Software AG Makes Bid to Acquire IDS Scheer

Software AG has made an offer to acquire IDS Scheer (whose Americas headquarters is in Berwyn) for EUR 15.00 per share.
Dr. Scheer and his cofounder have already agreed to sell their combined holdings which amount to 48% of the voting rights in the company. The takeover price would be approximately EUR 480, roughly a 40% premium on its current price.
I'm just surprised that it didn't end up with SAP, which I had assumed had kind of an informal right of first refusal. But this
doesn't preclude SAP buying Software AG some time in the future.

Software AG / Publication of the decision to make a public takeover offer pursuant to Section 10 Paras. 1 and 3 in conjunction with Sections 29, 34 of the German Securities Acquisition

Software AG agrees to buy stakes in IDS Scheer; tender for rest (Reuters)


Philly Tech Events Calendar



PERSONAL LANDMARK MOMENT: MY FIRST PATENT: ON THE DESIGN OF COMCAST’S FAN PLAYER
(code zen)


Ubuntu's maker: Chrome OS 'no slam dunk' just because Google announces it (Computerworld)


Daily Links 7/10/09: Advanta Lays Off Half Its Workforce; More Gannett Cuts in Jersey

Dentsu To Buy Razorfish? (BD Recruitment)

Today's "Heard on the Street" column in the Wall Street Journal (subscription required) suggests that the trend towards imposing sales taxes on electronic retailers like Amazon that do not have a physical presence in a state may benefit GSI Commerce, which already collects sales taxes for many of its clients that do have a "brick & mortar" presence.

TAGSYS Enhances RFID Infrastructure for Libraries (Business Wire)

Lockheed-Moorestown wins Japan work (Philadelphia Business Journal: Technology Blog)

Comcast Technician Arrested In Oregon Robbery
Check-Cashing Store Employee Hit in Head With Crowbar
(Multichannel News)
I should create an entire section called "Weird Comcast News". There is an endless supply.

Starz Joins Comcast OnDemand Online (NewTeeVee)

Advanta to lay off half its employees (Associated Press via Forbes)

Gannett cuts 125 jobs from N.J. papers (Cherry Hill Courier-Post)
Probably more cuts also at the Wilmington News Journal, but haven't heard about them yet.

Geek Weekend: Philadelphia, PA
(CrunchGear)

SEO with Duck-Duck-Go Founder, Gabriel Weinberg (DreamIt Ventures Blog)

Wayne-based website integrates medicine, consumer-directed care (Keystone Edge)



permalink


hhgregg Coming to Philly Area


The demise of Circuit City and Tweeter left the Philadelphia area with a lack of big box competition to consumer electronics retailing giant Best Buy. But new entrants are looking to fill the void.
Sixth Avenue Electronics has already opened a store in Montgomeryville, with another in the works in Wilmington and others to come. And yesterday hhgregg, a rapidly growing Indianapolis-based retailer, announced it will enter the Philadelphia market and other mid-atlantic states beginning in their 2011 Fiscal Year which begins in April 2010. The company plans to open between 40 and 45 new stores during fiscal 2011, with the majority of these new stores located in large and mid-sized metropolitan markets in the Mid-Atlantic region, including Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Washington, D.C. It has already executed leases for several of the stores to open in FY 2011.
hhgregg currently operates 112 stores in Indiana, Ohio, and several southeastern states.


Daily Links 7/09/09: The Tug of War For Razorfish; First Round helps fund CoTweet

Inside The Tug Of War For—And Within—Razorfish (paidContent)

Twitter CRM Service, CoTweet, Raises Series A Funding; Launches Public Beta. (TechCrunch)
CoTweet is based in Hershey, and First Round Capital participated in the funding.
(Update: So much for Hershey. CoTweet will be relocating to San Francisco.)

Help me rename "Lifestyle Business" (RedeyeVC)

SAP: Is the worst over? (ZDNet Blogs)

Comcast Finally Launches DNS Redirection
An additional revenue stream thanks to your butterfingers...
(Broadband Reports)

DOJ Says Murtha Earmark Money Was Illicitly Distributed (Roll
Call)

Wayne firm a force for change, transparency in money management (Keystone Edge)

Local companies thrive with Apple
Catering to Mac owners proves a viable business
(Baltimore Sun)
On MacMedics, which also serves the Philly area.

Crime lab saves energy costs by turning up heat in the data center (IT World)

TiVo Buddies Up With Best Buy
Companies Sign Five-Year Marketing and Product-Development Pact
(Multichannel News)



permalink


Video: 15 year old Philadelphia hacker Ari Weinstein (Wall Street Journal)



The Impasse Over Ben Franklin Technology Partners

The negotiations over the Ben Franklin Technology Development Authority's (the umbrella organization for Ben Franklin Technology Partners) budget remain pretty much stalled along with the overall budget impasse, it appears. Governor Rendell has reduced his request from $40 million to $35 million, coming a little closer to the $20 million proposed by the Republicans in the State Legislature. The previous budget allotment for the program was $50.7 million. I asked Terry Singer, Director of Statewide Affairs for BFTP in Harrisburg, to share some historical trends in the program's budget and the breakdown of expenditures.
The amount allocated to the regional BFTPs has been absolutely flat for at least the past six years at $27,611,000. The remaining $23 million or so goes to the state level, and the total pie was divided as follows for FY 2008-2009 (July 1, 2008 – June 30, 2009), though this chart actually represents $60 million since it includes a $10 million carry over from the previous year:



                (Source: Ben Franklin Technology Development Authority)

While I am personally not a big fan of government intrusions into private equity markets, I don't think BFTP is a massive program. It is also professionally managed, considered as a model by other states, and seems protected from most kinds of political interference in its investment decision making processes, as far as I can tell. I know many Philly entrepreneurs have have benefited from and succeeded through the program. And I haven't seen a word recently from anyone in the Legislature being critical of it.
On the other hand I agree with Joe DiStefano's assessment of the impact analysis produced by BFTP as being overblown. And it is only one of a number of programs that Republicans in the State Legislature are targeting to avoid Rendell's proposed 16% income tax hike which is something that would not be good for the State's economy at this time.
Hopefully, they will find a good compromise.


Daily Links 7/08/09: Comcast to Launch Olympic Channel

Google Chrome OS: A Scramble to Say Nothing (GigaOM)

Venture fund raising drops to six-year low in first half of 2009 (WRAL: Local Tech Wire)

U.S. Olympic Committee, Comcast Launching Olympic Cable Network (Bloomberg)

Hasso Plattner Calls for In-Memory OLTP Column Stores (Intelligent Enterprise)

Is there innovation in SAP’s SCM software strategy? (IT Knowledge Exchange: SAP Watch)

As Gannett’s Newspapers Suffer, Digital Side Sees Growth, More Hiring And Acquisitions (paidContent)

Technology's unclear impact on health care (Knowledge@Wharton via Wilmington News Journal)


Motorola sells FTTN family to CTDI (Fierce Telecom)

Devon IT Presents New Thin Client Model
A very... expansive client, one might say
(Softpedia)

CenTrak Releases New Temperature Tag for Healthcare (PR Web)

Clearwire Officially Adds Las Vegas to WiMAX Cities. There’s Many More to Go. (MostReviews.com)

Ex-baseball star and entrepreneur Lenny Dykstra files bankruptcy (Reuters)

Fire at Comcast cable junction investigated as possible arson (ABC4)
Fire that destroyed W.Va. cable station ruled arson (Charleston Daily Mail)
These are two entirely different incidences.

Rendell's Office Indicates He Supports Wine Vending Machine Concept (KYW NewsRadio)
I would imagine the selection wouldn't be too great.

Bio-Imaging Technologies, Inc. Shareholders Approve Company’s Name Change to BioClinica, Inc. (Business Wire)




permalink


Philly Tech Events



Daily Links 7/07/09: CTDI Acquires Motorola's Fiber-to-the-Node Product Portfolio

Justice Deptartment eyeing telecom probe: report (Reuters)

Feds: Pa. defense contractor exec took kickbacks (Associated Press via Google News)

CTDI Acquires Motorola's Fiber-to-the-Node Product Portfolio (PR Newswire)
CTDI is based in West Chester.

The End of Free Online News in Philadelphia? (WHYY: Its Our City)

ETC needed Lenfest funds big time (Philadelphia Business Journal: Technology Blog)

Before Watson Wyatt deal, Towers Perrin sold its stake in ExcellerateHRO (Philly.com: Philly Inc)

West Virginia Attorney General Sues Comcast Over Set-Tops
State AG Alleges MSO Violates Antitrust and Consumer-Protection Laws
(Multichannel News)

Spinning the Web: P.R. in Silicon Valley (New York Times)

Drexel works its own smart grid system (InTech)


South Jersey Healthcare Selects MobileMD for Health Information Exchange Service (Business Wire)
MobileMD is based in Warminster.

SAP Brings Intelligence to Unified Governance, Risk and Compliance Apps (Intelligent Enterprise)

Risky Business: Enterprise GRC Platforms Essential, Says Forrester (Read Write Web)

WiMax Ready To Surge Again (Information Week)

Hershey to Close Direct Unit (Multichannel Merchant)
A GSI Commerce client.

eZanga Relocates to House Growing Workforce
Company Plans Additional Sales & New Business Development Team Growth
(Business Wire)

Former IMS Health CEO Louis-Dreyfus Dies (mrweb)
Twenty years ago Louis-Dreyfus sold IMS to D&B for $1.7 billion(D&B spun it off a few years later) and today it has a market value of $2.2 biliion, though you have to factor in that today it has long-term debt of $1.3 million and D&B did sell off some small assets after the acquisition.
Probably the only reason IMS Health is headquartered in Connecticut rather than Plymouth Meeting where most of its US operations are based is that D&B was formerly headquartered in Connecticut when they owned IMS.



permalink


The Risk of Junk Upends Leverage (Breakingviews.com via New York Times)
Focuses on SunGard.

Google finally sued by makers of Finally Fast (CNET News)

What should SAP do with its $5bn war chest? (ZDNet Blogs)

Verizon, Comcast To Compete For Pittsburgh Cable Customers
Pittsburgh, Verizon Reach Tentative Cable Agreement
(The PittsburghChannel.com)

CardioNet’s strong pulse
Stock price drop a blip on screen?
(Philadelphia Business Journal)


People News 7/06/09

Kramer leaving Finch for MEDecision (Philadelphia Business Journal)

Lori Sofianek to Join WorldGate as Senior Vice President of Customer Operations
(Business Wire)

IMS Names Kimberly Gray Chief Privacy Officer, Americas (Business Wire)

Canoe Hires Schaffer As Head Of Finance
Former CEO of Consulting Firm Reports to David Verklin
(Mutichannel News)

Emerio Names Vice President for USA (Company Press Release)

UniRisX, a provider of SaaS-based solutions for the insurance industry with offices in Conshohocken, announced three appointments. David Hollander, formerly a managing director at Accenture, was named CEO. Jonathan Kalman, managing partner of Jaguar Capital Investments, was named chairman of the board. David Plate, also from Accenture, was named vice president sales and business development, North America.

Two Join Regulatory DataCorp Board (Business Wire)

Dynasil Announces Dr. Gerald Entine as New Director (Business WIre)

William Ashton Named Founding Dean of the Mayes College of Healthcare Business and Policy (University of the Sciences)



permalink


Updating Recent Philly VC Investments

Below is a table showing IT-related venture capital investments in the Philadelphia area in the second quarter, at least those that I am aware of. It should not be considered a complete record of deals in Q2; the PricewaterhouseCooper/MoneyTree report that should be out soon always includes some deals that have not been previously announced. But as you can see activity in Q2 looks much better already than what happened in Q1.
One company I have removed from the list that was on the PwC/MoneyTree Q1 report is a stealth company called "OSS 1701", listed as being Wilmington-based. It turns out that the company has nothing to do with Delaware, as far as I can tell, other than possibly being incorporated there. It is based in Redwood City, CA. The company actually turns out to be a pretty big deal; it is a cloud platform startup called webappVM, backed by Marc Andreessen among others. Possibly the founders or investors had it shown as being in Delaware in order to protect its stealth status by keeping it out of the Silicon Valley rumor mill.




QVC Debt Concerns

The Wall Street Journal reports on mounting concerns over QVC's debt load (subscription required). Its not that QVC is going to go bust anytime soon, its just that John Malone's Liberty Media empire (which owns QVC) is so difficult to keep track of with all of its asset juggling and tax advantage oriented transactions.The article suggests that Malone may not have treated some debt holders too well relative to other classes of investors.
Another thing I don't like about Liberty Media is its tracking stocks (for instance, QVC is assigned to the Liberty Interactive tracking stock). I would never buy a tracking stock; even though I have an MBA I've never quite understood what I'm getting with them (just my opinion).
Another thought about Liberty Media-if it does need more liquidity would it consider unloading its 90% or so position in TruePosition of Berwyn? I think it might, if the tax implications are favorable. I don't see a strong fit with most of the other activities Liberty Media is engaged in, though I might be missing something strategically.
Other Liberty Media holdings in the area include a stake in GSI Commerce, and ZoomBak, which sells GPS locators.


Editorial: Philadelphia story
Transparency in education is a rare thing -- which is why Microsoft and AIE are to be commended
(eSchoolNews-Free Registation)
A report card on Philadelphia's School of the Future.

Bill banning forced identity-chip implants clears House (Philadelphia Inquirer)


BI Number Games

It was a little surprising when Information Week reported last month on Gartner's Business Intelligence market share estimates for 2008. It cited that report as implying that SAS Institute (which historically has a large Philadelphia area user base) grew its BI revenue from $752 million in 2007 to $1.29 billion in 2008, a growth rate of 72%. I thought this couldn't be correct; in fact it was a virtual mathematical impossibility since SAS revenue grew only about 5% overall and BI revenue (as estimated by Gartner) represented almost 60% of overall SAS revenue.
Gartner confirmed to me that the Information Week figures were, in fact, incorrect. The reporter apparently compared the 2008 numbers to a previous Gartner release about the 2007 numbers, but it was not apples to apples since Gartner had added another category to the 2008 figures: Analytical and Performance Management applications, areas in which SAS is strong. (These numbers were also reflected in the revised 2007 figures.) SAS BI revenue actually grew about 5% in 2008, according to Gartner.
On the other hand, Gartner showed SAP's BI revenue rising by 46% in 2008, apples to apples including all Business Objects revenue in 2007, as it upsold its enterprise application customer base as well as its own legacy BI customers to Business Objects solutions. (SAP closed the Business Objects acquisition in January 2008.) This is a vastly different than IDC's recently released numbers, which shows SAP's growth rate at 17%, and that would appear to account for most of the difference between Gartner's overall market growth rate of 22% and IDC's rate of 11%.
A summary of the IDC report, including a breakout of the major vendors' revenue and market share, is here. Two other Philadelphia area companies are also included; rapidly growing QlikTech of Radnor, which appears to have continuing momentum in 2009, and Arcplan of Berwyn.
Also, see Cindi Howson's take on the IDC numbers in Intelligent Enterprise.


Daily Links 7/02/09: More Gannett Layoffs; City Water Billing Still a Problem?

Gannett Says It Will Lay Off 1,400; Digital Properies Largely Spared (paidContent)
Gannet owns daily papers in Cherry Hill and Wilmington, as well as PointRoll in Conshohocken.

NetSuite vs. SAP – How Newton would see this contest (ZDNet
Blogs)

Oracle plans to lay off up to 1,000 in Europe: AFP (Reuters)

City controller criticizes water-billing system (Philadelphia Inquirer)
Gee, I thought that problem was all fixed.

Qlik Tech enters into strategic deal with Path Infotech (Silicon India)

You Are About to Lose a Fortune (Motley Fool)
Mentions GSI Commerce.

The Human Capitalist Nails the SaaS Test (The Boomi Blog)

TelVue Launches New National Data Center
(Globe Newswire)

Environmental Tectonics turns 1Q profit (Philadelphia Business Journal)

Dish Wins Stay From Appeals Court On DVR Order
Court Schedules Case in TiVo Litigation For as Soon as November
(Multichannel News)

CableLabs Issues Ad Specs For Canoe
Four Interfaces Define Attributes of Advanced-Advertising Campaigns
(Multichannel News)

Pirate Bay 2.0 to Resell Users' Bandwidth to Comcast, AT&T (Silicon Alley Insider)

Smart Zone, an introduction
(Comcast Voices)

Peco Building's Fancy New LED Display Debuts July 4th (KYW NewsRadio)



permalink


Daily Links 7/01/09: CardioNet Shares Down 41% on Reduced Guidance

Vishay Announces Settlement with International Rectifier (Business Wire)

CardioNet, Inc. Updates Full Year 2009 Guidance, Industry Dynamics and Future Strategies (Business Wire)
Reimbursement rates drop; shares down about 40% today.

J&J (Centocor) Wins Record $1.67 Billion Verdict From Abbott (Bloomberg)

ERP SaaS: Three Moves Worth Noting (MSPmentor)

As Oracle advances Fusion middleware, what’s SAP’s next move? (IT Knowledge Exchange: SAP Watch)

More than $1.7B tendered in Comcast debt offer (Associated Press via Business Week)

FlyCast radio player comes to a desktop near you (Geeks.com)

Analysts Doubt Future of Comcast's WiMAX Offering (Mobile Tech Today)

July 1st Tru2way Deadline (Zatz Not Funny!)

Ascensus Acquires CUNA Mutual Group’s IRA Services (Business Wire)

Universal Display Awarded $750,000 SBIR Phase II Contract from U.S. Air Force for Flexible OLED Displays (Business Wire)

Electronic chemicals see slow signs of recovery (ICIS.com)
Discusses Dow Advanced Materials (Rohm & Haas).

USA Technologies, Inc. Announces Record Date for Rights Offering (Business Wire)

Urban flight slowing down (Philadelphia Daily News)
The rate of Philadelphia's population shrinkage declines.

The Insider-Film in Philly (Innovation Philadelphia Blog)



permalink