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“Education Week” on Hackathons, Apps4VA, Predictive Outcomes, and Daymuse Studios

I was recently interviewed by a well regarded publication, Education Week, as it relates to my entrepreneurial background, the Apps4VA competition, Daymuse Studios, and a recent project of mine: Predictive Outcomes. The full article and interview are behind a paywall, but here’s a relevant snippet:

Time will tell. But for now, Chris Cooper, a Web developer in Glen Allen, Va., is an early beneficiary of those competitions. This past fall, Virginia’s department of education and the center hosted four, 24-hour, simultaneous hackathons over a weekend.

A newcomer to hackathons, Mr. Cooper, attended an event in Richmond on a Friday, worked on his idea—a tool that uses demographic, academic, and other data to assess students’ risks of dropping out—and went home for the evening, returning the next day to finish it. (Some of the hackathon entrants camped out at the various sites all night, center officials said.) Mr. Cooper was impressed with his competition—one idea called for a mobile app that helped donors locate Virginia classroom projects; another came up with a way to simplify queries that people use to search the data system.

But on Saturday, Mr. Cooper learned that his project, titled “Predictive Outcomes,” had won a grand prize, worth $1,500. All told, more than $6,000 in prizes were awarded across the state.

Mr. Cooper, who owns a company called Daymuse Studios, said that when he has worked with K-12 systems in the past, he has occasionally grown frustrated when his proposals to improve school technology systems don’t mesh with the desires of district technology staff. “You’re kind of competing with their internal services,” he said.

He said that competitions like the hackathon could encourage developers who had never considered producing tools for K-12 systems to give it a look.

“You think of education as a government institution that’s always behind the ball,” Mr. Cooper said. But the competition, he said, sends a signal to developers who would “love to apply their skills to areas that aren’t for profit.”

It was fun to have a follow-up to the competition and to be able to offer some musings on the overarching topic. I was also interviewed by our local Times-Dispatch Richmond paper shortly after the hackathon ended. The competition that followed the hackathon, a multi-month Open Competition just ended as well – I’m excited to see what the Virginia developer community has come up with.

The Best Health Insurance for Self-Employed and Entrepreneurs

It seems like I’ve been on a bit of a health insurance kick lately. Sadly it’s been a big road blockto getting to the meat of operating a business lately so it’s rather top-of-mind. There’s a lot of options these days for individual health insurance plans, or at least in Virginia there are. At the highest level there’s generally two types of health insurance plans, the PPO and the HMO.

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Denied Health Insurance as an Entrepreneur or How a Fractured Elbow Got Me Denied

I wrote last week about the difficulties of finding reasonable health insurance as an individual, one of the pains of entrepreneurship.

Turns out having a fractured elbow, even after it’s all healed, can be a real problem for future health insurance applications. I recently applied to Optima Health, a regional non-profit with decent reviews (despite being #133 on Consumer Reports, it’s the best-rated available in Virginia for a PPO). Turns out I was rejected due to a “Broken Elbow” which occurred way back in July, 2011 and has since fully recovered (confirmed by an orthopedic doctor). I even managed to fracture it while in Ireland which made for an interesting trip down Ireland’s healthcare system.

Fractured Elbow in Ireland? Sweet.

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Health/Dental Insurance: One of the Tough Parts about Entrepreneurship

Dental Tourism

Dental Tourism is a $60 billion Industry in the US

Did you know that 26% of 18-64 year-old self-employed people are uninsured in the US? Did you also know that a root canal can cost upwards of $1,400 per-tooth? Not to mention a crown for that root canal is around $1,500? Add-in X-rays and other miscellaneous work and you’re looking at over $6,000 for a pair of emergency root canals.

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Shake Up Life or: Going From Cubicle to Entrepreneur with a Real-life MBA

Sun-setting on 2011, Nice, France

How has 2012 started for you? For me, it’s been quite the upheaval. The year started about 40,000 feet above the Atlantic in an A380 heading to Paris. That, in and of itself, wasn’t exactly much of a change. It was the second time I’d be ringing the New Year in under the Eiffel Tower, but this time was much different. (more…)