That and it being kind of centrally located. We've also got a lot of talent coming out of local-ish (UTD, UT, UNT, SMU) universities to fill the labor demand.
Fellow Dallasite here. The problem is that DMN doesn't cover/isn't aware of the scene. I think they might do one piece on TWC once every other year as a 'human interest' story rather than 'hey, look at all this cool…
TWC focuses on more of the enterprise/b2b side of things. They also recently opened up a new incubator dedicated solely to healthcare, which could turn into a HUGE market. It seems like many of the accelerators…
That's a pretty common abbreviation. Bankers use M for thousand and MM for million.
>I'm building my company in one of the worst areas for technology startups: DFW. Beg to differ. There's a plethora of resources in the DFW area for startups. They just don't have a centralized location/leader.…
That's what they claim. And what Brad said is correct. According to the CEO (who is also CEO of LCC) their software is much more granular than other search engines. For example, when they scour NYT, Twitter, Blogs, etc.…
Right. The point is that you don't have to search for the answer, it just gives it to you. That's a simple example of the possibilities of semantic search engines.
That and it being kind of centrally located. We've also got a lot of talent coming out of local-ish (UTD, UT, UNT, SMU) universities to fill the labor demand.
Fellow Dallasite here. The problem is that DMN doesn't cover/isn't aware of the scene. I think they might do one piece on TWC once every other year as a 'human interest' story rather than 'hey, look at all this cool…
TWC focuses on more of the enterprise/b2b side of things. They also recently opened up a new incubator dedicated solely to healthcare, which could turn into a HUGE market. It seems like many of the accelerators…
That's a pretty common abbreviation. Bankers use M for thousand and MM for million.
>I'm building my company in one of the worst areas for technology startups: DFW. Beg to differ. There's a plethora of resources in the DFW area for startups. They just don't have a centralized location/leader.…
That's what they claim. And what Brad said is correct. According to the CEO (who is also CEO of LCC) their software is much more granular than other search engines. For example, when they scour NYT, Twitter, Blogs, etc.…
Right. The point is that you don't have to search for the answer, it just gives it to you. That's a simple example of the possibilities of semantic search engines.