Saturday Highlights 6/8/2013: Salesforce buys BI startup EdgeSpring; Gartner say BI market growth slows in 2012



After Picking Up ExactTarget, Salesforce Buys Enterprise Business Intelligence And Analytics Startup EdgeSpring (TechCrunch)

NetSuite Exec Says Its Rival, SAP, Has Become A 'Hairball' Of Products (SAI Enterprise)


Business Intelligence Market Growth Slows, With SAP in Lead: Gartner (eWeek)

Why the SAP Mentor program sucks (Den Howlett/Diginomica)

IMS Health acquires Incential Software (Modern Healthcare)

Intel Has $2 Billion War Chest for TV Deals, But None Secured Yet (Variety)

Cohere Becomes Gainspeed
Terayon Founder’s New Startup Still Secretive as it Attracts Some Big Name Cable Engineers
(Multichannel News)
Dan Moloney, former president of Motorola Home and Motorola Mobility, is an "Executive Advisor".


Comcast comments on PRISM





Tom Paine



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A Comcast spokesperson told Philly Tech News via email that the company had issued the following comment (specifically to CNN) in response to inquiries about the PRISM program today:

“Comcast learned of the PRISM program in media reports. We only respond to government requests for customer information pursuant to legal process and have not received any court orders or subpoenas related to PRISM.”



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Daily Links 6/7/2013: TiVO settles with Cisco, Motorola, Time Warner





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TiVo settles with Cisco, Motorola and Time Warner (AP via USA Today)
The settlement with Motorola was for $490 million, but Horsham-Motorola Home has since been acquired by Arris. Google's agreement to sell Motorola Home to Arris capped Arris' liability in the case to $50 million.
Update: $490 million was apparently the total size of settlement for both Motorola and Cisco combined. Cisco is responsible for $294 million of it, according to an SEC filing.

D.C. area has a big presence in cable TV production (Washington Post)

SAP Paying Top Dollar in a Buying Spree (New York Times: Dealbook)

San Jose's HP Pavilion to become SAP Center (San Jose Mercury News)
Surprised Plattner is not naming it the "SAP HANA Center."

Men On A Mission (Philadelphia Business Journal)
On VC firm MissionOG.

Salesforce.com Appoints Oracle Vet As President
(Information Week)

They Acquire, Acquire, Acquire While We Build, Build, Build
(Zoho Blog)
Zoho takes a shot at Salesforce.

SoftBank may have interest in T-Mobile if Sprint bid falls through (The Verge)




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WSJ: Kynetic's Fanatics.com raises $170 million at $3.1 billion valuation





Tom Paine



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Fanatics.com has raised $170 million, the Wall Street Journal is reporting (subscription required) , quoting Michael
Rubin, Chairman & CEO of Conshohocken-based Kynetic LLC, which owns a majority stake in Fanatics.com

The Journal cites a source as saying the round doubles Fanatics.com's valuation to $3.1 billion.

Rubin told the Journal he expected Fanatics to reach about $1 billion in revenue this year, up from about $800 million last year and $600 million in 2011.

Fanatics.com is a leading online retailer of licensed sports merchandise. It is based in Jacksonville, FlA.


Local firm's lawsuit vs Apple causes big headaches for Morgan Lewis



Tom Paine



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A little over a year ago, I posted about a lawsuit filed by FlatWorld Interactives LLC, a Villanova-based firm founded by U of Arts Professor Dr. Slavko Milekic against Apple, claiming it violated at least one patent he was awarded related to touch screen technology. The lawsuit was dismissed by many observers at the time of being typical "patent troll" behavior. The FlatWorld lawsuit claimed that virtually every Apple device incorporating touch screen technology violated its patent(s).

Although FlatWorld made some small efforts at commercialization, they didn't seem to get very far.

Ars Technica revealed in an article by Joe Mullin published last week that John McAleese, an attorney (as of know, formerly) with Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, which does considerable IP work for Apple, controlled 35% of FlatWorld and played a key role in initiating the legal action. My report from last year had identified his wife, Jennifer Wilson McAleese, as a partner in FlatWorld, but did not make the connection to her husband. John McAlesse was an environmental law litigator at Morgan Lewis, not typically involved in technology patent issues.

John McAleese claims that he did not dip into proprietary, confidential data that Morgan Lewis maintained for Apple, but Apple disputes that, and is arguing that the Seattle law firm the McAleeses used to file the suit, Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro LLP, be removed from the case since it is now tainted by alleged access to privileged information obtained through Mr. McAleese at Morgan Lewis.

Beyond the scope of the case itself and its potential impact on Morgan Lewis' important relationship with Apple in the future, the situation may also raise broader issues about controls at Morgan Lewis regarding client confidentiality and potential conflicts of interest.

Ars Technica provides much more detail on the story.




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Daily Links 6/6/2013: IMS Health acquires SaaS vendor for Life Sciences reps; Magneto merchants can now use GSI fulfillment services






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Comcast exec insists Americans don’t really need Google Fiber-like speeds (BGR)

Light Bulbs Get a Smartphone App as Comcast Goes Beyond Cable (Bloomberg)

Pa Convention Center picks SMG - Update: Shapiro's 'Aye' (Philadelphia Inquirer)

'Solid', 'not massive' profit on LifeShield deal; Hagan joins DirecTV
(Philadelphia Inquirer)

IMS Health Announces Acquisition of Incential Software
Expands Leading-Edge SaaS Incentive Compensation Capabilities for Life Sciences
(Business Wire)

3Pillar Global Receives $12 million Series A Funding led by NewSpring Capital (PR Web)

Exclusive: eBay Extends GSI Fulfillment Service to Magento Merchants (eCommerceBytes)

SAP dips its toe in the e-commerce pool (Jon Reed/Diginomica)

SAP at work on Sentinel, an 'Amazon for Stocks' (Computerworld)

Seaport ad firm Allen & Gerritsen takes on Philly’s Neiman in friendly acquisition (Boston Business Journal)

Carriers Sell Users’ Tracking Data in $5.5 Billion Market
(Bloomberg)
SAP a big participant in emerging market.

Lockheed Martin completes functional testing of first GPS III satellite bus electronic systems
(Phys.org)

Amazon’s Relational Database Service Hits General Availability, Gets SLA With 99.95% Monthly Uptime Promise (TechCrunch)




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After passing on Jive & ExactTarget, SAP ramps up social media / ecommerce strategy by acquiring Hybris


Tom Paine



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Two weeks ago, Bloomberg reported that SAP had held talks to acquire enterprise collaboration network Jive, which has a market value in excess of $1 billion, but ended the talks after deciding that Jive's offering overlapped too much with SAP's own, according to Bloomberg's sources.

Then yesterday, Salesforce announced it was acquiring ExactTarget, which has a core strength in software for managing enterprise email marketing programs, for $2.5 billion. SAP was an investor in ExactTarget through SAP Ventures, and once again Bloomberg cited sources saying that SAP had considered acquiring ExactTarget but decided not to proceed.

Whether the sources talking to Bloomberg are coming from within the SAP camp is not clear. But the recent moves, and SAP's inaction, may have left some wondering what SAP's game plan was for increasing its social media toolbox.

Part of that answer came today, as SAP announced it was acquiring Swiss-based Hybris (not to be confused with Hubris), which had been said to have been on SAP's radar for a while. FT cited sources putting the value of the transaction in the $1 billion range. Hybris had estimated revenue for 2012 of more than $100 million. Its CEO was previously a top Salesforce executive in Europe.

Hybris sells an “omni-channel commerce platform that incorporates Web, mobile, call center and store solutions," which "helps businesses of all sizes on every continent sell more goods, services and digital content through every touch point, channel and device," SAP said in its statement announcing the deal. "Hybris' solutions provide a single view of customers, products and orders across multiple demand and delivery channels, made possible by state-of-the-art master data management and unified commerce processes for all channels."

While SAP plans to operate Hybris as an independent company, it does plan to integrate it with its HANA in-memory computing technology and Jam social network.

Hybris will serve as “a defining step in SAP’s evolution to a business-to-business-to consumer company,” co-CEO Bill McDermott said during a conference call today, adding that the acquisition is part of SAP's plans to “take over” the CRM market. MCDermott also took a shot at Salesforce's ExactTarget buy (which SAP had reportedly considered), saying SAP's ecommerce strategy was “not about sending out email blasts."

Along the ecommerce/social media spectrum, Hybris may be more directly comparable to Massachusetts-based ATG, which was acquired by Oracle in 2010, and IBM's WebSphere (and to a lesser extent eBay's King of Prussia-based GSI Commerce unit).

Hybris, which has many huge global brands as clients. has 14 office locations in North America, according to its website. Philadelphia is not among them, though I do see demand for Hybris specialists on the websites of some of the big consulting firms in the area.



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Daily Links 6/5/2013: DirecTV acquires Langhorne's LifeShield; SAP to Acquire hybris






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SAP HANA sales fly but there's more to the in-memory story (ZDNet)

SAP to Acquire hybris to Deliver Next-Generation Customer Experience (SAP News Release)

Here's Why Salesforce Spent A Whopping $2.5 Billion On ExactTarget (SAI Enterprise)


Boston-based mobile solutions provider Mobiquity Secures $12M in Series B Financing, led by NewSpring Growth (Marketwire)

DirecTV buys firm backed by Michael Hagan (Philadelphia Business Journal)
LifeShield Home Security was ranked #16 on the just released Philly Tech News Young Companies to Watch. However, information on its success in penetrating the market was sparse. My sense was its IP-based solution was targeted more at apartment renters than homeowners. One report says Lifeshield has 105 employees.

DirecTV Buys LifeShield: Reports (Multichannel News)

Comcast Tees Up Multi-Room DVR for X1 (Multichannel News)

QVC CEO aims to win in the new retail game (MarketWatch)


Verizon Cloud for smartphones & tablets, introduced in April, now available for iOS


Tom Paine



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In late April, Verizon Wireless introduced Verizon Cloud for smartphones and tablets, a cloud storage service available only to Verizon Wireless customers. Originally it ran on only certain Android models, but Verizon Wireless announced in late May that it is now available for iOS devices and additional Android devices, including the Samsung Galaxy S4 and the DROID DNA by HTC. Verizon Cloud allows for up to 125 GB of storage, although only the first 500 MB are free. Beyond that, pricing ranges from $2.99 a month for a 25GB plan to $9.99 for 125GB. That's competitive with DropBox's 100GB plan, but is roughly double the price of 100GB offerings from Google Drive and Microsoft’s SkyDrive.

Verizon Wireless emphasizes Verizon Cloud's ability to store phone-centric files (for example, saving copies of contact lists, text messages and call logs, although these features reportedly don't work on the iOS version), and to transfer some content between Android and iOS devices. It also stresses its potential value to multiple users sharing a data plan across several devices.

Verizon Cloud appears to supplant an existing, more limited Verizon Wireless utility called Backup Assistant, although current Backup Assistant users are switched over to Verizon Cloud.

Verizon Cloud was panned by some reviewers as being a me-too, less than price competitive, offering. An interesting aspect of Verizon Cloud, however, is that its technology was developed by Terremark, David Samberg, National PR Manager for Verizon Wireless told me in a phone interview. Terremark is Verizon Communication's (not Verizon Wirless') enterprise-grade cloud services unit; Verizon Communications owns 55% of Verizon Wireless. Terremark's proficiency in cloud services suggests a possibility that Verizon may have broader ambitions for Verizon Cloud, both on the consumer and SME (Small & Medium Enterprise) markets in the future. See Verizon's Shammo: SMB cloud is a great opportunity for growth.




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Daily Links 6/4/2013: Salesforce to acquire ExactTarget for $2.5 billion






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Salesforce.com buying ExactTarget for $2.5B (Indianapolis Business Journal)
Bloomberg reports that SAP, which had a stake in ExactTarget through SAP Ventures, considered acquiring the company but passed on it.

IBM To Acquire Cloud Services Company SoftLayer (All Things D)

Germany's SAP says HANA software clients top 1,500 (Reuters)

SAP Says Internal Successor to CFO Brandt Is Likely (Bloomberg)
No plans to move headquarters.

EPAM: UBS Says Buy Highly Skilled Software Devs, Russia-Belarus Arbitrage (Barron's: Tech Trader Daily)

Comcast CFO Discusses Telemundo Profits, NBC Upside, Aereo (Hollywood Reporter)

Cord-Cutting Is Real, and the Cable Guys Are Still in Great Shape – For Now (All Things D)
Craig Moffet issues new report on Cable industry.

Verizon reportedly close to a four-year, $1 billion deal to stream every NFL game (The Verge)

CenTrak Expands to Meet Growing Demand for Clinical-Grade Real-Time Location Systems (RTLS) (PR Newswire)
Says new Newtown headquarters doubles footprint. CenTrak was ranked #38 on the just released Philly Tech News Young Companies to Watch.

PhillyInc: TargetX spins off college-recruiting brand(Philly.com)
TargetX will focus on Force.com CRM business. TargetX was ranked #39 on Philly Tech News Young Companies to Watch.

Philadelphia CIOs Reveal Third-Quarter Hiring Plans
Robert Half Technology Survey Shows IT Hiring Projections
(PR Newswire)




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Lautenberg, NJ senator and ADP co-Founder, dies at 89




Tom Paine



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Frank Lautenberg, the long-serving (retired once, then returned) Democratic senator from New Jersey, died today at the age of 89. He died at New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center, according to his office, due to complications from viral pneumonia.

Prior to his political career, Lautenberg was a co-founder of payroll processing giant Automatic Data Processing (ADP), based in Roseland, NJ. One of the earliest pioneers in the computer services industry, ADP had $10.7 billion in revenue in its FY 2012 and has a market capitalization of almost $34 billion.

Lautenberg became CEO of ADP, which he first joined in 1954, in 1975 before being elected to the Senate in 1982.

Lautenberg’s financial disclosure filings gave him a net worth in the range of $55 million to $116.1 million in 2010. But his children and a charitable foundation he established reportedly lost millions in the Bernard Madoff ponzi scheme.




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