2015 Oregon Technology Awards Finalists Announced
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Monday, March 23, 2015
GoLocalPDX News Team
Last week, the
Technology Association of Oregon (TAO) announced the finalists for the
2015 Oregon Technology Awards. The annual program celebrates excellence and achievement in Oregon's tech industry.
The 31st annual awards ceremony will name the Technology Company of the Year, as well as two new award categories: Influential Technology Company Not Headquartered in Oregon, and Most Disruptive Technology.
The ceremony will also honor two outstanding leaders in Oregon's tech community: Sam Blackman of Elemental Technologies as the 2015 Technology Executive of the Year, and Bill Campbell of Equilibrium Capital Group as the recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award.
"The Oregon tech community is thriving and you can really tell by the turnout and quality of the Technology Awards program," said TAO President Skip Newberry. "It is a huge networking opportunity and brings together everyone from the startup entrepreneur to the seasoned executive."
The Oregon Technology Awards Ceremony will be held at the Portland Art Museum, April 30.
Click HERE to see the full list of Oregon technology Awards finalists.
Related Slideshow: 5 Tech Innovations Changing Oregon
New innovations in technology are changing things for Oregon and its residents. Here are five tech innovations that are making a difference.
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#1
Virtual Schools
Free virtual schools provide curriculums and a classroom experience over the internet. The Oregon Virtual Academy is part of national system that provides alternative education options for grades k-12. Students can interact with teachers and students from their homes, and be supplied with textbooks and materials for free.
“Right now there seems to be four times as many parents calling for students than last year,” Allen Finger, Enrollment Consultant for the Virtual Academy, said. “People are looking for flexible options, or the student may be facing bully issues, or schools may not be meeting issues. In the next 20 years we will see a rapid decline of traditional schools and a rise of virtual schools.”
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#2
3-D Printing
3D printing is no new technology, but in the last couple years new innovations have revolutionized how people use it. The process has become much more accurate and affordable, so that schools, companies, and startups are changing the way they think about manufacturing
“It saves months of time and 100s of thousands of dollars in molding,” said David Anderson, vice president of Oregon Swiss Precision. “It completely alters how manufacturing is done, literally changes everything across the board.”
Anderson said many schools have added 3D printers, helping students become interested and excited about engineering.
Photo Credit: Creative Tools via Compfight cc
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#3
Access to Internet
Oregonians have seen an increased access to internet, as well as ways to reach it. Problems with being a heavily rural state have limited access to high speed internet, but providers has grown and cellular companies have expanded their 4G networks. Google Fiber could show up to Portland in the next few years, which has pushed local providers to up their game. Portland has its own wireless mesh network, which helps neighbors share their internet and create free networks.
“We as users had become dependent on companies that weren’t acting in our interests,” said Russell Senior, president of the Personal Telco Project mesh network. “It was an act of self creation for something better.”
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#4
Open Health Data
In recent years Medicaid and Medicare have released new information that was obscure in the past, which has helped inform the public on the spending and costs of the health care system. Personal records have become easy to exchange between health systems, doctors, and patients, according to Tom Yackel, M.D., chief health informational officer at OHSU.
“I think [open health data] is opening up the dialog, and changing the dynamic of the health care system, said Amy Fellows, Executive Director of We Can Do Better, a nonprofit that helped start the Open Notes program in Oregon. “It improved the understanding of health care.”
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#5
Civic Engagement
With new ways to access and view data, Oregonians can be informed on important issues. Apps and websites bring information to the viewer in a personalized and effective fashion. Civic-minded projects help people make sense of information they need to know. The Behind the Curtain Project by HackOregon in 2014 sought to help voters know how money influenced campaigns.
“We are just beginning to understand the power of data visualization and how it can tell a story to make a person understand or feel differently,” Catherine Nikolovski, founder of HackOregon said. “We are hoping to improve quality of life.”
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