![]() |
How 4 Students Got a Satellite Startup Off the Ground and $500 Million From Google
How 4 Students Got a Satellite Startup Off the Ground and $500 Million From Google
http://rack.3.mshcdn.com/media/ZgkyM...df8/skybox.jpghttp://rack.3.mshcdn.com/assets/feed...013aed8d66.jpghttp://rack.1.mshcdn.com/assets/feed...3b7fd07c38.jpg Nearly seven years before Google agreed to buy his company Skybox for $500 million in cash, Dan Berkenstock had his eyes on a more modest goal: winning a $20 million prize in a Google competition. In late 2007, Google an**unced the Lunar X Prize, which promised $20 million or more to the first privately funded teams that could land a rover on the moon, take some high-resolution pictures and videos and transmit them back to earth. The lofty goal of the competition was to reignite the space race for a new generation of engineers and entrepreneurs Berkenstock, then three years into a PhD engineering program at Stanford, worked to assemble a group of students and investors to beat out the competition. "They spent about a year on it getting everything lined up," Juan Alonso, an associate professor of aeronautics at Stanford who became his academic advisor for a time, recalled to Mashable. "Dan always had a very entrepreneurial spirit to him. I remember him being very entrepreneurial, well put together and **t afraid to take risks." Read more... More about Google, Startups, Satellite Imagery, and Businesshttp://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Mashable/~4/cMWdL4lm8_4 |
| الساعة الآن 09:58 AM |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd. TranZ By
Almuhajir