, education and industry results in a leadership position potential for Orlando, she said.

“We are a microcosm of how partnerships are critical to the future of society,” said Cruz-Neira, Agere Chair Professor in the Department of Computer Science. “As a region, we are one of the best partners in the nation for strong industries to come and (partner) their expertise with ours towards a better future.”

CEO Jason Siegel of the Greater Orlando Sports Commission said MetaCenter Global Week should be special.

Not only will the event draw talent to Orlando.

It also gives the region a showcase – to both outsiders and those who live here – of Orlando’s deep talent pool.

In addition, the high-profile event should be just the beginning for many of these local companies and organizations.

“To be able to share that experience with the incredible talent pool that already exists here is a wonderful opportunity,” said Siegel, who will lead a sports tech panel on Tuesday. “It should not be lost on anybody that, at the end of the day, when you are doing business across multiple platforms, the chance to be face-to-face and in person are crucial. Those memories and relationships and experiences can create a foundation for wonderful outcomes in the future.”

HERE’S THE REST OF THE SERIES

“INNOVATE ORLANDO PROVIDES CONTEXT TO CITY’S TECH NARRATIVE”

“INNOVATE ORLANDO’S TENX TECH ADDS ‘BIG BUMP’ TO ATTENDEES’ REACH”

“CEO: METACENTER GLOBAL WEEK A SIGN ‘WE’VE MADE IT’”

“MGW NEEDED – AND RECEIVED – CITY, COUNTY BUY IN”

“DYER: MGW A SHOWCASE OF ORLANDO TO THE WORLD”

“WHAT COMMUNITY LEADERS SAY ABOUT METACENTER GLOBAL WEEK”

Adelson: MetaCenter Global Week to be ‘exhausting’ but ‘significant’

SERIES PROUDLY SUPPORTED BY:

Let’s just call it ‘Orlando tech week’ – 2 groups host hackathons

All right, I’m just going to do it on my own: Orlando Tech Week is officially underway.

No, it’s not an official declaration.

There is no proclamation from Buddy Dyer to go with this article.

But, while most anticipate what MetaCenter Global Week will look like and what it could mean to Orlando’s tech community, dozens of tech professionals and advocates have spent their weekend building.

Two hackathons have been playing out near downtown.

First, over at Credo Conduit is DataKind, a “tech for good” hackathon that will tackle social issues, including food insecurity, affordable housing funding gaps and early childhood education.

Organizer Caitlin Augustin told Orlando Tech News that she was hooked when she learned to use her coding and technical skills for good.

“DataKind hackathons always amaze me,” she said. Dozens of people come together with a common goal and always have such an energy and a desire to make an impact.”

You can read more about the HACKATHON HERE.

Meanwhile, about a mile away at the Dr. Phillips Academic Commons, they are having a spooky time building Halloween-themed games.

Organizer Kunal Patel has been one of the leading supporters of hackathons in the community, with his Indienomicon Foundation hosting several events per year.

Here are some photos from the events, courtesy of Steven Seidman (All Hallows Jam) and Caitlin Augustin (DataKind).

Adelson: MetaCenter Global Week to be ‘exhausting’ but ‘significant’

David Adelson doesn’t pull any punches when he talks about MetaCenter Global Week.

The event, which starts Monday, will become a huge moment in Orlando’s tech timeline.

It is a chance to illustrate to those outside of the tech industry just how deep The City Beautiful’s innovation community goes.

“We want to take our talent and Orlando professionals and give them a stage in our own hometown to tell global brands what we do,” he said. “That was the entire intent of MetaCenter Global Week.”

The event kicks off with a networking event on Monday then will send more than 125 speakers who specialize in technology onto stages throughout a three-day span.

GENERAL ADMISSION TICKET LINK

VIP REGISTRATION LINK

Before the big day, we sat down with Adelson to talk more about this community, what preparations have been like and what he’s excited about.

ORLANDO TECH NEWS: This event partners Innovate Orlando with Synapse Orlando and Immerse Global Summit. What are you most excited about for the week? 

DAVID ADELSON: I want to hear the reaction of the community. I want them to know we are here. We need to take technology and innovation here seriously. It lives here now and it will grow.

OTN: How much of a buy-in did you get from the Orlando tech community? 

DA: It has been driven by the community. They have leaned into it and accelerated the messaging about what this conference actually is. The journey has been a big lift but it’s a lift that i know is going to pay off for our community longterm.

OTN: So the plan is to bring this event back in the future?

DA: We intend to do this every year. We except to continue to grow this and compound it and watch it get bigger and bigger. The community has pushed this forward and this is our community’s show. It’s a long-tertm process.

GENERAL ADMISSION TICKET LINK

VIP REGISTRATION LINK

OTN: How important was it to get this rolling in 2023? 

DA: Conferences like this usually take well over a year to prepare and we did it in five months. I didn’t want to miss the opportunity to provide a conference of this scale to this community. I didn’t want to wait another year. We have put in a lot of work to get where we are.

OTN: And a multi-day conference was important, right? 

DA: We could have done a one-day conference but if you look at what I talked about five months ago, and what this would be – nighttime acts, arts and entertainment – I’m bringing it, man. It’s showing up. The momentum we have been building comes to a head next week and we get to increase that momentum and put ourselves out there on the proper global stage.

OTN: How big of a deal can this be when looked back upon in the future?

DA: We are looking at how, not just how 1+1 can equal 3 but how can it equal 5? If we all come together because of the momentum we already have, this conference is an opportunity for people not that familiar with the tech industry to see what Orlando tech has to offer. I’m talking about people not necessarily part of the tech scene. This conference is another opportunity for these other brands to see how large of a tech ecosystem we have here. 

GENERAL ADMISSION TICKET LINK

VIP REGISTRATION LINK

OTN: So this is not just an event for Orlando tech, right? 

DA: I’m excited to see not just our tech brethren but others who don’t know what or who we are and get to experience a small taste of what we have to offer. Outside of our TenX events, this is the first real action item that Innovate Orlando took on and if it says anything it’s that we are not just talking about tech, we are demonstratring and creating action for this community.

OTN: Should be a busy week.

DA: It will be an exhausting week for a lot of people but a significant one. It will be special if everyone comes on board.

“INNOVATE ORLANDO PROVIDES CONTEXT TO CITY’S TECH NARRATIVE”

“INNOVATE ORLANDO’S TENX TECH ADDS ‘BIG BUMP’ TO ATTENDEES’ REACH”

“CEO: METACENTER GLOBAL WEEK A SIGN ‘WE’VE MADE IT’”

“MGW NEEDED – AND RECEIVED – CITY, COUNTY BUY IN”

“DYER: MGW A SHOWCASE OF ORLANDO TO THE WORLD”

“WHAT COMMUNITY LEADERS SAY ABOUT METACENTER GLOBAL WEEK”

SERIES PROUDLY SUPPORTED BY:

‘Tech for good’ hackathon returns to Orlando two years later

When Caitlin Augustin signed up for her first DataKind hackathon in 2016, she was pushing forward a family tradition of volunteerism.

At the time, she was a University of Miami graduate student studying environmental science and policy after receiving her bachelor’s degree in industrial engineering. 

The thought that she could use her skillset to make a difference intrigued her.

“The idea that we could use our coding and technical skills to make a change in our neighborhoods completely hooked me as a volunteer,” said Augustin, who returned to Orlando in 2019 after graduate school in Miami and a stint in New York. “DataKind hackathons always amaze me. Dozens of people come together with a common goal and always have such an energy and a desire to make an impact.”

DataKind returns to Orlando on Friday, with the three-day event set for Credo Conduit (more details below).

The event will tackle three specific problems: food insecurity, funding gaps in affordable housing and investment in early childhood education and care through data.

DataKind’s ‘tech for good’ returns to Orlando

DataKind’s last Orlando event was held in 2021. VISIT DATAKIND WEBSITE

That hackathon created tools to address the urban digital divide, policy change and gender equity.

A city grant made that virtual event possible for DataKind.

“Working with a geographic focus in mind, we knew the problems we wanted to focus on were local problems and ones where a solution could have a positive impact on the community,” said Augustin, now VP for product and programs at DataKind.

About 11 years ago, DataKind founder Jake Portway received an overwhelming response to an initial call for a DataKind hackathon.

The idea was for programmers and technologists to volunteer to solve a civic problem within one weekend.

The thought was that people wanted to use their skills for good but did not know how to do so.

The so-called “DataDives” provided an outlet.

“DataKind harnessed a lot of the early 2010s excitement around hackathons and coding challenges,” Augustin said. “But they make the outcomes about social impact, rather than just cash prizes or corporate growth as is so common.”

The event allows those with limited resources some benefits.

For one, the tools will allow them to explore data.

In addition, they can grow the civic ecosystem and develop meaningful technology through rapid prototyping and analysis.

“With a problem and a collaboration identified, we felt strongly about finding the right philanthropic partners to help support building the solution,” Augustin said.

JASKY Foundation involved

That’s where local tech leaders Jacques and Yvonne Fu became involved.

They supported the “tech for good” effort through their JASKY Foundation.

“If we can use technology in innovative ways to solve our most complex problems, we can be an example for others to follow,” Jacques Fu said. “Central Florida, demographically, looks a lot like the rest of the country.”

Fu has been on Orlando’s technology scene ever since 2014 as one of the first Stax employees, then known as Fattmerchant.

“If we can run pilot programs that make an impact here, we solve problems in our local community but can also take them across the country,” he said.

How you can help

CLICK HERE FOR TICKETS

Augustin said the community can help in a number of ways, beyond amplifying the message before the event.

At the event, volunteers of all categories – developers, analysts, engineers, community perspective, researchers, testers – would help the event go smoothly.

Beyond that, DataKind could use donations and continual engagement with the projects, Augustin said.

DataKind, a global nonprofit, has been hosting hackathons since its creation in 2012 in New York City. It’s an entirely virtual organization and collaborates with local groups – in this case, Orlando Devs and JASKY – to host events.

A collaborative project with the American Red Cross provided insights into electrical fires. 

The effort led to a bigger project in Chicago.

Then, the group created a formal tool alongside the Red Cross that helps prevent and react to electrical fires.

“This hackathon is the start of a journey,” Augustin said. “Rather than hacking a weekend and having no path forward, DataKind can keep the work moving forward.”

“The most amazing part is you can show how data can work with existing great work others are doing,” she said. 

This article written in partnership with:

Lockheed Martin rolls out digital twin tech for flight trainers

Lockheed Martin’s Orlando operations rolled out digital twin technology last week that will help track and diagnose anomalies in flight trainers before they are produced.

The technology will help the company cut the time needed to build high-fidelity flight simulators for its clients.

What once took years can now be done within months. from years to just two to three months.

The ARISE simulation environment has made its debut for the company at its Missiles and Fire Control site in Orlando, with the plan to ultimately implement it across the entire company by January of 2025.

The system was a nationwide development program, primarily staffed in Dallas and Orlando.

“We collaboratively optimize the way our systems work in a joint all-domain operations environment, and that’s going to provide an enhanced benefit to the warfighter as they meet new and evolving threats,” said Doug Juul, Director of ARISE Simulation & Data Analytics Products, in a press release.

That means simulators headed for Lockheed Martin’s clients can identify, diagnose and potentially repair issues they might have much quicker, potentially cutting delivery time and customer satisfaction. 

The suite of tools will include data analytics, mission software, hardware and modelng, and simulation.

The digital twin technology and software allow testing on the actual environment a product will be set in.

“Data analytics is saving thousands of hours of analysis time by using Machine Learning on Petabytes of data that would otherwise would have relied on human eyes to sift through the data,” a Lockheed Martin official who is an architect of ARISE Data Analytics said.

The program includes a storage database that also analyzes real flight test data.

Incubator manager helps entrepreneurs prioritize mental health, grow their business

Written by UCF Business Incubation Program Communications

A few years ago, Kelly Daubach had a turning point in her life. A transformation of her values and what she wanted to do.

At the time, she was incredibly successful in her career, growing her division of Lincare Holdings from five people to more than 300. She had a national team of employees working for her. She was on the “Specialty Services Team,” a select group of key executives developing and acquiring new services and products.

Her life was on the fast track.

Until it wasn’t.

“I burnt out mentally twice and was hospitalized,” Daubach says. “I was turning parts of me on and off, trying to be a certain way in this corporate role and being a different person at home and it was literally draining my battery.

“I went through a personal transformation to be truly healthy, and I was passionate about living my truth,” she adds. “I then spent time growing that truth into opportunities without having to turn off and on any type of personality.”

As is the story with so many people, hardships turn into prosperity. That was the case with Daubach.

It led her to start ANU Coaching in 2021 and set a course to work with other business leaders and executives, teaching them how to find their path and ensuring they understand mental health is key to any entrepreneur’s success.

“I came to a place where I was working in servant leadership helping people and I wanted to do it more,” Daubach says.

That desire led her to apply for and recently join the UCF Business Incubation Program as a program manager, overseeing the Mentorship, Leadership and First Customer programs.

 “Today, I am first and foremost a community advocate and liaison for economic development within the brand of the UCF Business Incubation Program. How grateful I am to be welcomed and embraced by our leadership. I’ve never worked for a more collaborative, ‘How can I help?’ type of organization.”

Daubach came to Orlando via Miami and Kansas City, after graduating from Eastern Illinois University. She thought she wanted to be a dietitian when she was in college, but really that was her first seed planted in the now-embraced passion for human wellbeing. She was rejected for a position in St. Louis after graduating but was offered the role of medical nutrition specialist in Kansas City.

She took it, saying “I’ve always been someone to follow opportunities.”

The move paid off as she was continually promoted at the company, growing her division, and becoming a key executive for Lincare, then serving a key role in strategic positioning for Life Line Screening.

It was also where she met her husband Brent Daubach, who works for Cadence Strategies and has a track record of helping communities build and expand sporting/public venues. He did that first for the St. Louis Cardinals, then KC Royals, Miami Marlins, and now in Orlando working with Camping World Stadium, Exploria Stadium and the Dr. Phillips Center for Performing Arts.

They have two children and you can often find them experiencing the outdoors – or at some type of sporting event.

“Even though I grew up a Cardinals fan, we’re Rays fans now,” Daubach says. “We love going to the game. My brother-in-law, Brian Daubach, played for the Red Sox and now my son’s dream is to play Major League Baseball.  All while my daughter is pursuing her dreams in STEM and the ARTS at Howard Middle School.  Orlando truly offers us so many opportunities to be the REAL version of ourselves.”

While the couple has lived in Orlando for a decade, she joined the UCF Business Incubation Program in May. It was a logical step in her journey and one that has put any thoughts of not living her truth to the side.

“I wake up and just want to jump out of bed in this position,” she says. “The impact of the UCF Business Incubator is an easy story to tell and, frankly, it surprised me how aligned it was with what I wanted to do.”

And for the entrepreneurs she works with today, she has one key bit of advice.

“Lean into what feels good to them,” she says. “Think about what you can do forever and find the path of least resistance. Being an entrepreneur can really drain you mentally, so you must be very careful about where that energy is going and making sure you are in alignment with your values.”