Toronto Life

A HANDFUL OF RIM ESCAPEES ARE LEADING THE TORONTO TECH SCENE

Ontario’s first big innovator fostered a new generation of local talent. Here, five ex–RIM staffers turned tech tycoons

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TED LIVINGSTON

AT RIM: Systems engineerin­g and product management co-ordinator now: Founder and CEO of the messaging platform Kik Livingston—a hoodie-clad wunderkind in the mould of Mark Zuckerberg—created his own chat app in response to his dissatisfa­ction with BlackBerry Messenger. Now Kik is the platform of choice for teens looking to swap messages without parental supervisio­n. In 2015, Tencent, a Chinese media giant, invested $50 million in Livingston’s company, pushing its valuation to $1 billion.

RAY REDDY

AT RIM: Mergers and acquisitio­ns strategist now: CEO of Ritual, an app that automates restaurant takeout In 2008, Reddy left RIM to create PushLife, which made software that managed media files on cellphones. After selling the company to Google, he dreamed up Ritual, an app where users order food from their smartphone­s, then pick it up at the restaurant. Ritual has launched in four cities (Toronto, Chicago, New York and Los Angeles) and works with 2,000 participat­ing restaurant­s.

ADAM BELSHER

AT RIM: Vice-president of the Verizon Business Unit now: CEO of the investigat­ive platform Magnet Forensics Belsher teamed up with former Waterloo police officer Jad Saliba to launch software that helps detectives comb seized hard drives for evidence. (Saliba is now the company’s CTO.) It’s currently used in about 3,800 agencies in 93 countries, and it has been instrument­al in cracking online childexplo­itation and terrorism cases around the globe.

MARY PAT HINTON

AT RIM: Software R&D specialist now: Founder of the mental health app Emmetros Hinton, who worked at RIM from 2006 to 2014, creates products designed to help jog the memories of people with cognitive impairment­s by turning their mobile devices into digital memory palaces. The company’s marquee product, an iPad app called MemorySpar­x, allows users to store and access informatio­n about their daily schedules, their personal histories and their medication­s.

SCOTT TOTZKE, MARK PECEN AND MIKE BROWN

AT RIM: Vice-presidents now: Co-founders of the cyber-security start-up Isara Many technologi­sts believe that quantum computers will one day be so powerful that they’ll threaten online security by breaking current methods of encryption. This trio are developing new quantum cryptograp­hic security systems that will be able to withstand attacks from miscreants equipped with code-breaking tech.

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