Colibri Partners With Devour! Festival

Colibri Software, a Wolfville, N.S.-based rural development technology company, has announced a partnership with the Devour! Food Film Fest.

The company will soon launch the Devour! app powered by Strollopia, a mobile application that allows users to explore the festival through the app's geo-located content messaging.

“The app will enable users to explore not only the festival but also Wolfville and the surrounding communities,” said President John Read in a press release. “The goal is to make learning and exploring the festival fun and seamless.”

The third annual Devour! Food Film

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Brownie Points Moves Beyond St. John’s

A pair of St. John’s entrepreneurs has developed a new loyalty program app for smartphones that is gaining traction with retailers in their hometown and as far afield as Calgary.

Matthew Stenback and Adam Puddicombe have formed Brownie Points to offer small and mid-sized retailers — who have to compete with multinationals with sophisticated programs — fun digital loyalty programs with some interesting features.

The two former business students at Memorial University began Brownie Points as a tool for coffee shops (as the name suggests) but other retailers can use the product.

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Looking Ahead to a Busy November

In a sign of how active the startup community in Atlantic Canada has become, November will feature not one, not two, but three Startup Weekends. And these are just a few of the events taking place in the coming month.

Jason Janes, a co-founder of Startup St. John’s, and Chris Gardner, the founder of the Common Ground co-working space, are organizing a Startup Weekend Nov. 8-10 at the Genesis Centre at Memorial University in St. John’s. It will allow 60 people to spend a weekend putting together companies, the best of which will hopefully become bona fide enterprises. I’m proud to say I

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BIKE Scientific Prepares for Market

BIKE Scientific Inc., a Halifax-based medical device company, may be weeks away from the sale of its new ProTrap XG, a disposable cartridge that simplifies the process of isolating proteins in blood samples.

The company aims to solve the problem clinicians have in isolating proteins in blood samples, which is necessary before blood is analyzed in a mass spectrometer. Some 25 million of these procedures are carried out each year in Canada and the U.S., and isolating the proteins is bothersome and time-consuming.

Led by CEO Michael Barr, BIKE has been going for a few years and was a

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GetGifted Spreads Across Maritimes

Every Tuesday, about 10,000 people in Charlottetown eagerly await an email from a company less than a year old that offers them a chance to claim more than 1,000 gifts from local merchants.

The company in question is GetGifted, and its simple idea of helping merchants attract new customers with gifts is creating buzz in Charlottetown and beyond. The company has launched a program in Fredericton, and is already signing up future members in Saint John, Halifax and Moncton. And next month, it will begin a test program in Cambridge, Ma., its first trial in a U.S. city.

The buzz among

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Surge in I-3 Competitors

The surge in submissions to Innovacorp’s I-3 competition has been quite remarkable, especially in rural areas.

The innovation agency announced this week that it received 228 submissions for the 2013-2014 startup contest – an increase of more than 60 percent for the last time the biennial competition was held. Sixty percent is astonishing. The number of entries rose 9 percent four years ago, and 7 percent two years ago. Now there is a sudden surge in nascent companies.

Like the New Brunswick Innovation Foundation’s Breakthru competition, the aim is to thrash the bushes across the

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Atlantic Angels Holds 1st Meeting

Atlantic Angels held their first meeting yesterday, featuring pitches from four companies and a request for feedback in shaping the young group.

Permjot Valia, an investor and the Founder of MentorCamp, hosted the meeting at the Volta startup house, which was attended by about 30 people, including seasoned angel investors and the presenting companies.

“This is an experiment,” Valia told the group. “The success of this meeting will be judged by the feedback we get.”

A group surrounding Valia and Milan Vrekic, the Executive Director of Volta, have formed Atlantic Angels as a group of

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PDC Launches Failure Fund

In an effort to reduce the stigma attached to failure, the Pond-Deshpande Centre at the University of New Brunswick has launched the region’s first Failure Fund.

The idea is that entrepreneurs who give an idea their best shot and come up short (read: most entrepreneurs) should be encouraged to give it another try. In fact, the thinking is that entrepreneurs gain so much valuable experience in managing an unsuccessful business that the region gains by having these people running businesses again.

So the Pond-Deshpande Centre, which encourages social entrepreneurship as well as

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Notes from MentorCamp 2013

My favourite sports writer, Don Banks of Sports Illustrated, likes to open his columns with the words: “Musings, observations and the occasional insight from” such and such. Well, here are my musings, observations and occasional insights from the third annual MentorCamp yesterday in Halifax.

  1. The quality of the teams was exceptional, showing the depth of great startups in the region. Founder and CEO Permjot Valia had a great lineup of companies at MentorCamp 2012. He had been worried about whether the pool of tech companies in Atlantic Canada was deep enough to bring in six to eight
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Murphy Re-emerges with Atlantic Motor

Having previously proposed developing pneumatic motors for lawn mowers, Braden Murphy is applying this technology to a range of products for the oil and gas industry.

Last year, Murphy was taking his Masters in Engineering at Dalhousie University when he was working on a company tentatively called Scotia Motors, which aimed to commercialize technology he had developed at the university. The plan was to use pneumatic motors in lawnmowers to reduce noise pollution, but Murphy and his supervisor, Assistant Professor Darrel Doman, found that the costs of attacking consumer markets were

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