Daily Links 12/14/2012: Buffett interested in Allentown paper; Redbox launches event ticketing from Philly-area kiosks






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Is Warren Buffett eyeing the Allentown Morning Call?
Ownership of Lehigh Valley newspaper in question, and one of the world's richest men has something to say about it.
(Allentown Morning Call)

Phila. is launch site as Redbox sells event tickets at kiosks (Philadelphia Inquirer)

Comcast app to let viewers store, replay movies (AP via SeattlePI.com)


Student Engineers: Apply to work at 170+ startups with one Common Application (Redeye VC)

Year in Review: SAP’s Cloud Strategy in 2012 (ASUG News)

4 smokin' hot startups: The next tech boom
Social networks are dead, and smart VC money is pouring into enterprise startups like Shoutlet, Asana, Narrative Science, and Delphix
(Infoworld)


Norman Joseph Woodland, co-inventor of bar code at Drexel, dies at 91


Tom Paine


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Norman Joseph Woodland, who co-invented the bar code while he was a graduate student at Drexel University, died on December 9 in Edgewater, NJ, at the age of 91, the New York Times reported today.

Woodland and Bernard Silver developed the bar code at Drexel in the late 1940's and received a patent on it in 1952. However, the now-ubiquitous technology was not implemented in the supermarket industry until 1974.

I wrote about Woodland and Silver on the 60th anniversary of the issuance of the patent two months ago.

Woodland ended up working up at IBM, where he had a role in commercializing the bar code, retiring in 1987. Silver died in 1963.

While the patent itself was sought after and was acquired by Philco and later sold to
RCA, my sense is that it wasn't terribly lucrative for the co-inventors.




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phillyBurbs.com on Horsham-based EFE Labs; prospering after 50 years


Tom Paine


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In my article last week on Malvern-based Rajant Corporation, CEO Robert Schena told me how Rajant outsources the manufacture of the hardware units for its communication nodes to contract manufacturer EFE Laboratories in Horsham. I didn't know much about EFE, but in yesterday's phillyBurbs.com Crissa Shoemaker DeBree wrote an excellent article about the 50 year old company, that has adapted to change and prospered even as technology has changed dramatically over its history.

Rajant BreadCrumb® LX4



Under the leadership of President Kip Anthony, EFE has tripled its headcount over the past decade to about 36, DeBree reports, and was ranked #38 on this year's Philadelphia 100 list of the region’s fastest growing businesses. The article also points out that EFE serves as a resource for the area and frequently helps smaller firms build prototypes or get assembly lines off the ground.




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Daily Links 12/13/2012: Roberts on what Comcast has learned from Apple





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Comcast CEO: What we learned from Apple (Fortune)

ShopRunner’s CIO: The Cloud Won’t Run Itself (BizTech Magazine)

HP Former CEO Says Board Shares Blame for Autonomy Deal (Bloomberg)

Michael Dell: Our Transformation Is Complete (InformationWeek)

Sprint Offers to Buy Rest of Clearwire
(Bloomberg)

Comcast’s rollout of Streampix nearly complete (CED Magazine)

The Xfinity App Lets You Download Shows Now (Gizmodo)

Oracle Acquires DataRaker to Expand in Smart Meters, Sensors (Bloomberg)

Manufacturing solutions (phillyBurbs.com)
EFE Laboratories still growing after more than 50 years.

Connectify Dispatch Combines Ethernet, Wi-Fi, and 4G to Turbocharge Internet Speed
(PR Newswire)

Philadelphia Startup SnipSnap Gets More Social With Its Updated Coupon Clipping iOS App (TechCrunch)



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Synchronoss Cares: One Tech Company’s Sandy Relief Story


Esther Surden
Publisher & Editor, NJTechWeekly.com


When Stephen Waldis, CEO of Synchronoss — a Bridgewater, NJ, company that provides activation and content management solutions for connected devices — saw that his essential employees not only came to work but performed flawlessly while Superstorm Sandy was lashing at their homes, he was moved.

“There isn’t an employee here in New Jersey and at our operations center in Bethlehem [Pa.] who wasn’t impacted by the storm,” he said.

Synchronoss is a 24/7 operation. Customers are activating their phones all over the U.S. and the world regardless of what the weather is like on the East Coast, and “we had our own emergency plan so we could keep our services up and running for our customers,” during the storm, Waldis said. Being able to perform well under such adverse circumstances provided employees a big morale boost, he continued.

Yet after the storm, employees and management realized there was still much to be done. From a community perspective, “we could see how many other folks were suffering.” Everyone had a story about someone who was severely affected. Employees wanted to do something and initiated a discussion about their desire to help. Synchronoss as a corporation wanted to support them, Waldis said.

“The idea of helping the relief effort resonated with me because I’ve been a Jersey guy for 40-plus years. We decided, and my board agreed, that we would get behind this financially through both donating money to the cause and giving employees the opportunity to take time off, with pay, to work in the community to make it better. When you look at how bad things are, we thought it was the right thing to do.”

Synchronoss has devised a multipronged approach called Synchronoss Cares, and the company has committed to donating up to $100,000 to kick off the program. It wanted its employees to be able to donate and raise money, give back as individuals and contribute work hours to the cause.

The company has designated the Everett Family Fund a local fund it will support. Many Mendham-area employees know of this family and the tragedy that the storm brought it. Employees may also contribute at the state level to the Hurricane Sandy NJ Relief Fund, and at the national level to the American Red Cross.

For those who prefer a more hands-on approach, Synchronoss employees can donate time and talent to Habitat for Humanity. The company will donate $25 per hour (up to $50,000) to one of the three designated charities for each work hour invested in projects related to rebuilding homes. Synchronoss employees have already worked at a Hoboken cleanup effort.

Synchronoss Cares has also spurred a friendly competition among staff members. “We thought it would be great for employees to pick a cause to support. The company and board of directors will contribute to each of those causes equally. But the employees will be able to raise money from the outside for these charities,” Waldis said.

The employee team that raises the most money by the end of January will be rewarded with paid time off. “We are all very excited,” Waldis said, and the company expects to deliver progress reports on its charity effort periodically.

“If there is one message I want to communicate, it is that we have a wonderful sense of community in our organization. … This is the busiest time of the year for our organization. A lot of people buy tablets and phones for the holidays. Yet our employees are giving up their weekends. I can’t be grateful enough for what the employees are doing."

Waldis also said the N.J. tech community may contribute to the Synchronoss Charitable Foundation. For more information, email synchronosscares@synchronoss.com.


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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Air Force can't do ERP


Tom Paine


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X-37B (courtesy US Air Force)


The US Air Force can do some amazing things. Just yesterday, it launched a classified military space plane (the X-37B) into orbit. And recent reports suggest the Air Force may be developing stealth drones. But it apparently can't successfully implement something that doesn't even leave the ground - a new ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning) system.

The Air Force recently announced it was cancelling the Expeditionary Combat Support System (ECSS) program, after a $1 billion investment. The program was built around Oracle ERP software, and CSC was the lead systems integrator. The ECSS program was established about seven years ago to streamline its current weapons systems availability logistics process that includes hundreds of logistics systems. Senators Carl Levin (D-MI) and John McCain (R-AZ), chairman and ranking member respectively of the Senate Armed Services Committee, wrote Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta on Dec. 5 seeking an explanation.

Not that this is problem is unique to the Air Force. Numerous other DoD ERP projects have struggled, including a massive one for the Army based on SAP software. This suggests the problem has to do more with the inherent complexity of the military enterprise, as well as the client's difficulties in reaching group decisions.




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Highlights last week on Philly Tech News (12/3/2012 to 12/9/2012)





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On Philly Tech News, I looked at how Malvern-based Rajant Corp is succeeding
with its Kynetic Mesh Wireless Networks
, and spoke with CEO Robert Schena about the company's future prospects.

Comcast has had its problems in Vail and on Martha's Vineyard, and I look at what the stumbling blocks have been with these remote and wealthy communities.

Five Philly-area startups indicated in SEC filings that they have received new funding rounds.

In news from other sources, Friday was apparently the deadline for initial bids for Google's Horham-based Motorola Home unit. Arris and Pace were said to be the leading bidders. Janney's Tony Wible suggested that a Google acquisition of TiVo was conceivable. Such a deal could in part be due to TiVo's patent infringement claims against Motorola Home.

QVC acquired social classifieds website Oodle. And IBM completed its $1.3 billion acquisition of Wayne-based Kenexa.

DreamIt Ventures graduated its Fall 2012 Philadelphia class of 15 startups, and also formally launched a healthcare accelerator in partnership with Independence Blue Cross and Penn Medicine. Also, Blackstone LaunchPad expanded
its student entrpreneurship program
to Philadelphia with a $3 million investment.

The Inquirer's Joe DiStefano did an excellent profile of SAP co-CEO Bill McDermott, who is based out of Newtown Square.


Daily Links 12/11/2012: Comcast exec talks about X2, Cloud DVR




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Comcast Execs Talk Up X2, Cloud DVR (Light Reading Cable)

Telemundo shifts focus in effort to boost share
NBCUniversal has installed new management and increased the operating budget at the Spanish-language network, which has lagged behind rival Univision.
(LA Times)

Barry Diller sells TripAdvisor shares, Liberty Interactive new top shareholder (AP via Washington Post)
Liberty Interactive is the parent of QVC.

SAP and its fragmented path to cloud glory (Dennis Howlett/Cloud Pro)

Oracle's Database Appliance certified for SAP software (InfoWorld)

How my 10 cloud predictions for 2012 panned out (VentureBeat)

The year in enterprise software: Seven key takeaways
Larry Ellison embraces the cloud, mobility becomes a first-class citizen and SaaS reaches an inflection point
(Computerworld)


From The Valley To The Motor City: Why Stik Moved Back To Detroit (TechCrunch)
Also discusses DreamIt Ventures-backed Quikly, which moved from Philly to Detroit.


Netflix Ranks Google Fiber as Fastest U.S. ISP (PC Magazine)

Sprint in talks with major Clearwire investors: sources (Reuters)

Tribune Said to Seek Sale of Newspapers (Bloomberg)




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Comcast unveils new corporate logo (with Peacock)


Tom Paine


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Comcast has unveiled a new corporate-wide logo that incorporates the NBC Peacock. The copy of the logo shown above was downloaded from the media resources library on Comcast's website.

The Wall Street Journal just reported (subscription required) that Comcast hasn't yet formally announce the change, but the new logo was showcased in a staff meeting Monday led by Comcast CEO Brian Roberts.

No truth to the rumor that Comcast plans to put a ten-story high, illuminated version of the logo atop the Comcast Center.




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Daily Links 12/10/2012: Beyond.com acquires JobCircle.com; Top bids for Moto Home reported to be from Arris, Pace




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Google Said to Get Best Bids for Unit from Pace, Arris
(Bloomberg)

Beyond.com Announces Acquisition of Career Site JobCircle.com
Expands Its Social/Employment Platform in Mid-Atlantic Region with well-known brand
(Business Wire)

Billion-Dollar Flop: Air Force Stumbles on Software Plan (New York Times)

Comcast: 'The Cloud Changes Everything' (Light Reading Cable)

Comcast Meshes Ethernet With Docsis 3.0 (Light Reading Cable)


Philly Inquirer, Daily News to launch paywalled sites in 2013 (paidContent)

Dell's acquisitions not yet paying dividends
Dell's lack of an integration strategy, coupled with a challenging economy, is hurting the company's sales and bottom line
(Network World)

Dell Passed on Autonomy Before HP Bought It (All Things D)

Penn alumni less likely to stay in Philadelphia compared to peer schools (Daily Pennsylvanian)



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