Highlights: Last week on Philly Tech News (6/4/2012 to 6/10/2012)





I highlighted some of the recent venture-related goings on in the Philly area, including First Round Capital adding another VC for the summer (at least), Philly Startup Leaders' recent board additions and new mission statement, and New York-based General Assembly's presence in town.

I wrote about Entrepreneur Summer Camp's initial event tomorrow morning (the 12th) on Infonautics, and took a look back at the pioneering company's history.

The New York Times reported on Friday that Comcast was contemplating making a bid for European satellite broadcaster BSkyB, to which Comcast vice chairman & CFO Michael Angelakis responded by saying, ”this is complete rubbish".

The myYearbook brand name is history now, as New Hope-based Quepasa Corp. completed its corporate name change to MeetMe. and moved myYearbook to the MeetMe platform. The Quepasa social network will move to the MeetMe platform later this year.

With much fanfare, Oracle introduced its Cloud offerings last week, as Larry Ellison made his first tweet (taking his usual shot at SAP), and received some negative blowback.

NJTechWeekly's Esther Surden contributed her coverage of Google's (and Princeton alum) Eric Schmidt and his address at Princeton's centennnial commemoration and celebration of Alan Turing's birth.

Earlier reports were confirmed as Salesforce announced its intent to acquire social media marketing management platform Buddy Media for a price in the $750 million range. And Nat Turner, who co-founded Internet advertising platform Invite Media that was acquired by Google for $81 million, departed Google at the end of last week along with fellow co-founder Zach Weinberg, and the two have plans for a new venture focused on Healthcare IT.


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Daily Links 6/11/2012: Comcast hunts for new studio COO, plans sports radio network



NBC gears up for massive Olympics coverage online and on TV (Philadelphia Inquirer)

Comcast studio hunts for new COO: sources (Reuters)

NBC Sports To Create Radio Network To Challenge Disney’s ESPN (Bloomberg)

Looking for the Apple TV? Look in Front of You. (Peter Kafka/All Things D)

Larry Ellison: His public versus private cloud (Vinnie Mirchandani/Enterprise Irregulars)

Oracle's hardware worries surface again as analysts eye Q4 (ZDNet Blogs)

Oracle-SAP Retrial Delayed (PC World)






Intel's plans for virtual TV come into focus (Reuters)

Apple devs may get an SDK to create apps for iTV at WWDC
(Venturebeat)


Philly Tech People News 6/10/2012



Princeton names Dominick VP and CIO (News at Princeton)

Pazzani, Tech Transfer and Research Funding Expert, Resigns from Rutgers (NJ Tech Weekly)

Checkpoint Systems, Inc. Announces Business Segment Leadership Changes (Business Wire)


Halfpenny Technologies Appoints Brian Muck as EVP of Sales and Marketing (Business Wire)

Channel Intelligence Announces Executive Management Changes (Globe Newswire)
Doug Alexander, President of ICG, will serve as CEO of ICG partner company.


Leslie Nichols named executive video producer at Bradford Media Group (Philly Ad Club News)






Comcast Says It Isn’t Mulling BSkyB Bid, Disputing Report (Bloomberg)


Daily Links 6/8/2012: Comcast CFO tries to debunk NY Times story that its looking at BSkyB



Comcast Is Said to Be Mulling Bid for BSkyB (New York Times: MediaDecoder)
Michael J. Angelakis, Comcast’s vice chairman and chief financial office, commented: "This is complete rubbish". Based on what I'm reading, I don't think I would have run with this story so strongly, or at least headlined it that way. But, hey, I'm sure it will drive some hits on a slow Friday afternoon.

Has Oracle's Ellison finally stepped over the line? (Dennis Howlett/ZDNet Blogs)

Business Software IPOs Look to Reverse Market Woes (Reuters via PE Hub)





Philly Tech News VentureWatch 6/7/2012: Philly Startup Leaders, General Assembly, First Round Capital & more


Tom Paine


Venture Capitalist Bill Trenchard has joined First Round Capital, at least for the summer, Fortune's Dan Primack reports. Trenchard will spend his summer working out of FRC's West Coast office. Trenchard has most recently been working with Founder Collective, where he remains listed as a founder partner. In an email to Primack, Trenchard wrote "Just to clarify, I have not left my position as a Founder Partner at Founder Collective. I am continuing in the role at FC, while working in residence at First Round Capital this Summer. I have been closely involved with both funds since their inception and have collaborated with both funds actively over the past few years. I look forward to finding more opportunities to deepen the relationship between Founder Collective and First Round Capital through my current efforts".
I can see at least two investments from Josh Kopelman's early Midas Capital fund in which Trenchard was involved: LiveOps, which he ran, and IronPort, a deal he managed that was later a Cicso acquisition.

Thomas Charlton, whom I profiled late last year, recently departed as CEO of Center City-based PHD Virtual Technologies. The company announced in May that James Legg would be its new CEO. I asked PHD Virtual what was behind the change, since by all accounts things had been going well there. A company spokesperson told me by email: "Thomas moved on to devote his full attention to running his own company" (Conshohocken-based Goliath Technologies). "This was a smooth transition and not unexpected. Furthermore, Thomas was at the company transition meeting and helped introduce Jim Legg to the PHD Team".
Charlton has long been associated with Insight Venture Partners, which is an investor in PHD Virtual; he previously ran another Insight-backed Center City company, Shunra Systems. In fact, Charlton moved both companies to Philly; Shunra from New York, and PHD Virtual from New Jersey.

As Technically Philly initially reported late last month, Philly Startup Leaders President Bob Moul announced the organization had added Josh Kopelman and DuckDuckGo founder and angel investor Gabriel Weinberg to its board of directors. The other members are Moul and Chris Cera, with one open seat remaining to be filled. PSL also approved a new mission statement with three main areas of focus: resources (where to find space, talent, capital, mentors /advisors etc.), education (PSL University), and connectivity (circles, events, clubs, partnerships etc.). PSL also worked to bring Philly Uncubed, a startup-oriented job fair, to World Cafe Live on June 21. The Uncubed job fairs are a creation of Wakefield, a New York-based daily email newsletter on the startup scene.
Hopefully, the new structure of PSL will lead to a stronger, more stable organization with access to the resources needed to accomplish more.

New York-based General Assembly, which describes itself as "a campus for educational programming, space, and support to facilitate collaborative practices and learning opportunities" in the entrepreneurial community, is sticking its toe in the water in a few other geographical areas, and Philadelphia is one of them. GA held its first Philly event on May 30-"The Art of Business Development: An Interview with TicketLeap and Lokalty". It has bought on Sunny Shah, a Wharton & engineering student at UPenn, for the summer to start exploring the Philly market. It doesn't appear to have concrete plans right now, only to look at offering some courses and events. GA has opened campuses in London and Berlin, is also reported to be expanding into Boston, and may be looking at the Bay area.


A Baltimore tech entrepreneur named Ron Schmelzer has been holding monthly "Baltimore TechBreakfasts", and they been drawing quite a crowd, the Baltimore Sun's Gus Sentementes reports. Schmelzer says the breakfast meetings, which feature area tech startups, are getting up to 150 attendees, some from as far away as the DC area. He hopes to draw from the Philly area as well. Of course, in the Philly area Novotorium's Mike Krupit has started organizing monthly "Bootstrappers Breakfast" sessions.

Quewey, the Philly-based business-oriented Q&A startup that I wrote about when it launched in March, has produced an infographic that shows how to use it, and its really not that complex.





The University Science Center's QED Proof of Concept Program is opening it fifth round with an additional area of emphasis: a special track focusing on digital health technology. As many as sixteen projects will be supported in this round, up from 10 in the past. A new Independence Blue Cross program announced yesterday may also provide additional opportunities for digital healthcare startups in the Philly area.

At the urging of Philly area entrepreneur Anthony Coombs (SoLoMo app Interact), TechCrunch will be holding what it calls a "mini-meetup" at the Field House in Philadelphia on June 19. TechCrunch says it will also hold office hours on the 19th at the nearby Caribou Cafe, the exact time of which will be announced. A Mashable Meetup/Social Media Day is also on tap for the evening of June 30 at Morgan's Pier on N Columbus Blvd.

Sad to see Canada closing its consulate in Philly. The office had helped sponsor a number of interesting activities promoting trade and events in the tech and healthcare IT areas. I would have thought that with all of its oil and gas revenues, Canada would be in relatively better shape then we are.



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phillytechnews twitter posts: 6/4-6/6 2012


phillytechnews: Daily Links 6/6/2012: Oracle unveils Cloud offerings http://t.co/3k9fGFR1

Posted: 06 Jun 2012 03:09 PM PDT
phillytechnews: Daily Links 6/6/2012: Oracle unveils Cloud offerings http://t.co/3k9fGFR1
Posted: 06 Jun 2012 02:43 PM PDT
phillytechnews: Kynetic's Fanatics Completes Acquisition of Dreams; Receives $150 Million in Equity Funding http://t.co/1D6MTMZn
Posted: 06 Jun 2012 01:45 PM PDT
phillytechnews: Oracle joins public cloud party after six years in development | ZDNet http://t.co/36WJbnSu
Posted: 06 Jun 2012 01:36 PM PDT
phillytechnews: RT @chinamartens: @larryellison so dismissive of SuccessFactors = he really wanted to buy it:-) #oraclecloud
Posted: 06 Jun 2012 12:54 PM PDT
phillytechnews: Still no tweet from Ellison
Posted: 06 Jun 2012 12:52 PM PDT
phillytechnews: Roger Clemems trial absurd overkill for such a tiny, immaterial alleged offense
Posted: 06 Jun 2012 10:25 AM PDT
phillytechnews: Still no tweet from Larry Ellison (but he has 19k followers now) http://t.co/vATbUGpg
Posted: 06 Jun 2012 09:44 AM PDT
phillytechnews: RT @joshk: Uber is live in Philadelphia! Philadelphia Business Journal story here - http://t.co/iQTbB3mG #FRC
Posted: 06 Jun 2012 09:09 AM PDT
phillytechnews: Apax Funds to Sell Plex Systems (sometimes said to be possible SAP acquisition target) to Francisco Partners http://t.co/thKPuMdy
Posted: 06 Jun 2012 08:33 AM PDT
phillytechnews: " Invite Media has been rebuilt from the ground up and will become 'DoubleClick Bid Manager.'" http://t.co/qtKFPGbS
Posted: 06 Jun 2012 08:20 AM PDT
phillytechnews: PTN Post: myYearbook completes rebranding as MeetMe; New Hope-based Quepasa now MeetMe, Inc., trading as MEET (NYSEAM… http://t.co/qktxJ0qR
Posted: 06 Jun 2012 08:18 AM PDT
phillytechnews: Highlights: Last week on Philly Tech News (5/28/2012 to 6/3/2012) http://t.co/CP5UFZFW
Posted: 06 Jun 2012 08:10 AM PDT
phillytechnews: Daily Links 6/5/2012: Invite Media co-founder Nat Turner leaving Google, eyes healthcare IT startup http://t.co/LTBcYjaM
Posted: 06 Jun 2012 07:49 AM PDT
phillytechnews: Whenever I see a fire engine going out on a call, I think "They must have found some more books" #Bradbury
Posted: 06 Jun 2012 07:45 AM PDT
phillytechnews: inVentiv Health acquires Newtown-based Kazaam Interactive http://t.co/NlHLKSqP
Posted: 06 Jun 2012 05:55 AM PDT
phillytechnews: RT @jtramsay: Happy IPv6 Day, errbody! RT @comcast: Find out what @comcast is doing to support #IPv6 http://t.co/Udal0y9h




Daily Links 6/6/2012: Oracle unveils Cloud offerings




Oracle joins public cloud party after six years in development (ZDNet Blogs)

Independence Blue Cross launches $150,000 health innovation contest (Philadelphia Inquirer)

inVentiv Health Announces Acquisition of Kazaam Interactive (PR Newswire)
Kazaam Interactive is based in Newtown.

World IPv6 Launch gets 27 percent of pageviews on IPv6 (Ars Technica)

Sports Retailer Fanatics Growth Game Plan (CNBC)
A part of Michael Rubin's Kynetic LLC holding company. Interesting article, though it may contain one or two inaccuracies.

Fanatics Completes Acquisition of Dreams; Receives $150 Million in Equity Funding (Business Wire)

Google Pitches Marketing Dashboard for Agencies, Advertisers (Ad Age)
"As part of this, Mr. Mohan said Invite Media -- which allows advertiser to buy audiences across many websites -- has been rebuilt from the ground up and will become 'DoubleClick Bid Manager.'"

When you absolutely need a limousine in five minutes ... Uber Technologies (Peter Key/Philadelphia Business Journal)
Uber officially launches in Philadelphia.

NetProspex scores $7 million for crowd-sourced business contacts database (The Next Web)
Edison Ventures leads round in Boston-based firm.

SDI Closes Additional Investment with Premiere Private Equity Firms (PR Newswire)
Philadelphia-based LLR Partners one of the investors.

Comcast's ThePlatform Moves Down-Market With MPX Essentials
Entry-Level Packages Aimed at Small and Midsize Customers
(Multichannel News)

Netflix plan seen as no big threat to content delivery firms (Reuters)

Can Barry Diller Upend the TV Industry Again? (Susan P. Crawford/Bloomberg)
First Round Capital was an early investor in Aereo.

Apax Funds to Sell Plex Systems, Inc. to Francisco Partners (PR Newswire)
Plex. a leader in cloud-based ERP software for manufacturers, was considered by some as a possible acquisition target for SAP.

M&A in the Cloud - Plex Online now part of Francisco Partners (Brian Sommer/ZDNet Blogs)

Federal Reserve Board Beige Book- June 6, 2012: Philadelphia (Federal Reserve Board)



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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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