No More Photocopies for this SPP Alumnus
Sarasin Booppanon
While a doctoral student
and part-time graduate researcher at the
International Center for Applied Studies
in Information Technologies, School of
Public Policy (SPP) alumnus Sarasin Booppanon
discovered that he spent numerous hours
at the library photocopying sections of
books assigned by professors.
After one too many sessions
at the photocopier, Booppanon decided
there must be a better way to digitize
the information in books. So he recruited
a team of engineers and software developers
to help him turn his idea into a fully
functional automated page-turning scanner.
Many people would not
start a company and pursue a doctoral
degree at the same time, but Booppanon
decided to do just that. In March 2005,
he founded Atiz Innovation, and in January
2008, he graduated from SPP.
“The entrepreneurial
spirit of SPP, along with the large amount
of required reading, helped to bring about
the inspiration of Atiz,” says Booppanon.
As founder and president of products at
Atiz, Booppanon is involved in all aspects
of the company, particularly business
development and product creation.
The company’s CEO,
Nick Warnock, focuses on the sales and
marketing efforts for Atiz products in
the United States. A finalist on NBC’s The
Apprentice, Warnock headed a sales
team for an office equipment manufacturer
that offered scanning, copying, and printing
solutions for companies before being selected
out of 250,000 people to compete on the
program.
Newsweek and Forbes have
noted Atiz’s products such as BookDrive
and BookSnap, which are designed for use
by libraries and home users to convert
printed books into an electronic format
with ease. These digitizers use two digital
cameras to photograph book pages quickly;
the photographs are then enhanced through
image-processing software and turned into
e-books.
According to the company’s
web site,
Atiz is “a team of people passionate
about book digitization and supporting
global effort[s] to create a universal
library. We work to make the best scanning
experience possible and put our digitizers
in the hands of people around the world,
in every home and school.”
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