Startups

Miami-based Caribu wins 1776 Challenge Cup

The startup that makes a platform to livestream family reading time won a $100K investment from Revolution. Here are all the winners from the March 22 finals at the Anthem.

Announcing the winners at the 2018 Challenge Cup finals. (Photo by Stephen Babcock)

Entrepreneurs from 20 cities around the world took the big stage at The Anthem on Thursday night.

They were at the concert hall at The Wharf for the final round of the Challenge Cup, hosted by 1776 and Revolution.

Earning the $100,000 investment from D.C.–based Revolution was Caribu, a Miami-based company that makes a livestreaming platform allowing parents and other loved ones or mentors to read and draw with children when they aren’t together. CEO Maxeme Tuchman talked about how the platform is used by military service members who are deployed.

A couple of other big checks were written on the spot:

  • MyHappyMind, a Manchester, U.K.–based startup that developed a curriculum focused on proactive mental health education, picked up $20,000 in Amazon Web Services credits after a pitch by Founder Laura Earnshaw.

  • Airside Mobile, the Arlington, Va.–based mobile passport company, won $1,000 by topping the Fan Favorite Vote which was conducted via app at the event. We talked to CEO Hans Miller about the company’s recent happenings prior to the event.

The 20 finalists were chosen after pitch competitions in 75 cities, and further judging in a semifinal round earlier this year. Judges for the event included Rise of the Rest Seed Fund Partner Anna Mason, 1776 Chief Strategy Officer Penny Lee, Amazon Web Services’ Tricia Davis-Muffett, 1776 cofounder Evan Burfield and 3Pillar Global CTO Jonathan Rivers.

Among the other startups that pitched were a Tel Aviv, Israel–based commercial grasshopper farming company in Hargol Tech, Bangkok-based English education program Globish and Novulis, a Quito, Ecuador company creating preventative dental care clinics. Find the full list here.

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