Startups

Ted Mann just hired a CTO for Slyce, Philly’s ‘new’ visual search company

Former Neat Company engineer Adam Turkelson is the first executive leadership role that Mann has hired. He's said that he wants to grow Slyce in Philadelphia.

Two weeks after Ted Mann was named president of Slyce, the Toronto company that acquired his startup SnipSnap, he hired a Philly-based CTO.
The company’s new CTO is Adam Turkelson, an early engineer at Center City digital filing firm Neat Company.
“Adam is one of the most brilliant minds working on image recognition that I’ve encountered in the last ten years,” Mann said in a statement.
Mann first encountered Turkelson when he bought a Neat scanner, which was powered by image recognition technology that Turkelson helped develop. Turkelson will lead a distributed team of engineers in Philly, Minneapolis and Israel.
“Leading a company in the image recognition space is a lifelong dream of mine,” Turkelson said in a statement.
Turkelson, 31, of Perkasie, Pa., replaces former CTO Dan Grigsby, who was based in Minneapolis.
Mann had said that he planned to grow Slyce in Philadelphia. He’s currently hiring leadership roles on the sales team, plus an engineer and a product designer. We’ll be watching for more executive-level hires.

Companies: Slyce Inc. / Neat Company / SnipSnap
Engagement

Join our growing Slack community

Join 5,000 tech professionals and entrepreneurs in our community Slack today!

Donate to the Journalism Fund

Your support powers our independent journalism. Unlike most business-media outlets, we don’t have a paywall. Instead, we count on your personal and organizational contributions.

Trending

Comcast introduces ultra-low lag Xfinity internet that boosts experiences with Meta, NVIDIA and Valve

This Week in Jobs: Add these 26 tech career opportunities to your vision board

Enough with the panels and presentations, tech leader says: Philly’s life sciences community can’t thrive without informal meetups

National AI safety group and CHIPS for America at risk with latest Trump administration firings

Technically Media