Name | Title | Contact Details |
---|---|---|
Karl Redenbach |
Co Founder and Chief Executive Officer | Profile |
Tier 3 Technologies is a Louisville, KY-based company in the Software and Internet sector.
Community powers direct relationships and one-on-one conversations between Leaders and their Members through text messaging at scale. Launched in 2019 and headquartered in Santa Monica, CA., Community is breaking new ground in trusted marketing and communications channels by connecting Leaders- global pop culture stars, local community organizers, small business owners and brands- to their Members to drive conversations that convert into actions, sales, revenue and more.
arch street software is a Oakland, CA-based company in the Software and Internet sector.
For data-driven companies, Starburst offers a full-featured data lake analytics platform, built on open source Trino. Our platform includes the capabilities needed to discover, organize, and consume data without the need for time-consuming and costly migrations. We believe the lake should be the center of gravity, but support accessing data outside the lake when needed. With Starburst, teams can access more complete data, lower the cost of infrastructure, use the tools best suited to their specific needs, and avoid vendor lock-in. Trusted by companies like Comcast, Grubhub, and Priceline, Starburst helps companies make better decisions faster on all their data.
Oblong was founded in 2006 with the goal of creating the next generation of computing interfaces. We`re a company of designers, programmers, and hardware engineers. We`re committed to a full stack approach to technology development. We work on the most interesting problem we can think of, which is how to make computers more flexible, capable, useful, interactive, and empowering. Our Chief Scientist, John Underkoffler, designed the computer interfaces in the film Minority Report. Today we sell commercial versions of the Minority Report computers. These are, famously, gestural systems. But they do much more than simply allow users to point and gesture to interact with computers. (And, in fact, gestures themselves are optional.) These are spatial, networked, multi-user, multi-screen, multi-device computing environments.