Wednesday, September 26, 2012

AOL squatter launches his company, no hiding out required


Former AOL squatter Eric Simons.


(Credit: Eric Simons)

If ever there was someone with an entrepreneurial spirit, it's Eric Simons, known to many as the AOL squatter.


As CNET was first to report, Simons spent two months last year living surreptitiously at AOL's Palo Alto, Calif., offices, surviving on the company's kitchen fare, using its gym and locker room, and sleeping on its couches. All while working long days building a startup as part of an education-based incubator that had its offices in AOL's building. Until he was caught by AOL security and thrown out of the building, that is.


At the time, Simons' fledgling company was called ClassConnect. It was designed to allow teachers to create and discover lesson plans, and to share them with students and other teachers. "Teachers around the U.S. and the world are asked to teach from a checklist," Simons told CNET at the time. "They're asked to teach the exact same thing...and they're all going and creating their own lessons. What we've built is almost a GitHub for teacher lessons. They can fork someone else's lesson plan and use that as a springboard."


Now, ... [Read more]



via CNET http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/cnet/NnTv/~3/lZyKdrtXyFk/


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