Daily Links 4/29/2013: Will Fox compete with Comcast for Phillies rights?





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10 Degrees: Phillies next in line for Dodgers-esque TV deal that'll keep them among MLB's big boys (Yahoo Sports)

Powell in PA—Programming Costs, Net Neutrality & Cable's Need to Get Flashy (Cable360)


Their used-car start-up site is a winner (Philly.com: Philly Inc)
Results of Wharton Business Plan Competition.

More fun facts about AWS usage, this time from Cloudyn (Gigaom)

Amazon doesn’t reveal what it makes on cloud computing, but here’s the number, anyway (Quartz)

PRINCETON: 2 university students are venture capitalists (Princeton Packet)
Princeton students in First Round Capital's Dorm Room Fund.

Nokia and SAP team up on TwoGo ride-sharing platform (Gigaom)

evoke interaction Rebrands as Evoke Health (Marketwire)




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Philly Enterprise Software Meetup: Temple prof on "Simplifying Enterprise Operations", May 1 at Alter Hall



Tom Paine



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This coming Wednesday, May 1, Matt Held's Philly Enterprise Software Group will hold its next meetup
at Temple University
(Alter Hall, Fox School of Business, Temple University - Main Campus, Philadelphia, Room 232) at 6:30pm.

As part of its "Expert Speaker Series", the meetup group will feature a presentation entitled "Simplifying Enterprise Operations" by Mart Doyle, Assistant Professor in the Department of Management Information Systems, The Fox School. Doyle builds upon his extensive corporate, academic and consulting experience in helping implement large enterprise ERP systems. Examples include Rohm & Haas's (since acquired by Dow) groundbreaking SAP ERP system, where he served as both a manager and a consultant, and Temple's own implementation of SunGard Higher Ed's (now Ellucian) Banner ERP system a few years back.

One thing Doyle (a Philly native) has focused on in his teaching and consulting is the job of the operations manager who has the real-time responsibility to oversee and keep these very complex environments running. The cost of downtime, both operationally and financially, is tremendous. Different segments or functions within the enterprise systems environment often use their own diagnostic and monitoring tools specific to their part of the operation. The central operations manager needs a dashboard that bridges these different environments and identifies where events are occurring within the infrastructure, what they relate to and how they can be addressed. Doyle will discuss implementing an events management system to simplify operations management.

Alter Hall, the Fox School's new $80 million home, opened in 2009. The Fox School's MIS department is certainly well known in the professional ranks although I sometimes think it doesn't get as much local recognition as it should. US News & World report ranked Fox MIS 17th in the country last year.




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Philly Tech People News 4/28/2013







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Safeguard Scientifics Names Jeffrey B. McGroarty Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer (Business Wire)

RDC Appoints Industry Leader, Anthony Capon, To Forge Its Data Strategy
Vice President of Data Strategy joins RDC’s Executive Committee
(Business Wire)

Tribune Taps NBCU Exec Dana Zimmer as Prexy of Distribution
(Variety)


Airclic Names Charlie Virden as Vice President of Sales
Virden to Help Airclic Drive Momentum Amidst Expanding Market Demand for Critical Supply Chain Management and Logistics Technologies
(Business Wire)

MD Aligne Announces John R. Palumbo as President and CEO (PR Web)

KABOOKABOO INTEGRATED MARKETING
OPENS ADDITIONAL OFFICE IN PHILADELPHIA
(Press Release)
A spokesperson for the Coral Gables, FL-based agency says Ryan Helman, Director of Business Development, will head up the Philadelphia office. He was previously with SapientNitro and Rosetta.

Steve Merino Joins Mangos as Associate Creative Director (PR Web)


WebiMax Announces Michael Gurzo as Chief Financial Officer (PR Web)

Mark Lewis Joins MayoSeitz Media as Associate Director of Strategic Communications (PR Web)




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Businesses move to off-site computer-service operators (Philadelphia Inquirer)


Beyda Gets Specific About What Tech Startups Should Know to Receive Genacast Funding

Esther Surden
Publisher & Editor, NJTechWeekly.com


Gil Beyda of Genacast Ventures gave some very
 specific criteria he uses in evaluating a startup. | Genacast



Gil Beyda, founder and managing partner of Genacast Ventures (Philadelphia and New York), a seed fund formed in partnership with Comcast Ventures, gave attendees at the Feb. 19, 2013, Venture Association of New Jersey (VANJ) luncheon meeting in Whippany very specific criteria he uses when choosing whom to fund.


He started his discussion by explaining his background and connection to VANJ. Beyda, a former software technology consultant and serial entrepreneur who founded Real Media and several other startups, remembered pitching yet another tech startup to the VANJ in 2001. “It was a great idea, [but it was] bad timing, and it didn’t end up getting funded,” he recalled.

After Real Media was acquired in 2001, Beyda went into online advertising as CTO of Tacoda, an early behavioral-targeting ad network. Following AOL’s acquisition of Tacoda in 2007, he founded Genacast. Beyda noted that he is also personally invested in the fund.

Genacast’s goal is to fund early-stage northeast U.S. business-facing Internet technology companies with up to a million dollars, in four to six deals a year.

“Even though we are partnered with Comcast and Comcast Ventures, companies we invest in don’t have to have anything to do with Comcast or NBC Universal,” Beyda said. “However, we do work with those guys and can open those doors and make those intros,” he noted.

Beyda’s talk was entitled “Eight Keys to Yes: The Eight Questions You Need to Answer to Get Him to Write a Check.”

“More important than getting me to answer yes, it’s important to answer these questions to get your families, your significant others, to answer yes as well,” he told the young entrepreneurs in attendance.

“When I make an investment, … it’s just money. But you are investing a lot more: you are investing your time and … making a commitment to the business. First and foremost, you should be able to convince your friends and family that this is an awesome idea.”

Beyda’s eight “keys” are quite detailed. Getting his money is no simple journey:

  • Be clear about the problem you are solving. “It’s even better if this problem is felt by millions of people,” said Beyda. Then it’s likely there will be a large market. Know whether the problem is well understood. Ideally, your target customers know they have a problem and that it’s big and painful. That speaks to the sales cycle. If they have a very painful problem, customers say, “Yes, I want the solution and I want it now.”
  • Know your solution to the problem. What sorts of technology, services, processes, “secret sauce,” trade secrets and IP do you have? Understand that people are using other solutions to the problem today. Know how difficult it will be to move people away from current solutions. The more you have to change their behavior, the more difficult it will be to gain acceptance. Understand that you are probably not the first person who came up with this idea; someone else has likely tried it. Put context around your solution: pretend that someone else has come up with this idea before, know why it wouldn’t have worked before and what in the ecosystem, market or context will make it work now. Will it work, for example, because we all have mobile phones today and you need mobile data to make it work? Is it because we all have broadband and you need broadband for your solution?
  • The team is next in importance. Said Beyda, “It’s about their ability to create the vision and execute on the vision. It’s really important that they understand the stakes. It would be amazing if they actually felt the problem in their last job or in their past.” If team members are in the industry you are addressing, it’s even better. They can then share their contacts, and access partners, potential customers, distributors and channels. The team needs to be able to lead, inspire and hire. Look for teams with the mindset that in the office each day everything is going to go wrong.
  • Companies often don’t look at the real competition. Said Beyda, “Open up your competitive set and know if you threaten people who are borderline competitors who could try to enter the market.” Is it easy for them to move into your space? In that case, unlevel the playing field: “I want any company I invest in to have an unfair advantage [a unique asset] in the marketplace.” It may have contacts sewn up or patents or technology that is difficult to replicate. Know how the landscape will change after you launch: “You will affect the market by bringing your product to market.”
  • Know the market ecosystem in order to maximize the opportunity and leverage the marketplace. Who will the users be? Who will the buyer be? Know the decision maker, the potential strategic and nonstrategic partners and the channel partners and distributors early on. How will you acquire customers? What are the costs of acquisition and how will those costs make sense for the business? “It helps if you come from the industry; you know what the sales cycle is, you know how to find those customers, how you message them and close them.” It’s important to know how much cash you’ll need. “We are funding you to some point in the future. At that point you will have proven some aspects of your business. If you can’t do that, it’s unlikely you’ll get more money from me unless you’ve made substantial progress,” said Beyda.
  • Know how much “runway” you need at the seed stage. While you are working on your seed round, imagine what you want to put in your Series A deck. Picture it this way: I want to have X amount of customers and X amount of revenue. Work backward from that. How much time and how much money do you need? “The worst thing I can do is invest too little money and have you run out of cash,” said Beyda. Entrepreneurs don’t, however, want to raise too much, because early money is the most expensive money, and it gets the most dilution. The length of time Genacast expects to fund in a seed round is from 12 to 18 months.
  • Know how to “de-risk” for the next investor coming down the line. If there is risk of uncertainty that you can build the technology product, make sure you build it for the next investor. If there is market risk (“I don’t know if people will buy it”), make sure you have buyers for the next investor. Know the key assumptions the next investor will want to see for customer acquisition costs, sales cycles and so on. It shouldn’t come as a surprise when a follow-on investor asks you a question about traction, for example.
  • A somewhat controversial question is, Should entrepreneurs be thinking about the exit when they have barely started? Beyda’s response: “We don’t want you to focus on the exit. We want you to build an amazing business and delight your customers. But … it’s an important exercise to understand that you are building a valuable asset and to know to whom it will be valuable. We make our money when you exit, so we want to know that someone will find it valuable.
Esther Surden is Publisher and Editor of NJTechWeekly, and a contributor to Philly Tech News. This article originally appeared in NJTechWeekly, and is reposted here with her permission.




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Daily Links 4/26/2013: QlikTech rises on results; Philly.com owners lose arbitration ruling on trademark challenge to Philly2Philly.com





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What’s the SD Benchmark for ERP Apps Running on SAP HANA? (Thomas Wailgum/ASUG News)

Why in-memory computing is going mainstream
(Information Age)

Qlik Technologies Inks Larger Deals As Q1 Beats (Investor's Business Daily)


Interview: Dell software chief talks transformation (PC World)


AT&T rolls Digital Life home automation service in Comcast, Time Warner Cable, Cox markets (FierceCable)

LevelUp closes nearly all its remote offices, including Philly (Technical.ly Philly)

Whose Website is it Anyway? Philadelphia legal firm tames new frontier (Keystone Edge)

Philadelphia Inquirer wants to own the term “Philly” (Domain Name Wire)
Paper's owner loses arbitration ruling to Philly2Philly.com.




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Conshohocken-based CardioNet to reorganize corporate structure, become BioTelemetry, Inc



Tom Paine



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Conshohocken-based CardioNet, a pioneer in telemetry-based cardiac monitoring, announced a proposed major corporate reorganization along with its quarterly earnings announcement on Monday. Pending shareholder approval, it will adopt a holding company structure and change its corporate name to BioTelemetry, Inc. CardioNet and acquisitons Cardiocore and Braemar will become operating subsidiaries of BioTelemetry. BioTelemetry will continue to trade on the NASDAQ under the symbol "BEAT".

CardioNet CEO and President Joseph H. Capper said in a statement: “Qur strategy is to achieve sustained long-term growth by solidifying our leadership position in remote cardiac monitoring; building a leading research services business; and identifying markets that would benefit from the application of our wireless platform and proprietary technology. As a result, we recently launched a more comprehensive sales approach in our patient services business and acquired Cardiocore in order to expand our research services capabilities. Simultaneously, we have built an operational infrastructure capable of sustained growth in several areas of the developing mobile health services market. Consequently, we expect to derive economic and functional benefits through the alignment of our adjacent businesses, each with distinct brand equity, under this holding company structure."

Although Capper was not very specific during the earnings conference call (free registration required for transcript) in identifying the markets BioTelemetry might expand into under its new structure, the implication is that it plans to move beyond cardiac monitoring into other areas of remote health monitoring, as well as expanding research applications for the patient data it collects. In this sense, it is possible CardioNet's strategy may begin to look more like that of Sotera Wireless, a California-based venture that Safeguard Scientifics took a 7.7% stake in earlier this year as I wrote about here.

Dr. Eric Topol, the cardiologist and leading wireless healthcare technology pioneer who is now Chief Academic Officer of Scripps Health and serves on Sotera Wireless' board, was the first physician to serve on CardioNet's Medical Advisory Board in 1999, although to the best of my knowledge he no longer has a connection to CardioNet.

CardioNet, which did an IPO in 2008 and moved to Conshohocken from San Diego, has since suffered due to reimbursement rate cuts by payers and questions by some about the value of its services. It has since recovered somewhat and is showing revenue growth again, although its still losing money. BEAT closed today at $2.76, well down from its 2008 post-IPO high of $34.50.




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Recyclebank exits UK market, disposing of unit



Tom Paine



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Recently, I raised the issue of the long-term viability of Recyclebank's business model, noting the ongoing tendency of numerous communities that had participated in the program to discontinue it, frequently citing low participation rates in the rewards program and ongoing costs.

Now comes word that Recyclebank has exited the UK market, selling its Recyclebank UK unit to Greenredeem, a subsidiary of Grundon Waste Management Ltd. The UK website letsrecycle.com says it is not clear whether Greenredeem paid a financial consideration to Recyclebank for the UK unit or received it for free, noting "questions have been asked in the past about the precise impact of rewards schemes on recycling and whether results had been influenced by a change in collection systems and approach rather than by offering rewards." Recyclebank has 250,000 members in the UK, according to Greenredeeem.

Recyclebank was founded in Philadelphia before moving its headquarters to New York. It still has some operations based in Philly, and the city of Philadelphia is among its customers.



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Daily Links 4/25/2013: Verizon said to be preparing bid to buyout Vodafone's Verizon Wireless stake





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Verizon eyes $100 billion bid for Vodafone's Wireless stake (Reuters)

Safeguard Scientifics Announces First Quarter 2013 Financial Results
Capital deployments in Pneuron and Sotera Wireless bring partner company roster to 20

(Business Wire)

QlikTech Announces First Quarter 2013 Financial Results
Total revenue of $96.5 million increases 22% compared to first quarter of 2012
(QlikTech Press Release)

InterDigital Announces First Quarter 2013 Financial Results (Globe Newswire)

Mixed Q1 For Time Warner Cable
OIBDA Growth In Line, But Video Sub Losses Rise
(Multichannel News)

Arris Sees Video Gateway Market Start to Open Up (Multichannel News)

GE Puts $105M Into Pivotal, The New EMC And VMware Platform Initiative, But Here’s What It Is Missing (TechCrunch)

AWeber Announces New Headquarters in Chalfont, Pa.
Renovated 71,000-square foot building to be revealed with April 30th ribbon-cutting ceremony
(PRWeb)





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Devon IT focuses on software, as it teams up with Acer


Tom Paine



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Its unusual to see a company recommend that its customers buy someone else's product rather than its own - most of the time, anyway.

But that's exactly what King of Prussia-based thin client computing vendor Devon IT said in a recent press release ( Acer N2010G Thin Client Replaces Dell, HP, Devon and Wyse Thin Clients At Lower Cost). And on Devon IT's website, Acer models now clearly get top billing.

So what's behind this unusual strategic marketing move? It reflects for one thing a gradual evolution in Devon IT's business model, according to Devon IT VP of Marketing Paul Mancini, who spoke with Philly Tech News. And it also reflects shifting alliances in a rapidly changing and growing segment of the computer industry.

Devon IT has been moving for some time from being a bundled provider of thin client devices and the specialized software they need to function towards shedding the low-margin hardware manufacturing and focusing on its thin client/virtual desktop operating systems and software. While it still uses contract manufacturers to produce a couple of hardware models and customers or distributors can still contract to have other models produced according to Devon IT's reference or top level designs, Mancini says, Devon has been deemphasising its hardware manufacturing. Devon's greatest value lies in its thin client (DeTOS) and zero client operating systems, and its Echo Thin Client Management Software.

The other challenge Devon has faced has been finding a major partner (or partners) to help reach enterprise customers. As a relatively small player, Devon needs both the access to customers as well as the credibility and technical synchronization a major vendor can provide.

One partnership Devon IT developed was with IBM, but that ended in 2010 with Devon filing a RICO lawsuit against IBM and some of its executives (a judge later threw out the RICO portion of the complaint against IBM, but not the individual executives). That lawsuit was settled in October 2012 and the docket was ordered sealed by the judge, meaning the terms of the settlement are not publicly known.

After the termination of the IBM relationship, Devon IT developed a partnership with Dell that was apparently producing big results, as I was about to report one year ago. But Dell suddenly announced its acquisition of a larger Devon competitor, Wyse Technology, for all practical purposes ending its relationship with Devon (see Devon IT may need to reboot itself again after Dell's Wyse acquisition; Challenge also could create new opportunities).

But there were other large players in the PC industry looking for thin client solutions. One of them was Taiwan-based Acer, the 4th largest global PC manufacturer, ranking behind Dell in volume according to IDC data. Last year Acer announced a global alliance with Devon IT, and an Acer thin client product series using Devon IT technology.

There are some other major PC manufacturers out there looking for thin client solutions, but Mancini couldn't comment on whether Devon is working with any of them.




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