Techstars hacks into expert minds for visions of a future dominated by robotics
October 13, 2018 | Austin Barnes
A Fourth Industrial Revolution is unfolding as consumers and the tech industry alike watch with bated breath, Karen Kerr told a crowd of Techstars Kansas City attendees.
“Two things are happening,” Kerr, senior managing director with GE Ventures explained during a panel Thursday that explored the future of the robotics and manufacturing industries. “We’re able to capture more data … and cloud components are becoming critically important.”
As the two developments combine, artificial intelligence and machine learning will evolve the manufacturing space, Kerr said confidently. It sets the stage for a transformative moment that will alter the ways in which production and manufacturing facilities talk to each other, she said.
Kerr was joined on the panel by Phil DeSimone, co-founder of San-Francisco Carbon, who echoed her sentiments about the potential for rapid change.
“The technology is appreciating, it’s an appreciating asset. It’s constantly improving,” DeSimone said of Carbon’s value to clients hoping to modernize using the firm’s 3D printing tech.
Committed to the revolution, DeSimone has seen such companies as Adidas find new footing with the efficiencies of 3D printing –– a capability that’s been around for more than 30 years but that Carbon has greatly advanced, slashing production time from days and hours to an impressive matter of minutes –– he said in support of the science that powers robotic manufacturing.
Ever evolving, the latest industrial revolution will spark creativity in minds across the America heartland, Kerr said.
“This is where manufacturers are,” she exclaimed.
With dozens of clients spread from Kansas City to Cleveland, DeSimone agreed with Kerr’s assessment and argued that robotic expansion could drive economic growth when it eventually creates new jobs in Kansas City.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
InnovateKC: City pivots to startup-in-residence program to leverage local tech ingenuity
A new administration equals a new spin on established ideas, Nia Richardson explained, previewing the launch of Kansas City’s InnovateKC program. “I literally had a 45-minute conversation with [former city innovation officer] Bob Bennett before he walked out the door. He sent me an email with some notes and I had to pick it up…
KC-tested GoGetter uses AI to bring back human interaction in hiring talent (minus the middleman)
As a software contractor at Cerner for two years, Naga Rayapati saw more than 40 percent of his paycheck go into the pockets of middlemen, he said. “While the contractor puts in their heart and soul working for the company, these ‘preferred vendors’ reap the benefits,” said Rayapati, referring to third parties in the hiring…
Startup Road Trip: Patent-packed PowerBox puts productivity at the press of a button
Startland’s Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. This series is possible thanks to the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, which leads a collaborative, nationwide effort to identify and remove large and small barriers to new business creation. PITTSBURG, KANSAS…
Kauffman, ECJC: Stagnant US entrepreneurship is a diversity issue that throwing money at Big Business won’t fix
Women, people of color, and rural residents remain punished by systemic barriers to starting businesses, said Wendy Guillies in a nationwide call to action that unites powerful Kansas City entrepreneurism advocates. “America’s economy is out of balance. We’ve got businesses that have become too entrenched and powerful, while people and communities across America are being…

