We’re gearing up for 2017—and there are some exciting new changes coming to Softec’s Women in Tech (WIT) group!
First off, we’re going to shake things up with new days, times, and venues for some of our monthly events. Here’s what we’ve got planned:
Breakfasts:
Breakfast will now be the first Wednesday of the month at Steynberg Gallery on Monterey St.
7:30-8:00 Networking/coffee
8:00-8:20 Program
8:20-8:45 Q&A/discussion
8:45-9:15 Networking
For our breakfast program, we’ll be interviewing local women in technology—focusing on relevant issues—so bring your questions. For our first meeting, we’ll be doing some group brainstorming around the topic of “What does it mean to be a woman in tech?”
WIT and Wine Happy Hour:
Our wine nights will be the second Tuesday of each month at Wine Shed.
This is a great opportunity to grab a glass of wine and network with our local women. We keep this program loose and informal—with just a few announcements. The rest goes wherever the conversation may take us.
Lunch:
Lunch will continue to be at noon on the third Thursday of the month at Shalimar.
Take a break from the workday and enjoy a casual lunch with your WIT friends. Informal networking happens over lunch.
Can’t make it?
We’ll miss you—but you can now follow us on our brand new Facebook Page! Stay up to date on our latest events, get audio files of anything you might have missed, and participate in polls so we can continue to bring you the discussion topics you care about most.
See you in 2017!
Author: Bob Dumouchel
Santa Maria Tech Event – Econ Alliance Future Forum & Dinner
Our friends in Santa Maria have a tech related event coming up on November 3, 2016 from 5:30 pm to 8:30 pm at the Radisson Hotel. Click on the link before for program details.
future-forum-annual-dinner-2016
CCNTH Hackathon
Softec sponsors lots of technology related events and we are especially fond of those that serve the kids in our community. These take several forms but one of them is the Hackathon a competition designed to exposure kids to coding. So over the weekend with support from Softec and several other sponsors the kids ranging from middle to high school age put their coding skills to the test.
Coding group making magic.
Okay this might not be a software problem. Clues included the need to use tools. Mentors noted that if it requires pliers to fix it then it might be a hardware problem.
What a group of really smart people looks like.
Softec looks forward to next year’s event.
Startup Weekend 2016

To kick off the evening was a local success story of a business that formed out of Cal Poly by Jesse Dundon, the CEO of Hathway . He told his story of transformation that began with carpet cleaning and evolved into a local 50+ person mobile web design firm. One point that he made is that the pivot greatly improved his dating outlook as girls thought web development was cooler than rug cleaner 😉 It was a great talk and really helped set the stage for the transformations that most teams would go through over the weekend. Granted, nobody pivoted their concept this far over the weekend, but to be fair Jesse had a few years to do that pivot. What was clear from the story is that not everything happens in a clean and orderly fashion. The story was great and the presentation was excellent.
Chaos to Calm
The Startup Weekend process is a cycle from chaos to calm. The chaos begins within the first hour thanks to a crowd mixer game of Rock, Paper, Scissors (but with a twist); Every time a person wins they accumulate their losing competitor and also whatever followers they had accumulated. In the end we are left with two competitors and their cheer team of accumulated followers. In other words, the room is divided into two teams rooting for their victor! This gets not only the energy up but also the volume.
Within 20 minutes the noise level is down as one speaker at a time gives a 60 second pitch on the product or application they want to launch this weekend. Of course, some people are more animated than others but somehow calmness takes over the room. This does not last long as it results in about 60 ideas up on the walls for the chaos of the vote. Chaos is actually too mild of a term for what happens next as people are pulled between voting for different ideas or representing their own.
The crowd swirls and flows through the room as vote stickers are placed on pitch idea posters and people ask qualifying questions of the pitch presenters. Once the voting is closed, calmness returns and everybody sits in anxious silence as the event leaders take all the idea posters and count the votes. When done, the top 12 ideas get an additional 30 seconds before the pure chaos of team formation begin.
Team Formation
In the business world team formations for startups take years to evolve yet so do businesses. In this event businesses are created over a weekend and 107 people divide into 12 business teams in only 10 MINUTES!
When the event leadership asked if anyone was without a team after the formation process, only one person was left. Once this individual stated that they were a developer a bidding war erupted in the room as groups warmly invited the orphan to their team. Afterwards, each team went out into the wilderness to stake their claim in one of the two buildings designated for this event. Our team picked a spot on the second floor of the Bonderson Engineering Projects Laboratory while others remained in the Advanced Technologies Laboratory. Now things started to happen as computing devices of every form emerged from backpacks and power cords reached out to walls full of plugs.
Team Evolution
Our team quickly evolved as did the two other groups in our area as the challenges were discussed and people were assigned to take on each of these tasks. Leadership evolved in our group based on the role of each person. Milad, a 3rd year finance major, became the business lead in partnership with Charles Hu. Grant Terris and Kevin Vincent were the technical horsepower. Grant took the backend work with the server side development and the portal and Kevin did the iOS app development. With specs still in flux they started putting the framework together so that the rest of the team would have things to react to.
Pivot & Repeat
Startup weekends are nothing if not flexible and fluid and this time was no different than the prior five teams I have been on. As people talked and ideas changed the concept evolved over most of Saturday. Our team went through three major pivots as the idea evolved and unlike in a business world where every change is debated on its merits this team just took the changes in stride and kept moving forward. After all you only have 54 hours so there is no time for people to become vested in the idea so the pros and cons are less personal. Other teams went through the same process in different ways but every idea evolved radically over the weekend. Names were changed, missions evolved, concepts crashed, and the process went on.
Fueling Innovation

Read More about this
http://mustangnews.net/guayaki-yerba-mate-returning-to-cal-poly/
https://youtu.be/zwUy9TVA1pQ?rel=0
Other local firms that provided food to the event include:
- Friday Dinner: Fattes Pizza
- Saturday Breakfast: Costco fruit and bagels & Blackhorse Coffee
- Saturday Lunch: Petra
- Saturday Dinner: Old SLO BBQ Co.
- Sunday Breakfast: House of Bread & Costco
- Sunday Lunch: Golden Gong & Panda Express
- Sunday Dinner: Mr. Pickels
A Day of Focus
While Saturday was a day of pivots and debate Sunday is about focus. There is nothing like staring down at a deadline to make a team focus on the delivery. On Sunday, we started in the morning at the Library across street discussing the big idea that we had settled on and the business model that would get our team to the innovation finish line. As you walk around the event you can feel the change in the force (think Star Wars) as groups move closer to the immovable presentation at 5pm. The afternoon is refining and practicing the pitch and getting the technical types to shift from creating to fixing so the presentation works. Our team was pretty good about this with software changes down to just fixes by about 2pm. That is followed by a tech check, a deep breath and the final presentation.
Reflecting on the results
On our team (CheckMate) we got the mobile app working for iOS and the backend partner portal running. As a full disclosure not everything was perfect but it worked. I think the technical team can be rightfully proud of the result because in a normal business setting this would have taken several weeks to get done. The prototype demo went without any problems other than the projector in the room that jammed up several teams.
As I watched the other teams I was impressed by all of them. They had gone from a wild concept on Friday night to a presentation in just 54 hours. There were some stumbles but not a single on-stage failure – I have to wonder what the odds of that are! One thing I will probably never forget is Katie White on the Lettuce Team who lost her voice during the event. During the Q&A Katie wanted to answer the question so badly that she ran up up to the judges and whispered the answer and everyone listened. It was an amazing example of turning a liability into an asset. It demonstrates just how dedicated to these teams are and that it is not how loud you talk but what you have to say.
Team Summary – In presentation order
- Unlimited – Financial Training for Kids
- Extra Lettuce – Saving app for students – saving plan with auto deduction
- Project Take out – Home chefs to home delivery app
- Hitch – Long Distance Ride Sharing
- Spottr – Fitness Matching App
- Moola – Employee Recruiting Expense reimbursement and finance
- Head Count – School Field Trip Management
- Quinch – Smart Water Bottle
- PC Kit – Build your PC for Gamers – specs based on Game & Performance
- The APIARY – Bee Hive Monitor
- Virtual Realty – 3D Real Estate Marketing
- CheckMate – Consumer Driven Coupon Delivery App
Team Photos for those that provided them to me – as the ace reporter on the scene I should have gotten photos from all 12 teams but in the end these are all the photos that I could get my paws on.

From left to right: Kevin Mckinnis, Rebecca Krieger, Kaitlyn Henry, Kristen Henry, Mike Hurdelbrink, and Daniel Williams.
HeadCount is a mobile application that simplifies field trips for teachers, chaperones, and students. It empowers field trip leaders to work collaboratively and stay organized, so they can focus more on learning and less on the little things.

Front Row left to right: Michael Hbib, Danica Liang, Emily Cai, Nikki Duffy, Tiffany Lam
Back Row left to right: Neda Sales, Matthew Eng, Shain Lafazan, Anthony Fontes, Tyler Chen
The Tinder for Fitness buddies! Swipe right if you find a buddy that matches your fitness interests, level, and availability.

Left to right: Charles Hu, Kevin Vincent, Milad Hassibi, Bob Dumouchel, Grant Terris
CheckMate is a mobile app that delivers coupons to consumers based on their preferences rather than the advertisers distribution plan. System pulls from available coupon inventory based on personal settings rather than having them pushed by the advertisers.

Employee Recruiting Expense reimbursement and finance
We apologize, we were unable to get the team member names!
If you are one of the other 8 teams and would like to be included, just send to bob@smsrd.com a photo, your team members names and a description of your app and we will be sure to add it to the article!
Judging
The judging panel included:
Aaron Steed, CEO and founder of Meathead Movers. https://www.linkedin.com/in/aaronsteed
Charmaine Ann Farber, who worked as a ux/ui designer, illustrator, graphic designer, animator and educator, both nationally and internationally, for CIVCO International, MacArthur Foundation, Congressman Loebsack of Iowa, Stamats, Lipman Hearne, SMC Marketing Hong Kong, and Benson & Hepkar Design Group, and have spoke at events everywhere from Yale University to Chiba, Japan of Directors of AIGA and also served on the Pittsburgh board of Directors of AIGA.
https://www.linkedin.com/in/charmaine-farber-8181b723
Greg Gibson, Entrepreneur in Residence at CIE. Entrepreneur and senior executive with experience on the founding teams of companies in consumer internet, SMB ecommerce, online advertising, and social media spaces. https://www.linkedin.com/in/ggibson
Each group got 5 minutes to present and 3 minutes for QA from the judges. Because presentations are so unpredictable and nerve wrecking It truly is amazing that all 12 groups did so well.
And the WINNERS are:
- Project Takeout
- The Apiary
- Virtual Reality
Honorable Mention from the Judges:
- Quinch
- PC Kit
- Moola
Judging something like this is difficult and as I watched I ranked each of the groups on how they did on the presentation and the questions and answers. I came up with some of the same names but my top list was very different from the judges with Project Takeout being the only common name. This is not to take anything away from anyone but it does show that reasonable people can disagree, especially when you have so many really great teams. What is amazing is that all the teams could be a viable business if they can keep the team alive. I would bet that locally we will soundly beat the 12% continues after the event average of the Startup Weekend Program.
A true story from the Event
From Nick Sinai Event Coordinator:
I was sitting with Joe from virtual realty when he sees someone walk by with his wife and kids and tells me, hey that’s Tim Cook! So of course I’m surprised and like no way, “Joe you wanna go talk to him??” And he says no because he’s already met him and I’m like well I haven’t! So I grab Tim Elkana the main organizer and tell him “Dude! Joe says Tim Cook just walked by!” So Tim is freaking out and like “Heck yeah I want to go talk to him! Let me grab my camera!” So we run down the campus to where Tim Cook is walking with his wife and kids, and as we get closer we say ” Hey! Are you Tim Cook?” This man laughs and say “Nope!” And walks off. Tim and I walk back disappointed to find Joe laughing hysterically and then we realize Tim Cook would never be walking around Cal Poly with his wife and kids because Tim Cook is gay.
Shout out to the Event Leaders
Startup Weekends cannot happen without the inspiration and perspiration of the event leaders and the team this year did a great job. Here is the team that made the magic possible:
- Tim Elkana
- Luke Bayard
- Jim
- Nicholas Sinai
- Katie White
Tech Brew Recap – Oct 2015
If you missed last night’s Tech Brew you missed a great networking event. With an estimated 70+ attending some of us heard about wireless technology but Softec has some logistics to get straight for the new location. In the back of the room it was impossible to hear the presentation but we will figure that out for future meetings.
The new location is great and the crowd was overflowing into the other parts of the restaurant. If you missed this one you missed a good one.
2nd Annual Technology Expo on July 9, 2015 at the Radisson Hotel in Santa Maria, CA
Quintron Systems, Inc. will be hosting their 2nd Annual Technology Expo on July 9, 2015 at the Radisson Hotel in Santa Maria, CA from 5:00pm – 8:00pm. See attached Flyer. We will be featuring over twenty-five leading technology based manufacturers covering Audio, Video, CCTV, Networking, Digital Signage and Control Systems to name a few. Quintron Systems is inviting Central Coast Businesses, Governmental Agencies (both local and Federal), Education Facilities, and the general public to come experience an afternoon full of cutting edge technology, food and networking.
We will also be hosting several classes throughout the afternoon including:
- Sound design and troubleshooting for live music venues, hosted by JBL
- Analog vs IP based surveillance systems, hosted by Vivotek
- Interactive Collaboration systems for huddle and classrooms, hosted by Kramer Electronics
- Emerging technology for boardrooms and classrooms, hosted by Extron Electronics
This is your time to discuss what matters to you!
For more information and class times please contact Yolanda Clark at 805-361-8313 or please visit our website: http://quintron-isd.com/media.
Yolanda Clark
QUINTRON SYSTEMS, INC.
Administrative Assistant- Integrated Systems Division
2105 South Blosser Road
Santa Maria, CA 93458-7311
Office: 805-928-4343 x 313
Quintron Tech Expo Flyer
E-Waste Event at SLO HS
Startup Weekend at New Tech High
This last weekend New Tech High in Nipomo held its first Startup Weekend. We have had plenty of these but wait for it because there is a twist. This event was targeted at the high school level and I had the honor of touring the event on Saturday. Each team briefed me on the idea they were working on and the challenges they were trying to overcome. I can tell you that the participants were young but they were taking on and thinking about big problems.
While the groups were high school students the ideas were not kid stuff. All Startup Weekends have some degree of fun and silliness to them but these groups were really on their game. The ideas were on par with the other Startup Weekends and I would not be amazed to see a real business out of this event. This was one of those situations where you get to see the future and I can tell you the future is bright and so are these young men and women.
More Pictures
As I visited the groups one thing that really struck me was percentage of women in the groups. This event drew 52 participants and I was told that 40% were women. I am a math geek so I can tell you that this data is wrong but the truth is there were lots of women on the teams and many in the leadership roles. This is in stark contrast to prior Startup Weekends and I must tell you it was great to see. Recently Softec has been talking about the problem of attracting women to our industry and it appears that New Tech High might have a secret the rest of us should come to understand. Whatever they are doing in this program they may be laying the foundation to cure one of our industry’s greatest problem.
The other item that I have to mention is the teacher involvement. This event had support from a team of teachers not just one solo voice. New Tech High appears to be a different type of school at its foundation and we need to support these types of experiments in our local schools. We recently saw many of these teachers at our dinner on Women in Technology and if this event is an example of their work we better listen real careful to this group of educators.
Having been to a participant at seven prior Startup Weekends I can tell you that this was a very well run event. I was told by one of the event leaders that an overwhelming and consistent comment from the kids this weekend was:
“This is what school should be like”
Softec and our friends stepped up and supported this event because like all Startup Weekends it is perfectly inline with our mission. I need to give shout outs to the Softec members that joined with Softec for the donation to the event.
Thanks for the Support!!!
- Dan Weeks – SLO Hot House
- Dr. Jonathan York – Cal Poly – CIE
- Randy Scovil – Yes We do apps
Startup Weekend goes to High School

If you have kids in the High School and Middle School levels please encourage them to get involved and change the world. This event is hosted by Central Coast New Tech High but is open to all high school and middle school students.
Startup Weekend Youth Nipomo
Register Here!
More Program Details
Cool Meeting with Santa Maria Manufacturer's Association
If you missed the plant tour at Lineage Logistics you missed a very cool tour and you can take the word both ways. The Santa Maria Manufacturers Association was the coordinator for the event and we had 40-45 people for a 7:30am start time. The thing you have to know about Santa Maria is they tend to start earlier than most SLO groups.
The building is 225,000 square feet and it is actually much larger than the footprint would indicate. I spent 16 years working in the foodservice industry so I am no stranger to this sort of facility but I must admit to being in awe of the 40 foot ceiling. Other facilities I have worked in were closer to 25 feet and that was considered state of the art in those days.
They took us through the warehouse and there is something special about walking into a room that is 100,000+ SF with minus 40 degree air. It has been a long time since I have experienced that temp and in some ways I miss it – however I quickly got over it. I suspect that more than a few people that are acclimated to the mild central coast felt this was way cool in both senses of the words. Those that showed up in shorts probably regretted that morning’s wardrobe selection.

This is a shot of the front of the building and by this point the group had spent a few minutes in sub-zero warehouses so they were enjoying the warmth even if it was a brisk morning by local standards.
This picture of the forktrucks gives you some idea of the scale of the building. Those forklifts run up to 40 feet and weigh in at about 8,000 pounds with an average lift of 2,000. Needless to say they must have very well trained staff.
I love how they paid attention to the little details. Note in this picture that the signs are printed two ways. One is inverted so it reads properly in the mirror of the truck when they are backing up to the dock. Truck can back up and seal to the building and then open the door on inside so they do not compromise the temperature of the storage area. The facility has open dry storage at a very balmy 38 degrees and some office space so if you are looking for that sort of thing give them a call.
I do not know about everyone else but I really enjoy plant tours and would like to thank the Santa Maria Manufacturer’s Association for putting these types of events on. Santa Maria has lots of very interesting businesses and they have a warm welcome even at the very cool places.

















