Highlights: Last week on Philly Tech News (5/28/2012 to 6/3/2012)



SAP's announced $4.3 billion acquisition of Ariba brought back memories of a Philly area company, Verticalnet, that set out to be what Ariba later became. I wrote about how Verticalnet reached a $12 billion market cap before the tech bubble burst, and what happened to it afterwards.

Most annual shareholder meetings are programmed to be rather perfunctory, but Comcast's meeting in Philadelphia last week was quite lively. Chairman and CEO Brian Roberts was peppered with complaints from labor union reps, chants from some "Occupy Wall Street"-type protestors, conservative criticisms of MSNBC programming, and a question about whether Comcast might move to Delaware (leaving the Comcast Center behind?). The next morning Roberts told a New York investors conference that quarterly results at NBCU could be “flat, slightly down” due to disappointments at Universal Studios. “This year we have an unfortunate large miss in Battleship and The Five-Year Engagement”, he commented.

I caught a brief glimpse of an online ad last week titled "Life without FiOS" showing just how miserable life could be without Verizon's popular fiber to the home service. I tried to find it again but haven't been able to; maybe Verizon pulled it because its unwillingness to expand the FiOS footprint is a very sensitive issue right now. But Verizon did announce that its bumping up its top FiOS download speed to 300 Mbps later this month, double the current top speed. It will be pricey, though, as a leaked FiOS pricing chart revealed.

Amazon reached an agreement with the State of New Jersey to build two new warehouses employing up to 1500 people in the state. Amazon will also begin collecting the state sales tax from customers buying online in New Jersey in July, 2013. Amazon had originally hoped to obtain a longer sales tax holiday from the state. Amazon will, however, receive tax incentives to help finance construction of the warehouses.
Amazon also confirmed recently it would spend $52 million to air condition all of its warehouse/fulfillment centers, an issue that first received significant public attention from an Allentown Morning Call investigative series last September. A Forrester Research analyst wondered whether Amazon was doing this not just for its employees but to protect products or perishable items that Amazon might stock from damage. I wondered on a less serious note whether Amazon was doing this in preparation for the armies of robots who might soon invade its fulfillment centers as a result of its recent acquisition of a robotics company.

Dell was reported to be in serious talks last week with Quest Software about a $2 billion+ acquisition that could bring about some interesting synergies with Berwyn-based Dell Boomi's product line, but at the end of last week the word was the talks were on hold, at least for the time being.

A report surfaced in All Things D that Salesforce was prepared to buy social media marketing platform Buddy Media for over $800 million. The deal was announced yesterday, though the price was a little lower than that.

Larry Ellison on Léo Apotheker at D10: "Then they brought in Leo. Then when we subpeonaed him, he went on the lam! They sent him to Bolivia to talk to customers. And then they sent him to Mongolia to talk to customers, just beyond the reach of the federal subpoena. They should have left him in Mongolia, because when he got to California, it got bad."

An isssue was raised by CNBC commentator Herb Greenberg as to whether Ewing, NJ-based OLED technology firm Universal Display was accurate in disclosing the timimg of when it first learned of an unfavorable Japanese court ruling against some of its patents.

And the New York Times looked at why WiFi doesn't always work very well on Amtrak.

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myYearbook completes rebranding as MeetMe; New Hope-based Quepasa now MeetMe, Inc., trading as MEET (NYSEAMEX)




Tom Paine


The well-known myYearbook brand name is now essentially history, as the planned transition to MeetMe has been completed. The transition of the Latin-language Quepasa social network to the MeetMe platform will not be completed until later in the year. New Hope-based Quepasa Corp (now MeetMe, Inc.) stock is now trading on the NYSEAMEX under the symbol MEET.

MeetMe press release



MeetMe launch video




Related Philly Tech News post: Quepasa (myYearbook parent) to become MeetMe (April 4, 2012)



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phillytechnews twitter posts: 6/3-6/42012

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Daily Links 6/4/2012: Salesforce announces Buddy Media deal; SAP doubles Brazil staffing



Salesforce To Buy Buddy Media For $689 Million In Social Push (Bloomberg)
Price a little less than earlier reports had suggested.

Salesforce.com buying social marketing vendor Buddy Media in $689 million deal (Computerworld)

Marc Benioff Uses His $700 Million Purchase Of Buddy Media To Trash A Rival (SAI: Enterprise)
SAP?

SAP Doubles Staff In Brazil To Capture Growth Opportunities (Bloomberg)

QVC looks to television to make big online splash (MarketWatch)

Comcast Achieves World IPv6 Launch Milestone
(Comcast Voices/Official Comcast Blog)

Verizon Offers Buyouts to 1,700 Union Land-Line Employees (Bloomberg)

Exclusive: new Verizon FiOS plans coming June 17th, 300Mbps service to cost $204.99 per month (The Verge)

Huawei Looks Beyond Docsis (Light Reading Cable)

The growing industry of Higher Education Big Data (ZDNet Blogs)
On startup backed by First Round Capital.

Meet the startup helping sites like Fab and Etsy court their customers (Gigaom)
Another NY-based web analytics startup founded by Wharton people.

Small Business: Virtual office, or real? That is the question (Philadelphia Inquirer)
Profiles Wildbit and Dolphin Corp.



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Google’s Schmidt Talks Future Tech, World Connectedness at Princeton Turing Centennial

Esther Surden
Publisher & Editor, NJTechWeekly.com


Princeton University celebrated the centennial of Alan Turing’s birth in grand style from May 10-12, 2012. Turing, known as the “father of computer science", earned his Ph.D. in mathematics from Princeton in 1938, before there was a computer science department at the institution.

The university hosted addresses by some eight winners of the Turing Award, considered to be the “Nobel Prize of computing", as well as lectures by many other distinguished computer scientists. The range of topics was breathtaking, from quantum computing to modern programming languages and beyond.

A centennial celebration highlight was a public address by Eric Schmidt, Princeton graduate and executive chairman of Google. While not a Google founder, Schmidt has helped grow the search giant from startup to global entity and is credited with finding a way for the company to scale its infrastructure and diversify product offerings while attempting to hold on to a culture of innovation.

Princeton Tech Meetup members gathered beforehand at the local Panera Bread to walk together to Schmidt’s talk at McCosh Hall. Tickets had been reserved earlier. The event was so popular that it was being simulcast to several overflow rooms.

At the heart of Schmidt’s lecture was the belief that technology can be used to benefit all classes of society, including the 5 billion unconnected people on this planet, most of whom live in underdeveloped areas. He called this group “the majority” and was sure that “one day they, too, will be connected".

“The reality is that for the next decade, those people are not going to be as connected as we are fortunate enough to be", he added, for five reasons: they live in war zones, they have higher priorities, governments are corrupt, being connected requires infrastructure and they are not very organized.

One way to fix this is by using mesh networks, networks without a center. Companies can build phones that serve as mesh nodes, and together all these phones can form a powerful network.

Eventually people in the developing world will obtain devices with enough memory to store their high school education on them, Schmidt said. “All of a sudden their phone, which they are obsessed with, will be their educational and entertainment device", he predicted.

What’s important about developments in storage and processing does not involve storing photos, Schmidt said. It’s important that people anywhere can obtain a body of knowledge on their smartphones that can be translated on the fly to a language they speak. Think of what happens when a device like this shows up in an area that doesn’t have a textbook, he said. Those with nothing will have something.

Most unconnected people will have interestingly cobbled together networks, perhaps a single connection to a village with a Wi-Fi connection, and they will use Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) from their phones to the Wi-Fi connection, Schmidt predicted. They will still need Short Message Service (SMS) as a backup.

To the students in the audience Schmidt said that while they are building on the foundation of Turing and other great Princeton mathematicians, most humbling to him is that “you are just beginning to have something with a boundless capacity, a connected humanity you will create".

Earlier in the evening, Schmidt began his talk by saying one of the most remarkable things about computer science when he arrived at Princeton in 1972 was that you could almost know it all. There was a relatively small community of people working in the field.

Schmidt reminisced about how he had used an IBM 360/91, which at the time was “literally the fastest computer I had ever encountered". It had all of one megabyte of memory, made out of iron core. “Most of those 360s were sold, because their contents were valuable as minerals", he remarked.

While for most people on the planet the digital revolution has not yet arrived, the privileged few will experience the world in an ultraconnected way, Schmidt noted. For this group the future offers only what science can deliver and what is legally permissible, he added.

A data infrastructure is emerging that combines telemetry and sensors, to know where things are, Schmidt noted. He asked the audience to imagine what life will be like when we have real-time telemetry, driven by the presence of phones and other devices.

All estimates say that by 2020 true fiber-optic networks will be available in the Western world’s urban centers. Fiber optics will deliver a gigabit pipe, and that amount will cause all the limitations of HD and delivering media to disappear, he said.

Schmidt said we are already seeing some predictions made in “Star Trek” and “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy” come to pass. A major example is voice-to-voice translation: people speak into their phones, the spoken word is translated to text, the text is translated to another language and then a voice synthesizer transmits it to another person, all done in real time by supercomputers. Other examples: voice recognition and electronic books, once the stuff of science fiction.

“So the people who now talk about the possibility of holograms, virtual reality, are almost certainly right", commented Schmidt. The beginnings of these technologies are present in the labs, and the underlying computational and distribution capabilities are going to be there, he said.

Driverless cars are another invention that will be realized in our lifetime, Schmidt predicted. “Isn’t it obvious that the car should drive you?”, he asked. It never gets drunk or lost. And if properly designed, it doesn’t hit anything, he added.

{Update: You can now watch the speech on YouTube at this site.}


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



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"Entrepreneur Summer Camp" to kick off events with look back at Infonautics and what grew from it


Tom Paine


Life can be slow in the summer if you're in the city and looking for interesting tech events. Two business incubators/accelarators, though, Novotorium of Bucks County and Seed Philly of Philadelphia, are joining together to present Entrepreneur Summer Camp, consisting of a moderately priced series of weekly events featuring topics of interest to area entrepreneurs, plus the opportunity to opt into additional programs and
services the incubators offer.

The first event, to be held on the morning of June 12 at The University Science Center's Quorum, features a retrospective look back at Wayne-based Internet startup Infonautics, the people who came out of it, and the impact the resulting ecosystem has had in growing the Philly Tech community. Infonautics was co-founded in 1992 by Josh Kopelman, then a sophmore at Wharton, along with founder Marvin Weinberger, an entrepreneur who had previously co-founded Telebase Systems Inc., an online media company in Wayne. Weinberger was CEO and Kopelman was Executive VP with responsibility for sales & marketing. One of Infonautics' early investors and advisors was Howard Morgan, the former computer science professor at Penn turned VC who later co-founded First Round Capital with Kopelman and is a managing partner of the firm today.






Infonautics set out to become an online resource for children, providing curated content that helped young students learn and study. Its products included Homework Helper, delivered primarily via early online service Prodigy, and Electric Library, delivered via the Web. Infonautics did an IPO on the NASDAQ in April 1996 and raised close to $30 million, an offering that would be difficult for such a small early stage company to pull off today.


The company had difficulty selling a subscription-based service to a mass market, particularly as so much information was beginning to appear for free on the Web. In terms of technology, Infonautics also had to scramble to convert from the closed garden world of legacy online services such as Prodigy to the open Web, which really took off in the 1994-95 period. That transition, Novotorium GM Mike Krupit (who served as Infonautics' Director of Technology ) told me in a phone interview, spurred a period of tremendous innovation at the company. For example, Infonautics pioneered an early business model and developed related technology for managing affiliate marketing programs. And at a later stage of the company's history, in an effort to pivot, it developed an online service called "Company Sleuth", which I remember using. Company Sleuth allowed you to track several sources of records and information about a company that at the time were difficult to put together from one single email signup. And since the web was like a frontier then, with only slightly defined and rapidly evolving standards, Infonautics' staff was constantly looking for fixes or new ways of doing things.

Founder Weinberger, who Krupit described as a visionary, was a somewhat unorthodox businessman with penchant for dressing informally for meetings (not as common then as now), usually wearing an Infonautics baseball cap.




Infonautics posted 1996 results of $1.4 million in revenue and an operating loss of nearly $14 million. Its stock, which opened at $14, went down 19% during its first week of trading and was down to $2.38 by early 1997. The company was able to grow revenue to $23 million by 1999, but continued to have large operating losses. At the time, the technology infrastructure needed to run an online Internet service required significant fixed costs that were difficult to scale down. Employment at one point exceeded 130; a company 10-K indicated it reached about 80,000 paid subscriptions.

Josh Kopelman left Infonautics to start Half.com in mid-1999. Weinberger left in 1998 and started other ventures, some that worked and some that didn't. Also in that year, Infonautics began to sell parts of the company, selling its Education products group to Bell & Howell, gaining net proceeds of $18.5 million, and also ending up with a 20 % stake in bigchalk.com, the rest of which was owned by Bell & Howell. Infonautics intended to focus its resources on its Company Sleuth offering and other targeted personal information tools marketed under the Sleuth brand. The pivot to Slueth did not pay off financially fast enough, and in 2001 Infonautics merged with Tucows Inc., with the combined firm taking on the Tucows name. Toronto-based Tucows, which still exists today, specializes in domain registration and other Internet services.

Other pieces of Infonautics' product and IP portfolio ended up in different places; for instance, patent firm BTG acquired a portion of the patent assets of Infonautics covering navigational tracking on the Web and online affiliate programs. In fact, in 2004 BTG sued Amazon.com, BarnesandNoble.com, Netflix and Overstock.com over their alleged infringement of the patented Infonautics technologies. BTG apparently reached settlements with each of the four, with Netflix agreeing to pay an undisclosed sum (said to be millions of dollars in one report) in return for a non-exclusive license. BTG subsequently sold the web patents in 2006 for $5 million plus profit sharing, as it decided to focus on Life Sciences.

The event on the 12th, titled "After Infonautics: A Generation of Startups", will feature a panel of former Infonautics execs and employees discussing how their experiences there led to a number of other startups in the Philly area. Participants scheduled to appear include Kopelman, Weinberger, Lucinda Duncalfe (who went on to Destiny, TurnTide, Click Equations, and now Real Food Work), Krupit (who ended up running CDNow after Bertelsmann acquired it, and now runs Novotorium), Rick Mosenkis (VerticalNet, WorkZone), Ram Mohan (Afilias CTO and a member of ICANN's board of directors), Andrea Michalek (1800CTO, Topular, and a new startup, Plum Analytics), and Ed Watkeys (Half.com, Transmogrify, ActionX).

You can register for the event here. Additional Entrepreneur Summer Camp events will run through July 27.



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Could These Start-Ups Become the Next Big Thing? (New York Times)
Of the nine named in the article, four (Path, Uber, Square, TaskRabbit) are ventures in which First Round Capital was early investor.

3 things to know about IPv6 as World IPv6 Day approaches (ZDNet Blogs)




DirecTV's White downplay Apple TV hype: Comcast's Robert applauds Apple's ingenuity
(Variety via Chicago Tribune)

Wi-Fi and Amtrak: Missed Connections (New York Times)