Amy Cosper: Entrepreneurship is creating something new, innovative or disruptive where nothing was before

Valmir Mehmetaj, Kosovo 2.0 (www.kosovotwopointzero.com) – American entrepreneur talks about pursuing the “Cool” profession. What does it mean to be an entrepreneur? According to a simple Google search, it is “a person who organizes and operates a business or businesses, taking on greater than normal financial risks in order to do so.”

But if this definition comes across as dry, there’s always the perspective of Amy Cosper to consider. An entrepreneur for more than a decade, Cosper believes that any entrepreneur should not take no for answer, but rather be driven by the desire to “chase your dreams, change the world and make an impact,” while “creating something new, or innovative or disruptive, where nothing was before.”

Cosper is known as one of the most successful figures in the world of entrepreneurship. She admits that she did not get her “boost” from her degree in Italian and Art History, but by doing what she loved. She started as a reporter in 1995 for the tech world, reporting from Israel, Norway, Luxembourg, Brazil, Paris and London. Afterwards she ran several award-winning financial magazines, before in 2008 becoming vice president and editor-in-chief at Entrepreneur Media Inc., a U.S. based magazine and website that covers news stories about entrepreneurship and small business management.

Going through some of her articles, it is easy to see that Cosper is a fighter. She did not despair even when her house burned down in 2010, and her family of four — two teenagers and two adults — lived in a trailer until their house was reconstructed. She wrote that it only made her stronger: “We didn’t crack. We became stronger, better. We proved that we would survive. Yes, rising from the ashes is a cliche, but I happen to know that it’s also literally true. There was life before the fire and life after, and the two couldn’t be more different.”

That’s an experience that could resonate with many people in Kosovo, which she visited last week as a speaker at the fifth edition of KOSICT, the regional conference organized by Kosovo Association of Information and Communication Technology (STIKK), with the aim of bringing global IT trending topics to the Balkans. This year, the conference brought together speakers from a range of leading companies, including Google and LinkedIn.

However, Cosper told the audience that she decided to take a break from the world of media at the end of August, when she left her top role at Entrepreneur magazine. She is now pursuing other life goals, including writing a book, traveling, riding her motorcycle, and making a documentary.

In an interview for K2.0, Cosper said that she was thrilled to meet some of the people of Kosovo, whom she described as very ambitious to make something special and put themselves on the map. As someone who has taken on the mission of spreading the “good word” of entrepreneurship, for Cosper to be successful, one of the core rules is not to fear failure but to look past the fear, because that is the place where “experience, knowledge, empowerment, wisdom and success” await.

In order to read the full interview, please follow this link: http://kosovotwopointzero.com/en/amy-cosper-entrepreneurship-is-creating-something-new-innovative-or-disruptive-where-nothing-was-before/

Alan Greenberg: I can fix technology. I cannot fix people.

Dafina Halili, Kosovo 2.0 (www.kosovotwopointzero.com) – edTech guru discusses how technology is shaping the future of learning.

“I don’t care about being liked. I want to be respected,” says Alan Greenberg, a world leader in education technology and innovation, as he explains what he calls the ‘Greenberg technique,’ to K2.0. Young developers and startups need to be able to explain their product in 30 seconds in order to grab his attention, otherwise he moves on. “If they aren’t able to explain in 30 seconds what they are doing and what it will change, it will fail.”

Greenberg was demonstrating his technique on participants in the Startup Fair at the fifth edition of the KOSICT Tech festival, which was held in Prishtina last week. The conference was organized by the Kosovo Association of Information and Communication Technology (STIKK) with support from Innovation Centre Kosovo (ICK) and Universum University College. It featured talks on a number of global trending topics in IT; from digital marketing to education technology and e-sports.

Greenberg, who managed Apple’s Higher Education business in Europe and Asia between 2004 and 2009, was one of the most prominent KOSICT speakers during the two-day conference, that gathered international speakers from the tech world. He is now an investor, consultant and sometime mentor to a number of tech companies from across the globe. His portfolio includes companies from New York to London to Beijing.

For over a decade, his focus has been on education technology. His presentation at KOSICT included an introduction to ed-tech apps that have already found a place in the classroom and new apps that are being developed with the aim of further revolutionizing digital learning. K2.0 caught up with him after this presentation to discuss how technology can improve education, how the Kosovo government can help tech companies, and the development of technology to help autistic children.

In order to read the full interview, please follow this link: http://kosovotwopointzero.com/en/alan-greenberg-i-can-fix-technology-i-cannot-fix-people/

Marcin Malinowski: Artificial intelligence is going to be a game changer for humankind

Dafina Halili, Kosovo 2.0 (www.kosovotwopointzero.com) – Google’s head of Global Partnerships for Eastern Europe talks AI, user privacy and how to get hired.

For many people, Artificial Intelligence (AI) is considered a distant science fiction seen in Hollywood movies such as Ex-Machina and Transcendent. But last month in front of a large audience in Prishtina, Google’s Marcin Malinowski pointed out how AI has not only been the focus of the tech world in recent times, but that within a couple of years it will be a game changer for humankind.

Talking about AI breakthroughs, Malinowski described how Google’s AI has learned to play the ancient Chinese game Go; famous for its boundless possibility of moves and the strategic thinking required to play it, Go is often considered to be more complex than chess. He highlighted that this Spring, Google’s AI managed to beat the Go world champion in what is considered to have been a historic Go battle and an ultimate victory for AI researchers.

Malinowski went on to discuss how AI can today reproduce the artworks of the greatest painters in the world. He explained how researchers from a German university developed an AI able to even understand the technique and brush strokes of painters; as a result deep learning algorithms recreated masterpieces by painters such as Van Gogh and Edvard Munch. “There is also a song performed by AI, which resembles Beatles’ music as I recall,” Malinowski told K2.0.

The endless possibilities of AI and data collection were the focus of his keynote speech during October’s fifth edition of the KOSICT Tech festival, organized by the Kosovo Association of Information and Communication Technology (STIKK) with support from Innovation Centre Kosovo (ICK) and Universum University College. Head of Google’s global partnerships for Eastern Europe, Warsaw-based Malinowski was one of the most prominent speakers at the conference, which featured talks on a number of global trending topics in IT; from digital marketing to education technology and e-sports.

K2.0 caught up with Milanowski after the conference to discuss what is required for young developers to be part of Google, his thoughts on where AI is heading and issues related to users’ privacy.

In order to read the full interview, please follow this link: http://kosovotwopointzero.com/en/marcin-malinowski-artificial-intelligence-going-game-changer-humankind/