Daily Links 1/23/2013: ICG agrees to sell InvestorForce for $23.5 million




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SAP Forecasts At Least 12% Profit Gain on Software Demand (Bloomberg)

SAP CEO: Software Industry Being Split in Two (CNBC)

SAP's 2012 earnings mask challenges (Dennis Howlett/ZDNet)

Why Microsoft May Want to Invest in Dell (Wall Street Journal: The CIO Report)

Google: Motorola Home Had $820 Million in Q4 Sales
Internet Giant Reports Motorola Home as 'Discontinued Operation' with Pending Arris Deal
(Multichannel News)

Google Fiber 'not a hobby,' could expand, tech giant's execs say (LA Times)

Netflix Subscriber Gain of 2.05 Million Beats View; Shares Surge (Bloomberg)

ICG Agrees to Sale of InvestorForce to MSCI for $23.5 million (Globe Newswire)
InvestorForce is based in Conshohocken.



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Today in Philly Tech History January 22, 1999: DirecTV to buy assets of PrimeStar; Comcast exits satellite business



DirecTV announced on January 22, 1999 it would acquire the assets of Primestar, a rival satellite TV provider owned by a group of cable operators including Comcast and a GE satellite unit, for $1.82 billion. The deal would give DirecTV potential access to Primestar's 2.3 million customers, as well as its satellite assets. Primestar was reported to be running out of cash, hurt by older technology and a high churn rate among its customer base.



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Daily Links 1/22/2013: Microsoft may invest in Dell buyout




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Microsoft May Invest $1-$3 Billion in Dell Buyout (CNBC)

SAP cloudwashes its image (Vinnie Mirchandani/Enterprise Irregulars)

Questions SAP should answer during its Q4 earnings call
SAP's HANA, the cloud, changing sales culture and product mix will all be up for discussion
(Computerworld)

Verizon Earnings Fall as Discounts Yield Customer Record (Bloomberg)

Sandy, Pension Charges Bite Into Verizon Q4 Results
Telco Adds 134K TV and 144K FiOS Internet Subs, Drops 117K DSL Lines
(Multichannel News)

Verizon Strips Sports Out of FiOS TV 'Select HD' Package (Multichannel News)

Intel-Comcast TV Everywhere Deal Tops CES Show, GroupM's Michael Bologna (Beet.TV)

Service Electric buys Shen-Heights TV (Pottsville Republican Herald)
Interesting story covering the origins of the Cable TV business.

The world’s largest student-run hackathon isn’t at Stanford or MIT — it’s at Penn (PandoDaily)

Social to Play Second String on Game Day Marketers debate value of Twitter, Facebook in Super Bowl mix (Ad Week)
Philly's Red Tettemer + Partners producing Century 21 spot again this year.



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Dish Hopper Ad Mocks CBS and CNET
Satellite Giant Presses PR Advantage Against CBS and CNET
(Ad Age)

Mixed Response to Comcast in Expanding Net Access (New York Times)


Philly Tech News VentureWatch 1/20/2013: Hoopla HQ goes West, Quintiq triples Radnor space, Real Food Works raising funds & staffing up


Tom Paine



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Hoopla, the gamification platform currently oriented to the Salefsorce.com platform that encourages (hopefully) friendly competition and goal attainment among sales and customer service teams, has officially announced it has established a new Silicon Valley headquarters in San Jose, CA. Originally based in West Chester, Hoopla has received funding from Safeguard Scientifics and Salesforce.com. CEO and founder Mike Small, a long-time Philly area tech executive, tells me by email that "we are doing all software development in West Chester and will continue to expand that office in the coming year."



Quintiq, the supply chain planning & optimization software firm with dual headquarters in the Netherlands and Radnor, announced in December that it had tripled its office space in the Radnor Financial Center. “The accelerated demand for our software is not surprising when you consider that our solutions are helping organizations such as Walmart improve their productivity and profitability. Quintiq has a history of steady growth and we’ve decided that now is the time to invest in expanding our North American footprint,” said Quintiq CEO Dr. Victor Allis in a statement. The company said it "currently reports an average annual growth rate of approximately 40%", which means based on past reports its revenue may be approaching $100 million. LLR Partners and NewSpring Capital acquired a reported 48% stake in Quintiq in 2011, and it is a potential future IPO candidate.



OpenX, the Los Angeles-based online advertising technology platform, has raised another $22.5 million, with Samsung's venture unit coming on as lead investor in this round. SAP Ventures (which participated again) and First Round Capital (early stage) are among its existing investors. OpenX, which now has 260 employees, has raised a total of $70 million to date. Last year OpenX acquired King of Prussia-based LiftDNA (now operating as OpenX Lift), founded by former myYearbook ad tech exec Vadim Telyatnikov, which provided it with an important supply-side platform. In late 2011, OpenX said it had a $100 million annual run rate and that it was profitable.

Conshohocken & New York-based Real Food Works is raising capital and staffing up. Real Food Works, which provides subscription-based meal plans featuring healthy meals with an emphasis on plant food, was founded by area serial entrepreneur Lucinda Duncalfe (Infonautics, Destiny Software, TurnTide, ClickEquations). New executive additions include another Infonautics veteran, Mike Krupit, as Chief Operating Officer, ex-Inhabi CEO David Friedman as Head of Technology and David Navarro as Philadelphia Operations Manager. An SEC filing shows that Real Food Works has made an offering to raise up to $1,000,000, of which $50,000 has been committed. Wharton professor, startup veteran and angel investor Leonard Lodish is listed as a Director on the filing. Real Food Works is currently rolling out its delivery service to the Philadelphia area and plans to expand to some other major markets later in the year.

Curalate, which made a remarkable pivot to reach an apparently booming market in little more than a year, received $3 million in funding from New Enterprise Associates, First Round Capital, and Penn-affiliated MentorTech Ventures, the same firms that participated in its previous $750,000 seed round. Originating as Storably, which allowed people to rent out things like spare storage space or parking spaces, the startup realized quickly it wasn't gaining traction and switched to a different
business model built around analyzing brand presences on Pinterset. Much of what is pinned on Pinterest is based on visual images, not textual information, meaning measurement requires identifying and matching similar images with each other. Curalate is looking to expand its "visual search" model to other platforms. Curalate founder & CEO Apu Gupta recently told the Philadelphia Daily News that his company currently has 14 full-time employees (most based in Philly) and "now have hundreds of brands on the platform." Meanwhile, more competition is on the way.

Philadelphia-based social media-oriented ecommerce platform Sidecar (AKA Snipi) raised an additional $1.5 million, according to a recent SEC filing. Sidecar, which last raised $2.52 million in late 2011, has numerous investors including Innovation Ventures, NextStage Capital, Gabriel Investments, MAG Fund, ARC Angel Fund, and GSI Commerce and Kynetic LLC founder Michael Rubin. They are a quiet company, however; I have found it difficult to discover much about what Sidecar is actually doing beyond the broadest description.

Colin Devroe, until recently Director, Strategy & Technology at business video website Viddler in Bethlehem, says he will be slowly unveiling details about his new startup, named Plain, over the next few weeks on his App.net site. For now, however, details are mostly a mystery, so you will have to stay tuned.

A group of Penn freshmen have launched a new startup, Textbook Friend, which enables students to
easily buy and sell used textbooks directly between each other. Textbook Friend is already working with students at Drexel University, Temple University and the University of the Sciences to expand to those institutions, the Daily Pennsylvanian reports.
Meanwhile, out in West Chester a recent WCU alum, Kehinde Roberts ('12) has launched LogicPad, a social learning management platform currently in use at WCU and by some students at other institutions. LogicPad will also soon be launching a direct student-to-student textbook sales app, Roberts tells me.



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The Changing Of The Enterprise Guard (TechCrunch)
By Box co-founder Aaron Levie.


Daily Links 1/18/2013: Area VC funding hits 16-year low (PBJ)




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The Suite Life of SAP HANA: Why Customers Will, Won’t Adopt
(Thomas Wailgum/ASUG News)

GridIron gobbled up by Violin Memory
SAN acceleration added to Violin's string
(The Register)
SAP Ventures is a major investor in Violin, whose flash memory products may be important to SAP as it expands its in-memory Hana platform.

Michael Dell’s Empire in a Buyout Spotlight (New York Times: DealBook)


Venture capital funding in area fell to 16-year low (Philadelphia Business Journal)

N.J. Pension Fund Posts 13.3% Gain for 2012, State Reports (Bloomberg)

TODAY IN 2011: THE FCC APPROVES THE COMCAST-NBC UNIVERSAL MERGER (WestLaw Insider)

FCC wants gigabit Ethernet in all 50 states by 2015 (ZDNet)

TelVue unveils hosted broadcast service (Broadcast Engineering)
TelVue is based in Mount Laurel.


NJEN Panel Discusses “Where’s the Money?” Alternative Financing for Tech Companies, Part 2



Esther Surden
Publisher & Editor, NJTechWeekly.com

(NJTechWeekly.com is continuing to catch up on pre-Sandy coverage that would have been published in early November but was postponed because of post-storm chaos and the volume of Sandy-related stories. We apologize for the delay.)



While it was often difficult for the N.J. tech community to obtain funding in 2012, there were a variety of alternative options for companies, according to panelists at an October 10, 2012, New Jersey Entrepreneurial Network (NJEN) event in Princeton.

Some 60 attendees heard about crowdfunding, bank financing, a myriad of tools available from the state of N.J. and even a funding vehicle that gives immigrants green cards while providing financing to companies that create jobs.

New Jersey Economic Development Authority (EDA) director of technology and life sciences Kathleen Coviello’s presentation on ways the EDA can help tech companies was extremely comprehensive and demonstrated the agency’s view of its relationship with the state.

“Our role is to function as the bank for the state. We have money. As the bank for the state, we have underwriting standards we have to meet and due diligence we have to go through. Particularly in this tough economic environment, we have a fiduciary responsibility and must be fiscally prudent. We are not throwing money out the door,” Coviello said. However, she added, “we are doing transactions.”

EDA transactions made prior to the October meeting include providing $3.3 million to Fluitec, a Belgian company that had relocated to the U.S. and wanted to develop a manufacturing facility in northern N.J.

“This is one of the most attractive programs we have,” Coviello said, referring to financing through the Edison Innovation Clean Energy Manufacturing Fund, funded by the N.J. Board of Public Utilities and administered by the EDA. Companies can get up to $1.3 million in grant and the remainder in very low-interest loans if they meet certain performance metrics,” she noted. “We get funding for this from a sister agency formed to help promote clean technologies in the state of N.J.”

“We also just closed a transaction for FieldView Solutions (Edison), a company that has received funding through the Edison Innovation Green Growth Fund. “We provided that company with a million-dollar loan and, again, if they hit performance metrics, half of it gets converted into a grant.” (NJTechWeekly.com profiled FieldView Solutions here.)

Another approved company, Phone.com (Newark), “provides phone services to small and medium-sized businesses throughout the state. The company was virtual at the time and already had a little bit of VC funding. We provided matching money to that VC money in the form of a loan with warrants. And the company is going to relocate to the NJIT EDC [New Jersey Institute of Technology Enterprise Development Center] and put down roots in New Jersey,” said Coviello.

CareKinesis , a Moorestown company with a healthcare IT business model, has also been helped by the EDA. Its founder, Cal Knowlton, already had a successful business in Pa. but wanted CareKinesis to stay on the Jersey side of the river, where he lived and had grown up. “We provided a matching loan program to some of the VC money he raised,” said Coviello.

She continued, “As the bank for the state, we administer some legislative programs. You may be familiar with the Net Operating Loss Program, which is unique to N.J. I’ve even spoken to the federal government about this, as they are looking to deploy something like it on a national level. Companies that are losing money can sell those losses for cash today.

“We all know as entrepreneurs that cash in hand today is much more important than taking it as a write-off against your future losses. The state says you can sell those losses to profitable N.J. businesses. We set the threshold and ask that the recipient companies demonstrate they are growing jobs in N.J. There are three checkpoints: year one, year three and year five. Companies have to be at 10 jobs by the end of year ten.”

This program has been very helpful to N.J. biotech companies, Coviello said, and it benefits profitable firms by providing them a tax shield. The process involves an annual application that must be received by the end of June.

“In his budget the governor approved a $60 million annual allocation for this program this year [fiscal year 2013],” Coviello said. There is always an oversubscription, she added. “This year we expect the average award to be around $920,000.” [NJTechWeekly.com will be publishing the 2012 list of tech companies that participated in this program.]

“We also administer tax incentives for job growth, so before any of you entrepreneurs think about signing a lease in N.J., see us about a program we have that can incentivize you to grow your jobs in N.J.”

Coviello said the EDA is constantly approached by people who need early-stage capital, but as a bank, the organization doesn’t give out “risky money.” However, the state does invest in venture funds, working with partners and professional managers.

“We are invested across 11 funds currently,” she said. Some of the funds are fully invested, and some have capacity in them. “We take a portfolio approach: we have healthcare, life science, early-stage, and growth venture funds.” The state puts money into the funds as a limited partner and requires the venture partner to match the money the state contributes with a three times multiplier, said Coviello.

“Most recently we announced a $3 million investment in Osage Partners [Bala Cynwyd, Pa.]. Osage had been doing transactions in N.J. on a one-off basis but was located in Pa.” Funds were selected during a competitive application process that evaluated the VC’s activity in N.J. Now Osage has opened an office in N.J., Coviello said, and it has to “turn $3 million into $9 million in early-stage investments” by funding companies with less than $3 million in revenues.

“This approach takes the due diligence process and puts it in professional hands,” she pointed out. “The VCs can offer the coaching and mentoring we can’t,” she added.

The state has also invested $2 million in NextStage Capital (Audubon, Pa.), “which will be turned into $6 million for N.J. entrepreneurs.”

Coviello also spoke about TechLaunch (Montclair), the first N.J. tech accelerator funded by the EDA and which NJTechWeekly.com has covered in depth.

Coviello discussed her organization’s support of biotech through a real estate play. The EDA has purchased a complete campus in New Brunswick from Johnson & Johnson and put in a state-of-the-art wet lab facility close to Rutgers and, geographically, in the heart of the pharmaceutical industry. “We have strategic relationships with Rutgers, so our tenants can use its resources for mentoring and cooperation on animal studies. We are really looking to build that pharma community,” she noted.



Esther Surden is Publisher and Editor of NJTechWeekly, and a contributor to Philly Tech News. This article originally appeared in NJTechWeekly, and was reposted here with her approval.



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Daily Links 1/17/2013: More on SevOne; Philly Fed Index declines unexpectedly




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Pike Creek's SevOne makes Bain investment deal to expand (Wilmington News Journal)

27-Year-Old Box CEO Plans To Hire 300 More People, IPO In 2014 (Bloomberg via Business Indsider)

Manufacturing in the Philadelphia Area Unexpectedly Shrinks (Bloomberg)

January 2013 Business Outlook Survey (Philly Fed)

Google: TWC Is 'Withholding' Metro Sports RSN in Kansas City (Multichannel News)

Comcast upgrades core network with Ciena (CED Magazine)

OpenX Raises $22.5 Million in Round Led by Samsung Venture Unit (All Things D)
QpenX investors include First Round Capital and SAP Ventures. OpenX acquired King of Prussia-based supply side ad platform LiftDNA last year.

Ten New Ventures Join the Ranks of the Wharton Venture Initiation Program (Wharton Entrepreneurship Blog)

Union agrees to bargain to help save Philly papers (AP via phillyBurbs.com)

New Survey Shows Health Information Exchanges Growing in Pennsylvania (PR Newswire)




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Daily Links 1/16/2012: Report suggests Comcast may buy out GE NBCU stake sooner rather than later
Comcast encouraged Arris to acquire Motorola Home




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Comcast, GE Seen Fast-Tracking NBCU In $16 Bil Deal
(Investor's Business Daily)

Comcast (and Others) Urged Arris to Buy Moto Home (Multichannel News)

Cox Enterprises Invests $250 Million With Board Member Rackley (Bloomberg)

SAP earnings fall short of expectations (Reuters via Yahoo News)


Salesforce Partners Stir Pot (Denis Pombriant/Enterprise Irregulars)

Hoopla Establishes New Silicon Valley Headquarters
Leading provider of business gamification solutions expands operations to meet demand
(Business Wire)
Hoopla was originally founded in West Chester. Hoopla CEO Michael Smalls tells me by email: "We are doing all software development in West Chester and will continue to expand that office in the coming year." Hoopla investors include Safeguard Scientifics and Salesforce.com

Doug Pelletier/Founder, Trifecta Technologies (Keystone Edge)

CRM Slips on SEC Note; Nothing to Worry About, Says Morgan Stanley (Barron's: Tech Trader Daily)

Ben Franklin Technology Partners of Southeastern Pennsylvania Announces Third Class of Project Liberty Digital Incubator (Ben Franklin Press Release)

EHRs Continue To Take A Beating (Information Week Healthcare)

Up in the Cloud: Hype and High Expectations for Cloud Computing (Knowledge@Wharton)
Knowledge@Wharton and SAP team up on survey.




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