Sharing the Location of a favorite Place: That's GeoMonkey Business

Prepared by:
Bill London and Maria Ortega, WSU News Service, 509-335-7209, mortega@wsu.edu

GeoMonkey, a Washington State University class project that has come alive as a Web2.0 startup company, provides an advanced set of Web-based map-making tools that allows users with no programming experience to create and publish complex maps.

Every GeoMonkey map is potentially a collaborative map, in which users can allow others to add and modify the content --- resulting in online communities.

Orest Pilskalns, assistant professor of computer science at 91³Ô¹ÏºÚÁÏÍø, first envisioned GeoMonkey.

"My idea was to create a simple way for users to store and share maps," he said. "Then hiking enthusiasts, travel agents, runners, event planners or anyone could share comments and directions to destinations or routes. During spring semester 2006, I offered this idea to my CS420 course for undergraduate seniors in computer science. Together we refined it and brought it to life. GeoMonkey was born in that class."

In May 2006, Pilskalns took the working prototype to the WSU research foundation. WSU filed a patent on the idea and the foundation provided $20,000 from its innovation opportunity fund to pay for some of the students to work on the project and to form a startup company. GeoMonkey is the first company launched directly from intellectual activity at the Vancouver campus.

Through the research foundation, an individual private investor provided an additional $100,000 to GeoMonkey in a deal finalized in September 2007.

"That should fund us for about eight months," Pilskalns said. "Primarily, that will ensure that the students will continue on the project."

Kevin Karpenske, Adam McDonald and Jacob Moore, three students from the original class of 10, are still on the project. Together they have written 50,000 lines of code and each owns a share of the company.

"We have a fully functioning product now," Pilskalns said. "The Web site already has about 400 regular users who found the site through word of mouth, since we have done no advertising.
"In five years, I want GeoMonkey to be the world leader in location-based data."

And could GeoMonkey be the next big Internet success story, the next Google?

"Of course," answers Morse. "There's a lot of potential here. And remember, Google was a Stanford startup."

To visit GeoMoneky and create a map, go to .

Orest Pilskalns can be reached at 360-546-9110 or at orest@vancouver.wsu.edu.

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