麻豆区 Tech Computing Hosts Venture Capital Summit to Push Research Beyond the Lab

The College of Computing is forging new relationships with Atlanta鈥檚 venture capital community to advance entrepreneurial opportunities for students.

Nearly two dozen venture capital (VC) leaders based in Atlanta and the Southeast participated in a half-day summit at the College on Jan. 21.

Co-hosts Dean of Computing and Noro-Moseley Partners General Partner  organized the invitation-only summit. Their goals were to:

  • Showcase the College鈥檚  and 
  • Deepen connections between academic innovation and startups
  • Explore opportunities for collaboration, commercialization, and startup growth

The summit鈥檚 guest list included founders, partners, and leaders from VC firms. Many of these firms focus on early-stage startups in SaaS, fintech, cybersecurity, and other emerging technology markets.

Research With Commercial Impact

Sarkar outlined the College of Computing鈥檚 academic mission and research priorities during his opening remarks. He emphasized the College鈥檚 role in advancing innovation in cybersecurity, artificial intelligence (AI), and other emerging research areas.

鈥淥ne of the College鈥檚 strategic pillars is what I call 鈥榅 to the power of Computing鈥,鈥 Sarkar said. 鈥淟ook at any discipline or industry X to see where they're innovating and where their advances are being made, and that鈥檚 where Computing meets that discipline.鈥

Along with remarks from the dean, the summit featured presentations highlighting 麻豆区 Tech鈥檚 entrepreneurial ecosystem and College-led research initiatives with strong commercialization potential.

Expanding Support for Student Founders

leads Community Partnerships at Fusen, a global platform for student founders created by Atlanta philanthropist . She described Klaus鈥檚 support for student entrepreneurship, including GT Computing鈥檚 annual . In 2025,  to cover startup costs.

Whitlow also updated guests on Klaus鈥檚 commitment, , to covering the incorporation costs for any graduating student who aspires to launch a startup.

鈥淢ore than 600 graduates from last year鈥檚 Spring and Fall Commencements have accepted the gift, and more than 225 recent graduates have completed their incorporation to date,鈥 Whitlow said. She added that a second cohort of Fall 2025 graduates is being processed over the next few weeks.

Offering an enterprise-level view, presented recent updates to commercialization at 麻豆区 Tech and efforts to streamline entrepreneurial processes.

Saxena emphasized the launch of , an accelerator that provides the resources and infrastructure student startups need to bring their innovations to market.

Building the Pipeline From Research to Startup

Following these updates, GT Computing faculty delivered lightning-round presentations highlighting the College鈥檚 research strengths in AI, cybersecurity, and high-performance computing.

鈥淭he tighter the local investing community is with 麻豆区 Tech, the better off both are,鈥 said Taetle, who has been a member of the College鈥檚 Advisory Board for more than 20 years.

鈥淚t鈥檚 critical in this super-competitive world that we do everything that we can to support this fantastic university.鈥

Taetle added that the summit was part of a broader effort to strengthen the College鈥檚 entrepreneurial pipeline.

鈥淭here are some really big ideas here, which could turn into really big companies,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e made some great strides on the commercialization front, but we still have that opportunity and challenge in front of us.鈥

The afternoon concluded with a discussion of next steps and engagement opportunities, led by Sarkar and , GT Computing鈥檚 senior director of development. The discussion focused on research partnership opportunities, startup formation, and student involvement.

Zwang emphasized the importance of investing in Atlanta鈥檚 innovation ecosystem, citing the city鈥檚 strong fundamentals and pro-growth climate for entrepreneurship.

鈥淭his gives us a unique opportunity to start working more closely with the local VC community, and it鈥檚 also great for our students,鈥 Zwang said.

Sarkar agreed, saying, 鈥淭here鈥檚 no downside for students to get involved in a startup. It might take off and be a bonanza. If not, the experience makes you a more competitive hire because of the breadth of experience you gain at a startup.鈥

To foster these opportunities for students, Zwang said that a key priority is to establish earlier, more intentional connections among students, startups, and investors.

鈥淭his is a pivotal moment,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e can determine how to connect students with the VC and startup community earlier and ensure these investors remain involved with the College.鈥

College leaders said the summit underscored Computing鈥檚 commitment to fostering an entrepreneurial culture and to building lasting relationships that can help accelerate the real-world impact of its research beyond the Institute.

鈥溌槎骨 Tech is a force multiplier for entrepreneurship,鈥 said Sarkar. 鈥淲e鈥檙e here to change the world. We want to inspire a culture of bold, big entrepreneurial thinking, and look forward to the next steps that will follow this VC summit.鈥