| Volume 96, No. 2: June 2017
Chemistry major Luke Kanies 鈥96 founded IT giant Puppet Labs, which employs more than 300 people in downtown Portland.
The room is a hubbub of debate about broken code, JSON arrays, and the finer points of system architecture. But we are not in a conference room of a tech startup. We are gathered in a classroom for an innovative event organized by the .
Its name? .
Huddled at a whiteboard typically devoted to Milton and Hobbes, a group of students led by former math major Chris Fesler ’96 discussed the minutiae of designing service discovery protocols with all the earnestness of Odysseus begging Achilles to return to the siege of Troy. In lay terms, a service discovery protocol tells individual copies, or instances, of programs how to find and communicate with each other—so that if, for example, one instance of a security program fails, another can quickly armor up to continue its defense. Or so that, in the case of Fesler’s financial clearing company, , a member of al Qaeda can’t sell shares on the New York Stock Exchange when one of Apex’s trade screening systems goes down.
Continue reading Tech firms come to for skull sessions
Chemistry major Luke Kanies 鈥97 is the founder and CEO of Puppet Labs, a high-tech Portland startup that employs more than 190 people. 笔丑辞迟辞听产测听痴颈惫颈补苍听闯辞丑苍蝉辞苍
ies are taking an increasingly prominent role in Portland’s high-tech sector.
Last year, Twitter snapped up , an analytics company founded by , for an undisclosed sum.
Now two other local tech firms founded by ies-- and --have been identified as to go public in the next year.
CB Insights, a venture capital and angel investment database that tracks activity related to private companies, speculates that both Puppet Labs and Urban Airship are poised for an IPO, or initial public offering--a critical step in the life of a tech start-up, much like a Broadway debut for a young playwright.
Continue reading ies Take Spotlight in Portland鈥檚 Tech Scene