Daily Links 8/31/2011: Justice Department moves to block AT&T/T-Mobile deal

U.S. Files Antitrust Complaint to Block AT&T, T-Mobile Merger (Bloomberg)

Justice Dept. to block AT&T's T-Mobile deal (CNET News)

AT&T: Deal’s Dead, Says Bernstein; It Ain’t Over, Says Wells (Barron's: Tech Trader Daily)

Perzel: 'I'm sorry that I let you down.' (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)
Charges centered on use of State funds for software that aided GOP campaigns.

Scott Maxwell: What Prick Will Pop the Bubble? (PE Hub)
Scott Maxwell founded Boston-based OpenView Venture Partners, which this month has announced major investments in two Philly-area ventures: Monetate and NextDocs.


The Bidding War Over Hulu Erupts – Find Out Who's In And Who's Out Here (Silicon Alley Insider)


Comcast to introduce low-cost Internet service for low-income families (Philadelphia Inquirer)

Versus to Launch ‘NBC SportsTalk’ Live Studio Show at 6pm on Sept. 8 (Hollywood Reporter)

Bloomberg TV Takes New Shot At Comcast Over Channel Placement (paidContent)

Dell Cloud Business Applications video feaures Boomi and its CTO Rick Nucci (Dell via YouTube)

Salesforce.com Revs up Mobile Strategy With HTML5 (PC World)

Salesforce.com's Benioff inspired by Arab Spring (Reuters)

Salesforce.com, Dun & Bradstreet Launch Data.com (PC World)

QlikTech Announces New Salesforce Chatter Integration for the QlikView Business Discovery Platform; Enables Collaborative Decision Making by Leveraging Chatter Connect to Deliver Social Conversations to QlikView Business Discovery Apps (Business Wire)


CardioNet shares sink to life-low on DoJ probe (Reuters)



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Daily Links 8/30/2011: Dell to offer hosted apps for SMBs, tied together by Boomi

Court: Perzel will plead guilty Wednesday (Philadelphia Inquirer)


Dell launches a VMware-based cloud; Azure next (Gigaom)

Dell Offers Hosted Apps for SMBs (PC World)
Dell Boomi to tie it all together.

Dell Seeks to Unify Managed Services, Cloud Services Partners (MSPMentor)

FAQ: What to Expect at Salesforce.com's Dreamforce (PC World)

VMware tries to expand virtual networks with VXLAN (Gigaom)

Oracle accuses H-P of fraud in Hurd settlement (MarketWatch)

DoubleVerify Gets Another $33M in Funding
Analyst: Ad-Verification Companies May Integrate With New Demand-Side Platforms
(Ad Age)
Previous investor First Round Capital participates again in this round.


Capital One/ING Deal Delay Overdone: Analyst (TheStreet)

Fired Bill O'Reilly Adversary Loses Civil Rights Claim Against Comcast (Hollywood Reporter)

CardioNet says DoJ probing incorrect Medicare claim charges (Reuters)
CardioNet is based in Conshohocken.

Krames StayWell and 3M Partner to Integrate Patient Education Content with Health IT Systems (Business Wire)

Dollar General Selects GSI Commerce to Launch Its eCommerce Business (Business Wire)



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King of Prussia-based A-Frame Technology Services enters Cloud Brokerage business, launching RentTheCloud.com

Tom Paine





IT research firm Forrester has projected that the market for Cloud computing services will increase from about $41 billion in 2011 to $241 billion in 2020. As the acceptance and adoption of Cloud computing accelerates, industry watchers and participants are looking for new models for managing this environment. One of the perceived needs is at what one might say is a meta level; that of helping IT consumers select from among many PaaS (Platform as a Service), IaaS (Infrastructure as a Service) and SaaS (Software as a Service) offerings, making sure they meld together well, and giving the customer a single solution for negotiating the best prices and service level agreements, managing all the contracts and license terms, monitoring capacity requirements and making adjustments as needed, and providing or sourcing other resources needed to manage the entire process.

This has become known as the Cloud Brokerage model, which according to a recent report from Forrester will be emerging and standardizing over the next couple of years. Many companies are offering some types of brokerage services as a sideline, and a few are focusing on it more directly. Examples include Appirio's CloudWorks (Salesforce just made a significant investment in Appirio), and SpotCloud, which is mostly geared towards brokering Cloud computing capacity rather than applications. Dell, with its acquisition of Berwyn-based SaaS integrator Boomi and its other Cloud-related services, would appear well positioned to get into the brokerage space; although last year Boomi did release what it called a "cloud-based, real-time integration broker", I have not seen an indication that it has really gotten into the brokerage business yet. But clearly there are no dominant players now and plenty of room for new entrants.

One new entrant is King of Prussia-based A-Frame Technology Services, which has just launched a brokerage service, RentTheCloud.com. A-Frame helps large enterprise clients manage the risks of complex IT projects. A-Frame applies an agency construction manager business model to large IT projects, which means it has a duty to act in the best interest of its client and follows a structured methodology to ensure a project's success. (They looked to Philly-based Turner Construction as an example.) A-Frame, which was formed through the merger of specialty consultants Blue Ray, GCi and Panaro Dynamics a few years ago, has about 25 employees; Its principals are Dan Brennan and Mike Kovach.

In a phone interview, Brennen told me that RentTheCloud is targeted primarily towards the type of larger enterprises that are A-Frame's usual clients. RentTheCloud is using a real estate brokerage model for its business model. It has established what it calls the R.E.N.T. methodology, which involves the following steps:


  • (R)eview your current IT ecosystem, including application inventory, support organization, contracts, licenses, and facilities.


  • (E)valuate market opportunities that enable migration from current state to cloud alternative


  • (N)egotiate terms and conditions between buyer and seller.



  • (T)ransition to the cloud.



Brennan says his firm can usually assess a client's needs in one to two weeks. Fees typically amount to one to two months of a client's subscription fees, depending upon complexity, with a one year committment (payment due only when apps are moved to the Cloud). He worked with Blank Rome LLP Partner Daniel Rhynhart (named to the 2010 "40 under 40" by the Philadelphia Business Journal), to draw up a Cloud Brokerage agreement (pdf) that he thinks is better than anything else out there. RentTheCloud's website currently includes more than 100 Cloud vendors, with more on the way.            



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Daily Links 8/29/2011: Google, Apple said to step up TV plans

Apple is working on a television for 2012, sources say (VentureBeat)

Google TV Will Hit Europe Next Year (Silicon Alley Insider)

Google May Take Competitors to the Gridiron Next (Literally) (PE Hub)

New DirecTV TiVo Launches Next Month (Zatz Not Funny!)

Cable still beating out telcos in broadband adds (Gigaom)

VMware pushes enterprise hybrid clouds in first VMworld announcements (ZDNet Blogs)

SunGard Offers Recover2Cloud (Read Write Cloud)

Microsoft launches new CRM cloud promotion on eve of Salesforce conference (ZDNet Blogs)

PANL Slips: Display Malaise, Or Limited Upside? Bulls Defend (Barron's: Tech Trader Daily)

PANL Inks Lighting Deal With Panasonic Idemitsu (Barron's: Tech Trader Daily)

The politics of Sharpton’s new gig (Chicago Sun-Times)
Gets full time slot at MSNBC.

Motorola Is Full Of People Google "Would Never Hire," And That's Why The Merger Won't Take (Silicon Allley Insider)
I'm sure Motorola Mobility employees, who actually do some brilliant engineering, appreciate this kind of talk.


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Irene hits power, web infrastructure; Cell networks struggling to cope (ZDNet Blogs)


Daily Links 8/26/2011: Class action suit against Comcast can proceed, Circuit Court rules

Class Can Proceed in Comcast Antitrust Case (Courthouse News Service)

Clearwire denies report of debt restructuring (Bloomberg via Kansas City Star)

Canoe Ventures revamps senior mgmt team; new role for Orduña (CED Magazine)

InterDigital Case Against ZTE, Huawei Gets Trade Agency Review (Bloomberg)

QVC to open studio at L.A. Live (LA Times)

SAP Co-CEO Bill McDermott Appears on CNBC’s Mad Money with Jim Cramer (Video: SAP News)
McDermott: "SAP is all about the Cloud". Perhaps a bit of an overstatement, but a very entertaining interview to watch. You can see why McDermott has a reputation for being a legendary salesperson.

HP’s Chief Communications Officer Put on “Special Assignment
(All Things Digital)
Bill Wohl, who was brought over to HP by Léo Apotheker from SAP, is an area native who attended the University of Delaware and served as a volunteer fireman in Chester County for many years.

For Seamless Transitions at the Top, Don’t Consult H.P. (New York Times)

Salesforce.com Backs Cloud Solution Company Appirio’s World Domination Plans (TechCrunch)

Next Gen Strategic HR Software (Enterprise Irregulars)

Boarding the SevOne Rocket Ship (SevOne Blog)
Brian Harvell on joining SevOne as Vice President of Product Engineering from Comcast.

LaunchDM Designs iPad App for Salesforce.com Users (PR Web)
LaunchDM is based in Wyomissing.



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A look at Philly-area companies on the Inc. 5000

The 2011 Inc. 5000 is out, and here is a list of the top Philly area companies on it.

I always look at this with a grain of salt, because there are a number of ways in which a young company can generate a great deal of revenue quickly without necessarily building a sustainable business. Revenue does not always correlate with profit. But it does provide a good benchmark for measuring the progress of some of the most promising tech startups in the area.

re2g of Doylestown (formerly Solardelphia), which installs residential solar systems, was the top Philly area company - and 24th nationally. It was followed by a Philly-based company named Leadnomics, which as its name implies is in the online lead generation business for financial institutions, online schools, and insurance companies.

NextDocs of King of Prussia, which just received a large round of funding that I wrote about earlier this week, was third (it was first last year). NextDocs' revenue grew over 3,000% during the past three years to $9.8 million in 2010. It ranked ninth among all software companies.



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Daily Links 8/24/2011: Time Warner Cable to subsidize Slingboxes for subscribers

Aging East Coast infrastructure a concern after quake (Computerworld)

Comcast's Roberts hosts President Obama on Martha's Vineyard (Philadelphia Inquirer)

Moffett Rethinks TV Sector
Top Analyst Modifies Cable, Satellite Targets
(Multichannel News)

Time Warner to Subsidize Subscribers’ TV Device (New York Times)

PowerBoost: A Comcast Innovation for High-Speed Internet Users (Comcast Voices /Official Comcast Blog)

COMCAST ROLLS OUT METRO E, ADDS REGIONAL PARTNERS (Channel Partners)

Drexel U scrapping plans for 2nd campus in Calif. (AP via San Jose Mercury News)

HP: Where is it going? (Dennis Howlett/Irregular Enterprise)


AT&T’s Hyperlocal Sites Show Off Network Upgrades (TechCrunch)
One of the sites is for Philadelphia.

Fallout? Pharma & The Facebook Wall (Pixels & Pills)

The Next Tech Patent Powerhouses (Forbes)
Could Ewing, NJ-based Universal Display be the next InterDigital (or more?)

Google’s acquisition of Motorola’s TV-box business worries WPP’s Sorrell
(FT Tech Hub)

Epicor Announces Cloud Computing Solution for Distributors (Marketwire)
Complementary to Epicor's Prophet 21 product line, which is based out of Yardley, PA.



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