Manufacturing Giant Foxconn Is Moving Into The Hardware Accelerator Game

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Foxconn, the gargantuan manufacturer of electronics, is experimenting in the hardware accelerator market by turning an underused Nokia campus in Beijing into its first small business outreach center. The plan, as described by Foxconn Chief Investment Director Charles Pan at the TechCrunch/Technode event in Shanghai, has led one small manufacturer to market and will help others over the coming year.

The incubator, which is not completely formalized, will work with small manufacturers by bringing them in for an intensive coaching and mentorship period. Tomoon, a smart watch company, worked with Foxconn on their T-Fire e-ink smart watch, a unique Android-powered watch with a curved screen. The company moved from a simple idea to a fully-fledged product in about six weeks.

“When they came to us it was like a toy,” said Pan. He said the company helped improve the design and offered manufacturing expertise to create the final product.

There is no date set for the accelerator launch but Pan said the company is writing up standard operating procedures for the new venture. He expects that Foxconn will take some equity in exchange for the hardware help.

Hardware Giant Flextronics Is Launching Lab IX, An Accelerator That Gives $500K To Each Hardware Startup

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If innovations in 3D printing, and platforms like Kickstarter and Indiegogo, are making it easier than ever for hardware startups to conceive and prototype new gadgets, then Flextronics, the San Jose-based manufacturer that works with Apple and many others on smartphones and more, is putting its hat in the ring to tap into hardware startups another way. It is launching a new accelerator, Lab IX, based out of Milpitas (where the company also has an R&D center), which will award $500,000 to each selected company to grow their ideas.

The focus will be on finding startups that are less than three years old, have less than $5 million in funding: “early stage disruptive companies incorporating hardware and software innovation.”

The idea is to bring Flextronics closer to new business. Perhaps it is in some way also to compete against upstarts like PCH International, which has launched its own incubator called Highway1 and doing more innovative design itself. It also helps the company continue to raise its profile in the U.S., where it is increasingly doing work for companies like Apple as part of a bigger wave of U.S. domestic manufacturing.

“We are excited to offer Lab IX services to help growing technology companies take their products to market and the next level,” said Mike McNamara, CEO of Flextronics, in a statement. “We believe that engaging with game-changing companies at an early stage will not only benefit Flextronics, but will provide those companies with the ability to leverage a wealth of experience in hardware design, manufacturing and logistics from all of the Flextronics business units and specialized partners in an unprecedented scale.”

“Hardware is hard,” the company notes in its brochure detailing the new program. In addition to a capital injection, Lab IX will also provide access to Lab IX and Flextronics’ engineers and designers, including IDEO, access to manufacturing and protyping equipment — some $30 million in the R&D center alone. Those who look like they may be progressing to the next stage of their development get access to Flextronics’ network of factories for manufacturing, procurement network and marketing network —  effectively hitting the jackpot by leveraging Flextronics’ scale.

We’re reaching out to the company to get more details on how many startups are going to be accepted into the program, and when the cut-off is for applications — or whether this is a rolling deadline. We’re hopefully speaking to Lior Susan, who heads up the Lab IX program later, and will update the post as we learn more.

Haxlr8r Is Looking For A Few Good Hardware Start-Ups To Be Close To The Action

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Cyril Ebersweiler has launched one of the coolest incubators I’ve seen in a while. Based in Dalian, China, the incubator has already run one group through the ringer, and now they’re looking for hardware hackers to join them in their second round. This time, however, they’re doing it up nice.

The organization has just launched a new website, Haxlr8r.com, and they brought in a new program director, Zach Hoeken of Makerbot fame. They’ve grabbed some great mentors including a young man named Nolan Bushnell who, if I’m understanding this correctly, invented freaking coin-op video games, and Bunnie Huang.

The accelerator runs for 111 days and is based in Shenzhen and the Valley. Teams will have access to prototyping hardware, including laser cutters, 3D printers, and the like. Chosen groups get $25,000 in funding and are required to live in Shenzhen for the duration of the program.

Ebersweiler writes:

The goal of the program is simple: create a working, scalable prototype and find a manufacturing partner ready to produce it before going home to
launch. Each week, startups will meet with mentors and work on the team’s concepts and prototypes. Mentors will provide valuable insights in
terms of manufacturing, supply chain management, distribution, marketing or fundraising. Last year, 9 teams participated including Nomiku, which went straight from an idea to production in three months and sold hundreds of thousands dollars worth of products since.

While SF is the center of the web services universe, Shenzhen looks to be the center of the hardware universe, and this looks like a great way to get right to the heart of it.