Keller Rinaudo

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Keller Rinaudo
Keller Rinaudo.jpg
Rinaudo beside Zipline's first generation drone
Alma materHarvard University
Occupation
  • entrepreneur/CEO
  • rock climber
Spouse(s)Stephanie Nevins

Keller C. Rinaudo is an American robotics and autonomous airplane entrepreneur and the CEO and a co-founder of Zipline.[1][2]

Zipline began drone deliveries in Rwanda in late 2016, and primarily delivers blood to urgent medical situations.[3]

He was also the CEO and a co-founder of Romotive, a former company established in 2011 with Kickstarter funding that made inexpensive small robots that use mobile phones as their computing system, machine vision system, and wireless communication system.[2] Romotive essentially shut down in 2014 and morphed into Zipline.[4] Rinaudo presented a TED Talk about Romotive in April 2013 and another in November 2017 about Zipline.[2]

Education[]

Early education[]

Keller attended North High School in Phoenix Arizona, receiving an IB diploma and being named a National Merit Scholar.[5]

College and internships[]

Rinaudo is a graduate of Harvard University,[1][6] where he was the founder of the Harvard climbing wall. The wall was initially founded by Rinaudo with help from Harvard Business School student Karl R. R. Kuryla as a relatively primitive construction in Lowell House in 2006, and was later upgraded and reopened in the Quadrangle Recreational Athletic Center in 2017.[7][8][1]

While a student, Keller built computers out of RNA and DNA that he said could operate in human cells as "molecular doctors". He published this research in Nature Biotechnology, becoming one of the youngest first authors in that publication's history.[9]

Keller graduated from Harvard magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa with a 3.9 GPA and was designated a Harvard College Scholar for superior academic achievement both freshman and second years and also won the Detur Book Prize (top 5% of the class).[10]

While in his undergrad at Harvard, Keller spent several summers (2006–2008) working at the management consulting firm, Boston Consulting Group (BCG).[citation needed] He signed a full-time offer at BCG following his junior year internship to return to the firm following graduation (for fall of 2009). During his time at BCG, Keller "Conducted in-depth financial analysis of 140 competitors in the engineering construction industry and co-wrote new international strategy for a US company with $8B in revenue."[10]

MBA[]

In his senior year at Harvard, Keller was also admitted into Harvard Business School (HBS) for the class of 2013 - through the 2+2 program. However, Keller ultimately chose not to attend HBS due to the success of Romotive.

Early career[]

Following his graduation from Harvard, Keller spent 2.5 months at BCG in their San Francisco office before quitting to live out of his van and become a professional rock climber.[5]

Keller grew up rock climbing and quickly found professional success in the sport. As a professional rock climber he was ranked in the top 10 in sport climbing.[2] He has scaled alpine cliffs in France, underwater caves in Kentucky[2] and the limestone towers of Yangshuo, China.[2][11][12]

Keller founded JobSpice through the business accelerator Y Combinator in the fall of 2009.

Romotive[]

In 2011, Keller founded Romotive, an iPhone-controlled toy robot.[13] Keller sold the first version through Kickstarter.[13] Romotive morphed into Zipline in 2014 when Keller realized that the competition was not other toys but Minecraft and phone apps.[14] "If we’d compared ourselves to true competition-- competition for a 12-year-old's time-- this is not a battle that robotics was going to win."[14]

Zipline[]

Keller is the CEO and Co-founder of Zipline, an American medical product delivery company headquartered in South San Francisco, California, that designs, builds, and operates drone aircraft. The company operates distribution centers in Rwanda and Ghana. The company began drone deliveries in Rwanda in 2016 and primarily delivers blood. In addition to whole blood, the drones deliver platelets, frozen plasma and cryoprecipitate.[15] As of May 2019, more than 65% of blood deliveries in Rwanda outside of the capital city Kigali use Zipline drones.[16]

In Ghana, the company began using drones in April 2019 to deliver vaccines, blood, and drugs.[17]

During the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, the US Federal Aviation Administration approved Zipline for the delivery of medical supplies and personal protective equipment to hospitals in North Carolina. The company also plans to offer deliveries to people's homes.[18]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c "Keller Rinaudo". www.bloomberg.com. Retrieved November 4, 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Rinaudo, Keller. "Keller Rinaudo". TED. Retrieved November 4, 2018.
  3. ^ Rosen, Jonathan W. (June 8, 2017). "Zipline's Ambitious Medical Drone Delivery in Africa". MIT Technology Review. Retrieved August 24, 2018.
  4. ^ simplebotics (February 8, 2016). "Why Romotive shut down". Simplebotics. Retrieved December 5, 2018.
  5. ^ a b Podcast, Flux (August 19, 2018). "16: Keller Rinaudo – Building the Sky Ambulance". Medium. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  6. ^ "Keller Rinaudo: Co-founder, Zipline". Forbes. Retrieved December 7, 2018.
  7. ^ Tran, Melissa (October 18, 2006). "Hard as a Rock Wall". The Harvard Crimson. Retrieved December 7, 2018.
  8. ^ Burnes, Henry W.; Shimozaki, Kenton K. (September 28, 2017). "Expanded Climbing Wall Reopens at QRAC". The Harvard Crimson. Retrieved December 7, 2018.
  9. ^ Rinaudo, Keller; Bleris, Leonidas; Maddamsetti, Rohan; Subramanian, Sairam; Weiss, Ron; Benenson, Yaakov (2007). "A universal RNAi-based logic evaluator that operates in mammalian cells" (PDF). Nature Biotechnology. 25 (7): 795–801. doi:10.1038/nbt1307. PMID 17515909. S2CID 280451.
  10. ^ a b Department of Construction Management & Civil Engineering
  11. ^ "Yangshuo (Moon Hill)". Climbing Away. Retrieved November 4, 2018.
  12. ^ Keller Rinaudo – China Climb 5.14b. Vimeo. Retrieved December 7, 2018.
  13. ^ a b "Live from the Engadget CES Stage: an interview with Romotive's Keller Rinaudo (update: video embedded)". engadget. Retrieved January 16, 2020.
  14. ^ a b ""People were questioning my sanity": The improbable comeback of Keller Rinaudo". Pando. Retrieved January 16, 2020.
  15. ^ , Wikipedia, November 27, 2019, retrieved December 2, 2019
  16. ^ "UPS Foundation supports Ghana's vaccine drone delivery network". May 3, 2019.
  17. ^ Kelland, Kate (April 24, 2019). "Drones to deliver vaccines, blood and drugs across Ghana". Reuters. Retrieved May 21, 2019.
  18. ^ "Drones deliver medical supplies and PPE in US". BBC News. May 27, 2020. Retrieved May 28, 2020.
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