A Life

Timeline

Fifty years compressed into a few dates. Behind every one of them were thousands of small introductions, late-night emails, and “come by tomorrow, let’s talk.”

1975

Born

Joshua Baer is born. He will grow up to call himself an “Austinpreneur,” a word he invents because no other word fits.

1996

SKYLIST

As a Carnegie Mellon undergraduate, Josh starts his first company — SKYLIST, an email service business — from his dorm room. Four-time entrepreneur before he’s thirty.

1999

Carnegie Mellon, Computer Science

Graduates from Carnegie Mellon with a CS degree, “a less-than-stellar academic record, and a couple hundred grand in revenues from his first company.” Returns later as a guest lecturer to give back.

2005

SKYLIST sold to Datran Media

First exit. Moves to Austin permanently and never looks back.

2008

OtherInbox — TechCrunch50 Finalist

Launches OtherInbox at TechCrunch50, one of fifty finalists chosen from thousands. The national tech press meets Josh Baer.

2009

Capital Factory founded

With Bryan Chambers and a small team, Josh opens Capital Factory in downtown Austin. “Lots of smart people in a small space.” Seed capital, weekly mentoring, and an open door.

2012

OtherInbox acquired by Return Path

Second exit. TechCrunch covers the deal and notes it brings Return Path’s operations to Austin — another company anchored in his hometown.

2012

CNN Business profile

“Capital Factory spurs startups in Austin.” Josh tells the national audience he’s on a mission to keep talent from leaving for Silicon Valley. He uses the word “Austinpreneur” on national television.

2013

President Obama visits Capital Factory

As part of the Middle Class Jobs and Opportunity tour, President Obama makes an unannounced visit to Capital Factory. Josh, then Entrepreneur in Residence at UT, shows the President around.

2013

Longhorn Startup

Begins co-teaching Longhorn Startup at UT Austin. He will continue for roughly fifteen years — one cohort, then another, then another.

2014

Capital Factory matched by Silverton & Floodgate

TechCrunch announces that Silverton Partners and Floodgate will match Capital Factory’s investments in select companies. The institutional validation Austin had been waiting for.

2015

Texas Tribune board

Joins the board of the Texas Tribune, the nonprofit newsroom covering Texas politics and policy. Serves through 2017.

2018

Henry Crown Fellow, Aspen Institute

Selected for the Aspen Institute’s Henry Crown Fellowship — a class of leaders committed to applying their gifts to the common good.

2018

Army Futures Command comes to Austin

The U.S. Army selects Austin for its new four-star Futures Command. Capital Factory becomes a connective hub between the Army and the startup community. Mayor Adler later credits Josh as instrumental.

2021

Eisenhower Fellow

Named an Eisenhower Fellow — a global network of leaders advancing peace, prosperity, and justice.

2023

Key to the City of Austin

Mayor Kirk Watson presents Josh with the Key to the City in January. The honor recognizes a generation of work building Austin’s startup ecosystem from a few couches into a global hub.

2024

Texas Votes

Builds Texas Votes — a nonpartisan, open-source tool that turns five minutes of preferences into a personalized Texas ballot. One of the last things he ships.

2024

Washington Office

Co-founds the Washington Office, a Washington, D.C. firm focused on frontier technology and national security policy.

2025

Apptronik Series A — $350M

Capital Factory co-leads, with B Capital, Apptronik’s $350M Series A. The UT-spinout humanoid robotics company — one of Josh’s long bets — goes mainstream.

2025

Austin Tech Hall of Fame

Inducted into the Austin Tech Hall of Fame. He still answers his own email.

2026

STATION Austin

Launches STATION Austin in March, a nonprofit dedicated to keeping Austin’s entrepreneurial soul intact as the city grows. Ninety-nine days of work he was incredibly proud of.

2026

Saronic — $1.75B

Saronic, the defense-tech maritime company Capital Factory backed early, raises at a $1.75B valuation in March. Another seed, fully watered.

2026

In memory

Joshua Baer is survived by his wife Amy and their three children. The community he built keeps planting seeds in his name.