Highlights: Last week on Philly Tech News (4/16/2012 to 4/22/2012)



I wrote about how Comcast is entering Alteva's Unified Communications market, Alteva's expansion plans in Philadelphia, and its new advertising campaign.

Cherry Hill-based icueTV, which has been focused on building a platform for Interative TV Apps, branched out in a somewhat different direction by launching DropWallet, a mobile app platform for online eCommerce aimed at publishers. Real Simple magazine is its first user.

Uber, the San Francisco-based mobile service for locating and ordering private cars originally backed by First Round Capital, indicated last week it is planning to launch in Philadelphia, though it wasn't ready to offer specifics yet.

A University of the Arts professor's startup filed a lawsuit against Apple, claiming it infringed its patent on touch screen technology.

Philly-based discount retailer Five Below filed for an IPO, saying it planned to raise up to $150 million. In another retailing move, Fanatics, a part of GSI Commerce founder Michael Rubin's Kynetic LLC, announce plans to acquire competitor Dreams Inc. for $183 million including the assumption of debt.

In the aftermath of SAP North America CEO Robert Courteau's departure following a disappointing quarter for sales in the region, someone identified as "an SAP insider" complained to Silicon Alley Insider about the intense pressure at the company to achieve sales targets (like that's never happened before). Meanwhile, SAP's newly launched advertising campaign aims to appeal to a broader base of potential users. And up and coming SAP/Oracle cloud-based competitor Workday hired Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley to lead its IPO. In a stunning move, the General Services Administration nixed Oracle's entire blanket contract with the Federal government; they probably need more funds for their party budget.

Netflix CEO Reed Hastings took to Facebook to complain about Comcast exempting its own streaming service (Streampix) from its monthly download limit, and apparently the FCC is paying attention. Comcast CEO Brian Roberts and NBCUniversal CEO Steve Burke both took compensation cuts last year, Burke's reduction being much larger.

Verizon says it plans to stop selling DSL it markets where it has Fiber to the Home (FTTH) service, and will try to transition DSL customers to FiOS. A Verizon executive also said "we're going to have several price-ups in our FiOS packages" over the next two quarter. Meanwhile, Philadelphia City Council voted to hold hearings on alleged Verizon foot dragging in rolling out FiOS in the city.

First Round Capital is raising its fourth fund totaling at least $135 million, slightly larger than reported earlier this year. The firm is sticking to its strategy of keeping its funds fairly small.

King of Prussia-based InterDigtal may move or add up to 74 employees in a new Delaware office, mostly related to its Intellectual Property (legal) practice.

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appRenaissance acquires UXFLIP



Tom Paine




appRenaissance, the Old City Philadelphia-based mobile app development startup, made an important step towards building out its own platform by acquiring West Chester-based UXFLIP, the company will announce this morning.

UXFLIP was founded in 2011 by Michael Raber, a longtime area resident who spent several years with Nokia Navteq/Traffic.com in Malvern. It won best in show at last month's Phorum Cloud Computing Conference at World Cafe Live. appRenaissance said in statement that UXFLIP's UX/UI creation, deployment and management capabilities will be merged with the company’s mobile middleware platform, Unifeed. UXFLIP's strength is on the front end, helping users to dynamically build, deploy and manage user interfaces for native mobile apps from the Cloud.

UXFLIP was a DreamIt Ventures company (Philadelphia 2011), where appRenaissance CEO Bob Moul became familiar with the startup while serving as an advisor.

appRenaissance announced earlier this month it had raised a $1.5 million seed round led by FirstMark Capital. It was founded in 2010 by CTO Scott Wasserman and Moul joined at the beginning of the year after leaving Dell Boomi.

Terms of the deal were not disclosed, though it wouldn't be surprising (my guess) if it included a combination of cash and equity. Raber will continue to be responsible for the development and roadmap of UXFLIP at appRenaissance. A beta version is expected to be released this summer.

UXFLIP is the second startup I know of from the Phorum Demo Pit to be acquired. ReadySetWork was acquired by West Chester-based PrimePay in March.



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A few interesting area events this week not on Philly Tech Week's Calendar



Princeton Tech Meetup Tonight (April 23) at 7pm at the Princeton Public Library. Four spots open right now, according to its Meetup page.

Philly FileMaker User Group Tuesday, April 24th, at 6:00 PM. at IT Solutions in Fort Washington. Presentation on the new FileMaker 12.

Cloudforce Social Enterprise Tour Wednesday, April 25, Washington DC. Features keynote from Vivek Kundra, EVP of Emerging Markets at salesforce.com and former CIO of the United States.

State of .NET - The Road to Windows 8 Microsoft Malvern on Thursday, April 26 from 2:00-5:00.

System Center User Group Microsoft Malvern on April 26 from 5:30 to 8:00 pm. Best of Microsoft Management Summit 2012 review and see live demos of next generation Windows Server "8", Hyper-V 3.0, and Windows 8.

PhillyForce April Meeting April 26, 6 to 8 pm, at LiquidHub in Wayne. How MEI (West Chester), maker of electronic bill and coin acceptors, uses the Boomi Platform to Integrate Salesforce and SAP ERP.

Delaware Tech Meetup Thursday, April 26 at 7:00pm at
the The coIN Loft in Wilmington. Focus on EdTech.



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NJ Tech Startups Dominate Awards at NJTC Venture Conference


Esther Surden
Publisher & Editor, NJTechWeekly.com





The 2012 NJTC Venture Conference, held in late March in Somerset, was dominated by young technology companies, although some life sciences firms were in the room.

New Jersey tech startups took home many honors at the conference, where a number of companies reported they made excellent connections with the venture community. Several angels and VCs told NJTechWeekly.com it was one of the best events at which to find good N.J. companies to fund. The award winners:


  • DocView Solutions of Cherry Hill was named best marketing/e-commerce company. The firm's tablet- and smartphone-based system uses predictive modeling and data analysis to notify a clinician proactively when a patient's health baseline is changing, thus preventing many hospital readmissions.

  • Newark-based Allweb Technologies was best information technology company. The firm has a cloud-based identity- and password-management system that uses fingerprint matching and two-step user authentication.

  • ATC Labs, also of Newark, took home the best communications company award for its technology that can increase bandwidth utilization via compression and processing technology.

  • The best advanced materials/nano company was Natcore Technology of Red Bank. The small, publicly traded firm is developing a black silicon solar technology that will increase solar cell output.

  • Veracity, a Glen Rock designer and developer of transmission, stage and display products for network video and surveillance applications, won best electronics company.

  • Voted both the people's choice and the company most likely to succeed was SpeechTrans (Lyndhurst), the instant translation firm that offers both apps and landline over-the-phone capabilities.

  • The best healthcare/IT company was SpectraMD of Princeton, whose intelligent solution aggregates and analyzes data for more cost-effective and better healthcare outcomes.


This year’s program included the usual expo and five-minute pitches along with a luncheon panel discussion, but it added a new twist. Companies were asked to make one-minute elevator pitches in the morning as well as to give longer presentations and answer questions later.

According to one angel we spoke with, the one-minute pitches were an excellent way for the funding community to quickly figure out which companies interested them so they could find them on the floor and devote greater attention to them.

However, some entrepreneurs we spoke to worried such short pitches would discourage people from finding them at the longer presentations. Indeed, at some points the longer presentations were discouragingly sparsely attended, as one presenter noted.


Esther Surden is Publisher and Editor of New Jersey Tech Weekly, and a contributor to Philly Tech News. This article originally appeared in New Jersey Tech Weekly.


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NJTC Panel Looks at “Strategic” Corporate Venture Investing


Esther Surden
Publisher & Editor, NJTechWeekly.com





Are entrepreneurs and follow-on investors well served by the investment fund arms of such companies as AOL, Google, Condé Nast, SAP, Time Warner and Home Depot? That’s the question a panel discussion on corporate venture investing, moderated by Raymond Thek, vice president of the Lowenstein Sandler (New York; Roseland, N.J.) Tech Group, attempted to answer at the 2012 NJTC Venture Conference in late March in Somerset.

Introducing the topic, Thek said in the past 15 months he has been on the other side of many deals with such companies, and this trend is a new one. “I’ve never seen anything like it in 20 years,” he noted. While companies in the life sciences used this strategy in the past, it is now widespread across industries.

The panelists thought early-stage investing with so-called “strategic investors” is a good idea for entrepreneurs if the company’s fund objectives and strategic interests align with the entrepreneur’s goals and the value the strategic company adds is very specific. However, deals need to be balanced, with nonstrategic investors also at the table to provide a counterweight to the sometimes more powerful entity. Also, the panelists advised, look for a strategic investor who can offer you something you can’t get elsewhere, like industry contacts.

Young companies should realize many strategic investors may not spend the time to get the right sales director into the right spot at the company and provide other, more hands-on help VCs might offer. Also, if a strategic investor is around at the initial round, “you may not have someone working that hard for you on the follow-on rounds,” said Peg Jackson of Gridley & Co. (New York).

Gil Beyda, founder and managing partner of Genacast Ventures, operates a seed-stage fund that is a Comcast (Philadelphia) offshoot. It’s not technically a “strategic fund,” he said, since companies in which it invests don’t necessarily have to have anything to do with Comcast’s interests.

His view is that more large firms are looking at creating their own venture funds as an integral part of their strategy. Some see this as a road to acquisition, while others view it primarily as a financial-management tool allowing them to diversify their financial stream. Most look at it as a way to identify new sectors, technologies and trends occurring in the industry and be on the cutting edge or bleeding edge.

Jackson added that large companies are getting into venture funding because “technology is having such a big impact on their businesses in so many ways.” Firms are looking at their investment arms as a way to maintain a formalized team and a structure, to know what’s coming down the road in technology. The good news for investors who get involved with them: while it used to be an informal arrangement, strategic companies have now formalized these groups and offer professionally structured term sheets, which they didn’t do before, she said.

Strategic investors are funding small slices of disruptive technologies to be at the top of the curve, before their businesses can be disrupted, Sasank Aleti of LLR Partners (Philadelphia) pointed out. Getting technology to market goes much faster now, so you can see the impact of disruptive technology much sooner, he said.



Esther Surden is Publisher and Editor of New Jersey Tech Weekly, and a contributor to Philly Tech News. This article originally appeared in New Jersey Tech Weekly.



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Philly Tech People News 4/22/2012



MediMedia Health Names Phil Deschamps as Company CEO (Business Wire)

Rajant Names Todd Rigby Vice President Business Development - Mining (Business Wire)

Comcast Promotes Melanie Penna to Senior Vice President of Human Resources for Comcast Cable (Business Wire)

Kevin O'Toole, Comcast Business Services (Fierce Telecom)

Cozen O’Connor Continues Growth of IP Litigation Practice with Seven Partners, Two Associates from Duane Morris (Business Wire)

The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Receives CEO IT Achievement Award (PR Newswire)

Tim Anderson Joins ISGN as Director of Corporate Technology (National Mortgage Professional)

Brownstein Group Launches B2B Practice
Philadelphia Agency Translates Wealth of Consumer Brand Experience Into Helping Business-to-Business Companies Differentiate Their Image
(Globe Newswire)

Stream Companies Adds 10 New Hires (Philly Ad Club News)

Emerald Bullish on Future with Expansion (Business Wire)


TE Connectivity Announces Retirement of Robert A. Scott, Executive Vice President and General Counsel; John S. Jenkins, Jr. Appointed as Successor (PR Newswire)

Checkpoint Systems, Inc. Announces the Resignation of Board Member Robert N. Wildrick (Business Wire)

NFTE Philadelphia Welcomes Philip P. Jaurigue to Advisory Board (Business Wire)

DMTF Welcomes NetApp and SunGard to Board of Directors (HPC in the Cloud)




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U of Arts Professor's startup sues Apple over touch screen technology patent

Tom Paine

FlatWorld Interactives LLC, a Villanova-based company founded by Dr. Slavko Milekic, a Professor of Cognitive Science & Digital Design at the University of the Arts ( see his U of Arts profile), has filed suit against Apple, claiming it violated at least one patent he was awarded related to touch screen technology.

FlatWorld alleges that Apple infringed its patent, US RE 43,318, originally awarded to Milekic but now the property of FlatWorld. The Apple products that the suit claims infringed this patent include the iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, iPad Nano (sixth generation), MacBook Pro, MacBook Air, Magic Mouse, and Magic Trackpad. The patent "includes claims to touch screen based systems that allow users to manipulate images using gestures, such as selecting an image by touching it, and flicking images off of the screen", according to Flatworld's law firm, Hagens Berman.

I have not been able to find a website for FlatWorld, although I did come across this article from 2008 about the company by Peter Key in the Philadelphia Business Journal. Milekic's partner at FlatWorld is Jennifer Wilson McAleese, a Villanova graduate whose previous experience includes Institutional Equity Research sales positions with Citigroup and other firms. FlatWorld has developed interactive displays for museums and other exhibits, and is now developing a product it calls "ShowMe Tools".

I was going to look the patent up on Google Patents, but then remembered that product has just been discontinued.

FlatWorld seeks an injunction and damages. The lawsuit was filed on April 19. The case number is 3:12-cv-01956-JSC, filed in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.



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Comcast CEO Total 2011 Compensation Valued At $26.93 Million (Dow Jones Newswires via Fox Business)
A cut from last year; even larger cut for Steve Burke.

The Boom in Enterprise I.P.O.’s
(New York Times: Bits)


Alteva: Comcast enters its market, as it expands office space & hiring; Launches new ad campaign

Tom Paine



Plenty of things are going on with Philly-based Alteva, which since being acquired last year is a unit of Orange County, New York-based WVT Communications Group (NASDAQ: WWVY), also known as Warwick Valley Telephone. Alteva provides unified communications services, which include a platform for VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) along with integrated communications and information management tools, to small, medium-sized and larger enterprises.

Comcast had already built a sizable business providing communications services primarily to the SME market, but more through offering raw bandwith access rather than intelligent managed services. But in late March Comcast announced the launch of Business VoiceEdge, a service that at least on the surface sounds very similar to Alteva's. Like Alteva, Business VoiceEdge provides a hosted, cloud-based solution that eliminates the need for an on-premise PBX. Also like Alteva, Comcast' offering provides Hi-Def VoIP, is built on BroadSoft's platform, and ties in access to a package of Microsoft apps for unified communications. I don't have enough information now to compare the two apples to apples on features and price (Comcast says its price per line will run between $24.95 to $34.95, though there can be numerous variables involved when comparing pricing) but they are definitely playing in the same sandbox now.


Alteva sees Comcast's entry as a validation of the potential of its market. “Comcast clearly sees the growth in the unified communications industry and appears to be responding to this market push. But I believe we are offering a significantly different value proposition and suite of products to the cloud market,” Alteva President David Cuthbert said in a statement to Philly Tech News. “We believe that Alteva’s fully integrated offering is the most comprehensive UC solution available. While Comcast is looking to expand their services to their customers, Alteva has been a pioneer in the cloud and UC markets for many years now. Our focus on customer needs has paid off over the years and has contributed to our ability to provide our clients with a solution that helps them be more successful in their businesses.”


Alteva' solutions are not completely unique; there are several competitors with roughly similar offerings. Most of them are still fairly small with a regional focus. A major challenge for firms such as Alteva will be to establish a broader geographical footprint. Comcast's says Business VoiceEdge is now available across most of Comcast’s Northeastern Division, which is Alteva's home territory, and that "nationwide rollout across Comcast’s entire service is targeted by the end of 2012". Comcast is a huge business telecom provider already, with revenue running at about a $2 billion annual rate and growing at over 30%. Comcast will have to demonstrate, however, that it can be as agile as smaller firms such as Alteva in tailoring solutions to meet specific customers' needs.

To help further spread awareness of hosted UC solutions in the Greater Philadelphia Region, Alteva recently launched its “My Phone Stinks” contest that invites small businesses in the Delaware Valley to enter to win a complete UC system, free for an entire year.

Alteva will also be making a significant expansion in Philadelphia this summer. It has taken a lease on the former Wells Fargo branch at 401 N. Market St, containing slightly over 9,000 square feet. A renovation has been designed by Philly architectural and design firm L2 Partridge LLC (who's own website is also under construction). The space will have an open design with large windows allowing viewing from the street, and will be set up to allow customers and prospects to simulate an office communications environment and try out products and services. A major purpose of the location is to build awareness of Alteva in the area business community. The old bank vault will also be maintained. Alteva will also keep its existing space in the Bourse Building on Independence Mall (about 4,000 square feet), which will be used primarily for technical & development staff and is intended to eventually house a Network Operations Center for all of Alteva.

Alteva also continues to add staff in Philly. Plans are to bring on about 23 more employees this year to reach a total headcount of 50 by year end, the company says. Almost all are based out of Philadelphia, except for a few remote sales/customer service people.

The word is part of the plan is for Philadelphia to become the headquarters location of WVT Communications Group, although the company is not willing to comment on that now. WVT's other components are local telco Warwick Valley Telephone, based in Orange County, New York and also having a wireless partnership in that area, and USA Datanet, a Syracuse-based company acquired by WVT in 2009. USA Datanet's operations have already been integrated with Alteva's, with USA Datanet focusing on businesses with less than 35 employees and Alteva on larger customers. The USA Datanet/Alteva combination also probably results in a better mix of voice and data services. The wireline business is shrinking, and WVT has made it clear that cloud communications are its future. Alteva President David Cuthbert is also WVT's COO and President of USA Datanet, and Alteva's Chief Sales Officer Louis Hayner and Chief Network Officer Mark Marquez also have WVT corporate responsibilities.

Its a bit difficult to get a complete breakout of Alteva in WVT's financial results, and will probably become more difficult now since the lines between Alteva and USA Datanet have become blurred. At the time of the acquisition last year, WVT CEO Duane W. Albro said the company paid "3.1 x current revenue", implying revenue in the $6 to 7 million range since the acquisition price was said to be $17 million. Revenue from Alteva reported by WVT from August 5 to the end of 2012 was just over $3 million, or about $600,000 per month. A WVT financial spokesperson contacted by Philly Tech News couldn't provide any other financial details on Alteva "other than to say they are growing fast". WVT has a market value of about $79 million and currently has 147 employees.



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