Saturday Highlights: Would Google consider TiVo acquisition?; G4 reportedly will rebrand as Esquire Channel



Google Fiber, you had our curiosity. Now you have our attention (PandoDaily)

TIVO: Time is on Their Side, Google Acquisition Conceivable, Says Janney's Wible (Barron's: Tech Trader Daily)
TiVo suit against Horsham-based Motorola Home could complicate Google's effort to sell that business.

Report: NBCUniversal, Hearst Corp. Close Deal to Rebrand G4 as Esquire Channel (Hollywood Reporter)

Sports TV Class Action Against Comcast, DirecTV, MLB & NHL Still In Play (Deadline.com)


New app, website let public assess Boston’s performance (Boston Globe)
Developed in conjunction with SAP.



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Daily Links 12/7/2012: Today the deadline for bids on Google's Motorola Home?; SunGard planning first dividend payout since LBO



Google Sets Deadline for Motorola Home Bids (Light Reading Cable)
Motorola Home is based in Horsham.

Does Google Have a Plan B? (Light Reading Cable)

SunGard to Pay First Dividend, $720 Million, Since Going Private Seven Years Ago (PE Hub)

It's Personal: Mystery of the new Apple store at Plaza at King of Prussia (Philadelphia Inquirer)

Fisker hired Evercore to seek partners, rules out sale (Reuters)

Roundup of CRM Forecasts and Market Estimates, 2012 (Louis Columbus/Enterprise Irregulars)

How T-Mobile’s smartphone pricing could change the U.S. wireless industry (Gigaom)

Most Docs Won't Qualify for EHR 'Meaningful Use' (MedPage Today)




Malvern-based Rajant's innovative kinetic mesh networks finding broader market



Tom Paine


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Rajant Corporation (pronounced Ray-jant) is probably one of the lesser known successful technology startups in the Philly area, perhaps because its vertical markets are less visible to many locally. Founded in 2001 and headquartered on King Street in Malvern, its customers are primarily the military (its products are used in Afghanistan, for example) and mining markets. Rajant's direction after its founding was shaped by 9/11, which demonstrated the need for more resilient network architectures. It has developed a fascinating technology that serves a global market, and may have broader applications in the future.

Rajant's fundamental technology is Kinetic Mesh Networking, with emphasis on the word kinetic, meaning that various parts of the network, not only (end user) client devices but its communications nodes, may be in motion at any time. Through the combination of Rajant's BreadCrumb wireless network nodes and its InstaMesh routing software, Kinetic Mesh networks can be built to support hundreds of moving nodes (the largest now has about 300 nodes), and are designed to enable continuous and instantaneous routing of wireless and wired connections. Mesh networks typically feature a peer to peer architecture with a high degree of redundancy and fault tolerance. Rajant's wireless mesh networks in particular are designed to operate successfully in rugged terrains and harsh environments. Rajant networks can employ various communications modes and support numerous types of client devices.




Rajant's co-founders are CEO Robert Schena and CTO Paul Hellhake. Schena, who grew up in Jersey City, attended Temple as an undergrad and received a Wharton MBA. After serving as CFO of Frazer-based cable company Harron Communications (acquired by Comcast), Schena has been involved in the founding of other area ventures, including FutureVision of America, a pioneering fiber to the home video service later sold to Bell Atlantic (now Verizon), and Trevose-based Airclic. Hellhake was also involved with FutureVision.

Rajant has raised about $6 million, including $3.25 million in 2006 from Batelle Ventures, the Princeton-based VC
fund associated with the Batelle Memorial Institute, which manages some of the Department of Energy's National Laboratories. Ben Franklin Technology Partners was among early investors. Today, Rajant's annual revenues are about $20 million and have grown in each of the past six years, and the company, which employees 43 people, has been profitable for the past three, Schena told Philly Tech News in a phone interview. Engineering is based in Downington, and manufacturing and assembly of hardware for Rajant's node devices is outsourced to contract manufacturer EFE Labs of Horsham.

Schena said that military applications now account for half of Rajant's revenue and mining the other half. On the military side, last week Rajant announced a "teaming agreement" with long-time partner Northrop Grumman, to exclusively work together on "development of Advanced Meshnet Technology networks with Advanced End-User-Devices for a series of risk-reduction exercises, culminating in the U.S. Army Network Integration Evaluations (NIE) and the initial follow-on development or production program." No word now on what this might mean in future revenue potential. On the mining side, expansion in South America, including Brazil and Chile, is high on priority list, as well as in Africa.

Other developing markets for Rajant include Oil & Gas and railroads. After the Gulf oil spill, Schena started wondering how his company's technology could help improve communications between and safety on the oil platforms. As a result, Rajant proposed a network named GulfMesh, which would link most of the Gulf of Mexico's' 5,000 oil platforms. I'm not sure how far this proposal has advanced (it would probably require a larger partner), but in August Rajant added two new executives to its Oil & Gas Solutions Team and Schena expects new business from this sector soon. Rajant is also developing business in the Canadian Oil Sands and is looking at opportunities in the Marcellus Shale.

There are larger competitors, such as Cisco Systems, Aruba Networks, Inc.(NASDAQ:ARUN), and Motorola Solutions (no longer related to Google-owned Motorola Mobility), as well as smaller niche competitors. Asked whether Rajant needs a larger technology marketing partner on the commercial side, Schena said he has engaged in such discussions but the terms and conditions haven't been right.

Rajant can be said to already be into "The Internet of Things", as its networks can connect to sensors and RFID tags, and that may be another dynamic area for it in the future.

Schena, who was not trained as an engineer, said that when he was growing up in Jersey City the last thing he could have imagined himself doing would be running a technology business in Malvern, Pa.



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Highlights last week on Philly Tech News (11/26/2012 to 12/2/2012)





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On Philly Tech News, I took a look at signs that coworking is growing in the Burbs, NextFab Studio's scheduled reopening in its new space, and Lehigh Valley Tech's rebranding courtesy of Philly agency At Media.

In news from other sources:

First Round Capital introduced a new website for the holiday season highlighting e-commerce offers from many of its portfolio companies.

Jeff Zucker, who ran NBCU up until the time Comcast acquired it, was named the new head of CNN. Meanwhile, NBC and Verizon's FiOS reached a broad program carriage deal that includes rights to over-the-top delivery to multiple screens for both NBC broadcast and cable channel content. Of course, Comcast and Verizon are partners now.

Wilmington-based SevOne introduced a new version of its Performance Appliance Solution (the PAS-200k), which can monitor and manage 200,000 network elements simultaneously, four times that of any other available product, the company says.

A Northeast Philly data center reported to be under long-term lease to Vanguard was acquired by Carter Validus Mission Critical REIT of Tampa for $65 million, or $540 per square foot, the Business Journal reported.

Tierney v. Tierney? Interpublic, which owns Tierney Communications, has sued its founder Brian Tierney and his current firm, Brian Communications Group, over its use of Tierney's last name in some company literature and its website, something Interpublic says violates an agreement between the two parties that Tierney wouldn't use his name in another business (from the Philadelphia Daily News).



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Daily Links 12/5/2012: QVC acquires Oodle; DreamIt graduates 15



SAP's McDermott rolls with ever-changing tech 'revolution' (Joe DiStefano/Philadelphia Inquirer)

Letter to IBM (Bruce Cleveland/InterWest Partners)

The Renaissance of Enterprise Computing (Peter Levine, Partner, Andreessen Horowitz/All Things D)
Both of the above articles from VCs address some common themes.

DreamIt Ventures graduates 15 startups in its 2012 Philadelphia class (VentureBeat)

QVC Acquires Social Classifieds Veteran Oodle To Help Power Its Social Commerce Evolution (TechCrunch)

Verizon to start targeted advertising this week, will be optional (SlashGear)

CloudPay Raises $16 Million in Series B Funding (Marketwire)
Use of Cloud technology in payroll processing biz heating up.

DC City Council passes law legitimizing Uber car service
City carves out new "digital dispatch" category for smartphone car services.
(Ars Technica)

Why First Round Capital funded a lawsuit (Redeye VC)

Online ed startup Coursera moves further along money-making path
(Gigaom)
UPenn is an investor in Coursera.

Comcast[-Spectacor] president reaffirms Beach arena support (The Virginian-Pilot)

Comcast: Tech vendor didn't have permission to publicize RDK conference (FierceCable)
Oops.



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Daily Links 12/4/2012: IBM completes Kenexa deal; DreamIt Ventures launches accelerator for Healthcare





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SmartThings, a Kickstarter Hit, Raises $3M More From VCs and Angels (All Things D)
First Round Capital leads round.


DreamIt Ventures Teams Up With Blue Cross, Penn Medicine To Launch An Accelerator For Health Startups
(TechCrunch)

Philly student-investors choose Dorm Room Fund’s first deal: Firefly (PandoDaily)

We know accelerators are headed for a shakeout — but do they? (PandoDaily)
Discusses DreamIt Ventures, among others.

IBM Completes Acquisition of Kenexa (IBM)

How a theater major went from scripts and sequels to scripting SQL (Gigaom)
On Aria Systems co-founder and Philly area resident Brendan O'Brien.

Verizon CEO says no to Dish spectrum deal, big acquisitions (Reuters)

Verizon CEO: Redbox Streaming Video Venture Launch Pushed Back to Early 2013 (Hollywood Reporter)

Netflix and The Walt Disney Studios Announce Multi-Year Premium Pay TV Window Agreement in the United States (PR Newswire via MarketWatch)

Netflix takes Disney pay-TV rights from Starz (LA Times: Company Town)

Dish Network CEO Charlie Ergen, the TV Distrupter (Ad Age)

Comcast, Time Warner Cable host RDK conference (Communications, Engineering & Design Magazine)

An 'Uber' Problem for Cities: Balancing Innovation with Regulation (Knowledge@Wharton)




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Daily Links 12/3/2012: Blackstone LaunchPad expands to Philadelphia, puts up $3M





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Blackstone LaunchPad expands to Philadelphia, puts up $3M for student entrepreneurship (Newsworks)
Blackstone LaunchPad Press Release

Telling the Story of PHL (Also Known as Philadelphia) (New York Times)


Loren Brichter: Designs on the future of iOS apps
(Gigaom)
Back in Philly from California.

SAP Clings To A Dated Cloud Apps Strategy (Doug Henschen/InformationWeek)

Why VMware is spinning off Cloud Foundry and SpringSource (Gigaom)

Morgan Lewis on both sides of HP disaster? UPDATE (Philly.com: Philly Deals)



Rocky Road for Rodale Inc.
Gunning for New E-Commerce Amid Executive Departures
(Ad Age)
Rodale is based in Emmaus, PA.

FTS Acquires Dependable Payment Processing and Discount Payment Processing (Business Wire)
FTS is based in King of Prussia.



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Philly Tech News VentureWatch 12/3/2012: 5 startups report new funding



Tom Paine


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InsPro Technologies, the Eddystone-based Insurance SaaS provider I recently profiled, has raised $1.5 million out of a proposed $3 million offering, according to a recent SEC filing. CEO Robert Oakes had told me the company would be raising one more round that should get it over the hump, funding wise, and this apparently is it. Past investors have included Cross Atlantic Capital Partners and Independence Blue Cross.

Xtium, the King of Prussia-based Cloud Services provider, has raised another $2 million. Xtium raised a $11.5 million Series A round of funding from Boston-based OpenView Venture Partners last year.

Southampton-based Smart Structures, Inc., which provides wireless Embedded Data Collector (EDC) solutions to monitor the integrity of concrete foundations, has raised $210,000 of a proposed $2 million offering. Smart Structures had previously raised about $2.3 million, according to SEC filings. Previous investors have included Ben Franklin Technology Partners of Southeastern Pennsylvania, Delaware Crossing Investor Group, and Emergent Growth Fund.

Philadelphia-based PHmHealth LLC has raised $175,000 of a $750,000 offering. PHmHealth says its platform allows home health care providers to check in through its NFC-enabled app verifying the visit and uploading the collected data to a secure cloud-based server.

Glen Mills-based Versify Solutions, which markets an energy usage management and trading platform, has raised $406,000 out of a total offering of $500,000. Versify had previously raised at least $2.3 million.
Past investors have included Fairbridge Venture Partners and Ben Franklin Technology Partners of Southeastern Pennsylvania.




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Phillly Tech People News 12/2/2012: Fisker Hires Former GM Marketing Boss; Mark Harrington joins ListenLogic






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Moritz Upped to VP of Communications, Digital and Integrated Media for NBCU's E&DN/IM Division
Will lead communications for Integrated Media group; gains oversight of DailyCandy, Fandango, TV Without Pity
(Broadcasting & Cable)

Fisker Hires Former GM Marketing Boss Ewanick (Wall Street Journal: Driver's Seat)

Half.com, Ecount Veteran Joins Social Intelligence Pioneer ListenLogic
Mark Harington joins ListenLogic executive team as CMO to drive marketing and strategy.
(PR Web)

Rajant Names Hank Ottey Chief Engineer – Sales & Support Services (Business Wire)

DBA Technologies Returns to Its Roots, Heads Home to Doylestown (Marketwire)

Cadient Group adds two senior managers (Philly Ad Club News)

Electronic Ink Welcomes Reggie Murphy as Principal Consultant (Electronic Ink)



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