Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Four Canadians To Receive $100,000 To Drop Out Of School, Pursue Their Dreams

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Jun, 2015 07:09 PM
    Four Canadian youth will be putting their formal education on hold and accepting hefty cheques to help kick-start their budding technology-oriented business ventures.
     
    The former students are among the 20 winners of the 2015 Peter Thiel Fellowship, a program that offers $100,000 in funding and two years' worth of mentorship to young entrepreneurs who drop out of school to take their fledgling businesses to the next level.
     
    The four Canadian winners, who hail from Ontario and Quebec, range in age between 18 and 22 and have all launched companies with a strong emphasis on up-and-coming technology.
     
    Montreal's Simon Tian has founded a company designing wearable technology to help people perform day-to-day tasks in any environment.
     
    Cathy Tie of Toronto co-founded a startup focused on improving the accuracy of genetic testing.
     
    The contact lenses being developed by Harry Gandhi of Waterloo, Ont., would be able to monitor glucose levels in diabetics. And Liam Horne, of Cambridge, Ont., is a co-founder of a software company dedicated to helping retailers set up shop in the right locations.
     
    Horne said his company, Piinpoint, offers companies a simple piece of software that analyzes census data and other sources of demographic details, traffic patterns and spending habits. The software then offers recommendations and financial projections as tools to help guide the company's decisions, he said.
     
    Horne described his Thiel Fellowship win as very humbling, adding the monetary award will confer benefits that extend beyond the bottom line.
     
    "It's going to give us peace of mind to know that Piinpoint, and myself, can just go about doing what we're doing," Horne said in a telephone interview. "Take risks, do experiments and things like that. Focus on more important things such as hiring really important people rather than always worrying about having capital."
     
    Horne, who was studying computer science at the University of Waterloo this past year, said the fellowship feels like a further extension of his formal education rather than a departure from learning.
     
     
    Fellowship founder Peter Thiel, the German-born billionaire who helped co-found PayPal among other tech ventures, appeared to view the program in the same light.
     
    "College can be good for learning about what's been done before, but it can also discourage young people from doing something new, especially when it leaves them in debt," Thiel said in a statement announcing this year's winners.
     
    "Each of the fellows charts a unique course, but together they have proven that young people can succeed by thinking for themselves instead of competing on old career tracks."
     
    But others urge caution for would-be entrepreneurs, saying programs such as the Thiel Fellowships aren't ideal for everyone.
     
    Sean Mullin, executive director of Ryerson University's Brookfield Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, said such programs are best suited to people who are firmly committed to their projects and have an unusual degree of conviction in their future paths.
     
    He said most people favour an educational experience combining both theoretical and practical learning.
     
    "If for some reason down the road your venture does fail, which does happen in this world, you do have education and a degree to fall back onto," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Cabinet Secrecy Blocks Rationale Behind Harper Government's Advertising Slogan

    Cabinet Secrecy Blocks Rationale Behind Harper Government's Advertising Slogan
    OTTAWA — The genesis of the Harper government's "Strong Proud Free" slogan currently bombarding Canadian television viewers is considered a cabinet confidence and will be hidden from public scrutiny for 20 years.

    Cabinet Secrecy Blocks Rationale Behind Harper Government's Advertising Slogan

    Adventurous Raccoon Makes 58-Storey Climb Up Toronto Crane, Charms Social media

    Adventurous Raccoon Makes 58-Storey Climb Up Toronto Crane, Charms Social media
    Social media is lighting up with a photo of the furry adventurer peering from between the metallic rungs of a crane about 58 storeys high.

    Adventurous Raccoon Makes 58-Storey Climb Up Toronto Crane, Charms Social media

    Health Officials Ramp Up Testing For Rare, But Potentially Fatal Powassan Virus

    Health Officials Ramp Up Testing For Rare, But Potentially Fatal Powassan Virus
    The Public Health Agency of Canada says it's broadening screening for Powassan virus in the tiny, blood-sucking arachnids to include blacklegged ticks.

    Health Officials Ramp Up Testing For Rare, But Potentially Fatal Powassan Virus

    Aquarium Examines Samples From Bunker Fuel Spill In Vancouver's English Bay

    Aquarium Examines Samples From Bunker Fuel Spill In Vancouver's English Bay
    VANCOUVER — Scientists at the Vancouver Aquarium are examining samples from the bunker fuel spill off the city's harbour to help confirm the source, how far the oil has spread, and the risks to sea life.

    Aquarium Examines Samples From Bunker Fuel Spill In Vancouver's English Bay

    Quebec Mayor Jean Tremblay Says He's Surprised By Supreme Court's Prayer Ruling

    Quebec Mayor Jean Tremblay Says He's Surprised By Supreme Court's Prayer Ruling

    SAGUENAY, Que. — The Quebec mayor who would recite a prayer at the beginning of municipal c...

    Quebec Mayor Jean Tremblay Says He's Surprised By Supreme Court's Prayer Ruling

    Canadian Teacher Convicted In Indonesia Pans Feds For Lack Of Help

    A Canadian teacher serving time in an Indonesian prison on child-abuse convictions says the federal government has done little to protect him from what he calls an abuse of his human rights.

    Canadian Teacher Convicted In Indonesia Pans Feds For Lack Of Help