Daily Links 6/26/2013: Oracle/Salesforce deal - a virtual acquisition?






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Workday Pushes Recruitment As Taleo, SuccessFactors Fade, Says Pac Crest (Barron's: Tech Trader Daily)

Workday: Oracle Unlikely to Unseat Them at Salesforce, Says William Blair (Barron's: Tech Trader Daily)

Salesforce and Oracle in a Deal (Denis Pombriant / Enterprise Irregulars)

Oracle slips out long-heralded 12c cloudbase in SECRET (The Register)

Oracle and NetSuite unveil cloud-computing alliance (Reuters)


SAP HANA at 2: How Do the Numbers Add Up? (ASUG News)

Intel Has Internal Launch Date for Pay TV Service
Chipmaker Expects TV Content to Include Live Sports
(Ad Age)


A Changing Telecom Landscape (Infographic)
(Wall Street Journal)
An interesting look at how the US telecom industry has evolved since the breakup of the old AT&T in 1984.

PPD and ePharmaSolutions Win 2013 Microsoft Life Sciences Innovation Award (Business Wire)
ePharmaSolutions is based in Conshohocken.

Event stresses need to keep graduates in region (Philadelphia Inquirer)

Drexel Engineering Students Create The EZPass of Parking for Major Cities – Hot Spot Parking (Drexel Engineering News)

Square’s New Online Stores Could Make Twitter Where You Shop (Wired)




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Daily Links 6/25/2013: Artisan Mobile raises $5.5 million; Veeva Systems acquires Ft Washington-based AdvantageMS





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Veeva Systems Acquires AdvantageMS, a Leading Healthcare Data Provider with a Database of More Than Seven Million Active Healthcare Providers in the U.S. (Business Wire via Yahoo Finance)
Veeva Systems has sales, marketing and customer service functions in Radnor; AdvantageMS is based in Fort Washington.

Artisan Mobile Secures $5.5 Million in Series A Financing
FirstMark Capital Leads Artisan Funding to Pioneer Mobile Experience Management
(Business Wire)
Announcement comes on same day as Artisan's open house this evening at its new offices on Market Street.

Artisan Mobile raises $5.5M to update your mobile app’s design on the fly (VentureBeat)

Yowza: Salesforce commits to Oracle hardware (!) (Gigaom)

Oracle, Salesforce.com ink nine-year technology partnership (PC World)

Oracle cloud computing strives for relevancy with Salesforce.com deal (SearchOracle)

Comcast should root for Aereo's legality, analyst says (LA Times: Company Town)

Comcast leads cable's push for cut of $13B home security and automation market
ADT says it's not feeling heat from Time Warner Cable, Comcast, AT&T, Cox, Mediacom

(Steve Donohue/FierceCable)

Los Angeles shocks Uber, Sidecar, and Lyft with Cease & Desist orders despite state authorization (PandoDaily)

MeetMe Expects Second Quarter Revenue of Approximately $9.0 Million (Business Wire)

Vertex Takes Lead in Developing Regional Talent
(Business Wire)

Life Sciences Companies Undergoing Major Technology Shift
(PR Newswire)
NextDocs releases survey results at DIA.

G3 Global completes Q1 with record growth following acquisition of Diagonal Consulting, Inc. from 2e2 (Business Wire)




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Seeking growth, SunGard Availability looks to Managed Services, expands Cloud strategy





Tom Paine



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Wayne-based SunGard Availability Services has been somewhat of a riddle to decipher.

The $1.4 billion (revenue) giant of the third party disaster recovery and business continuity industry it largely created (originally using excess Sunoco computing capacity-it was later spun off from Sunoco), has been rather stuck in the mud for the past several years, with overall revenue flat or slightly declining, while many cloud services companies have been growing rapidly or getting acquired for hefty premiums. Understanding SunGard Availability is not easy, as below the macro level it is composed of numerous components and services. But the essential transition underway reflects the fact that the disaster recovery business, at least in terms of SunGard's traditional business model, is simply not a growth vehicle for it now. The ongoing value of disaster recovery and business continuity services has been reconfirmed by events such as 9/11 and Hurricane Sandy, in which SunGard Availabilty played essential roles in helping businesses recover. However, competition from the high and low end, the rise of the cloud and reduced capacity requirements due to virtualization, and the commoditization and downward cost curve of hardware, have all been factors in constraining growth.

Reuters reported last Tuesday (as I was working on this story), citing unnamed sources, that parent SunGard Data Systems - also based in Wayne - was considering the sale of all or part of SunGard Availability, saying the sale could reportedly fetch up to $2 billion. SunGard Data Systems was taken private in an $11.4 billion leveraged buyout (LBO) in 2005, and its private equity investors have been looking to get their money out. Malvern-based SunGard Higher Education was sold for $1.7 billion last year to another PE firm that then merged it with Datatel(since renamed Ellucian); SunGard's other remaining major unit is SunGard Financial Systems. SunGard Data Systems management had spoken in the past of spinning off Availability Services in an IPO, but it seems unlikely that the unit has enough momentum right now to be an attractive standalone offering. SunGard would not respond to the Reuters report.

SunGard has long been a provider of a variety of managed services including hosting, but it has been moving aggressively in recent years to roll out its cloud strategy. In May, it announced a refocused strategy for its Managed IT Services, with an increased emphasis on Cloud architecture, virtualization technology and managed recovery. Jack Dziak, who joined the company in August 2011, was named in January executive vice president and general manager of Managed Services, and he leads the Managed Hosting Services team in North America.

In pursuing its strategy, SunGard Availability is sticking close to its traditional strengths in security and reliability and meeting high standards for service level agreements (SLAs), areas it suggests some of the newer cloud services entrants are not as strong in. These features are also critical to many of SunGard's major customers in industries such as financial services and pharma which must meet strict security requirements for regulatory purposes.

Much of the impetus for SunGard's emerging cloud strategy has come from its UK unit, including the 2010 acquisition of Dublin, Ireland-based Hosting 365, which in many ways has served as a testing ground for constructing SunGard's cloud environment.

SunGard entered the private cloud business officially in 2010, and offers services at its facilities located in Philadelphia, Colorado and Canada, as well as two UK locations. SunGard Enterprise Cloud Services (ECS) delivers IT infrastructure and operational support in either a multi-tenant(which might be considered quasi-public) or a dedicated, private environment via the same platform. The ECS platform is based on technology from VMware, Cisco and EMC.

But SunGard expects later this year to begin offering a self-service public cloud at a yet unspecified facility in North America. It will be a true multi-tenant facility supported by the Apache Foundation CloudStack, Xen and VMware. SunGard Availability is fully committed to CloudStack for its public cloud, Simon Withers, vice president of global cloud products at SunGard Availability Services, told me. (Simon is a UK native, but currently operates on both sides of the Atlantic, and when I caught up with him by phone he was in Philadelphia).

By entering the self-service public cloud market, SunGard is not trying to compete head-on with Amazon Web Services (AWS), the giant in that space. Rather, SunGard's offering is meant to complement its existing cloud services, offering clients an option for testing, development, and rampup, and perhaps use in a hybrid manner with ECS or on-premise systems.

Other issues are in front of SunGard Availability as it builds its cloud services strategy. Hosting and managing both Oracle DBMS and ERP and SAP ERP environments for customers are important parts of its business. Earlier this month, SunGard Availability announced support for virtualized platforms for its SunGard Managed Oracle Services. Virtualized platforms allow companies to make the transition from capital intensive, traditional dedicated infrastructure, leveraging scale and pay-as-you-go multi-tenant models. Managed Oracle Services are designed specifically to run ERP applications and Oracle Databases with pre-certified Oracle server and storage hardware and software, known as Oracle Red Stack.

SunGard Availability is also evaluating (and perhaps doing some test work) on the SAP HANA Cloud Platform, announced by SAP at its Sapphire Now conference in Orlando in May.

Another possible future platform for SunGard Availability's cloud offerings is VMWare's Hybrid Cloud, announced late last month. VMware initially will offer Hybrid Cloud out of four of its own data centers, but it appears to be looking for third-party partners to host the service. SunGard certainly could be an option given its close working relationship with VMware, although no plans are in place as of now.

Early last year SunGard AS established a partnership with Amazon Web Services for Advanced Consulting and Amazon Direct Connect services. SunGard's long term vision is to provide a broad portfolio of Information Availability solutions, including a planned offering providing customers with managed application availability for AWS environments.

In addition to its extensive hosting management expertise, SunGard Availability also brings some proprietary technology to the table. An example is its Recover2Cloud for vCenter SRM offering for VMware infrastructures at SunGard cloud-based recovery sites, introduced in April.


Inside SunGard Availability's Spring Garden Street data center /
Courtesy SunGard Availability 

SunGard Availability will add over 52,000 square feet of data center space across North America this year, and continues to expand in Philadelphia, adding capacity this year in Room 2 of its 1500 Spring Garden Street Philadelphia facility, Joe Sullivan, vice president of Product Management, Managed Services, told me. It consisted of an additional 13,500 sq ft of raised floor and 1,215 kW of sellable power, and came online in March.

SunGard Availability has over 3,000 employees.




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Daily Links 6/24/2013: Oracle, Microsoft meet in the cloud





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Suite revenge
Rutledge a ‘Charter’ member of move to merge
(Claire Atkinson/New York Post)

Vodafone in $10.1 Billion Deal for German Cable Giant Kabel Deutschland (Hollywood Reporter)

Oracle databases head to Microsoft's Hyper-V, Azure (ZDNet)

Microsoft Joins Oracle in Cloud-Computing, Rivalry Thaws (Bloomberg)


Solve Media Launches Effective Mobile Advertising Platform That Delivers Measurable Results Across All Screens (Business Wire)
Could be significant expansion of product line; Solve also entering EMEA market.

Greenphire and Oracle Work Together to Automate Clinical Trial Planning, Budgeting and Payments (Applied Clinical Trials)

New Cloud-Based Investigator Portal from Veeva Systems Speeds Clinical Study Start-Up
Single source for sponsor, CRO and investigator collaboration
(PR Newswire)



Fab.com’s Ascent to $1 Billion Valuation Brings Missteps (Bloomberg)

Zeebox Gets Personal with Digitalsmiths
Digitlasmiths Brings Video Discovery to the Zeebox TV Companion App
(Multichannel
News)

US tech firms look abroad for engineers (BBC News)

AgileSwitch helps lead digital energy revolution (Philadelphia Daily News)

Clear Align Acquires irZoom, Computer Optics, and Hudson Machining (PR Newswire)



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Philly Tech People News 6/23/2013








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Comcast's Bonnie Hammer is a force in television (Philadelphia Inquirer)

Universal Display Corporation President and CEO Steven V. Abramson Receives Ernst & Young Entrepreneur Of The Year 2013 New Jersey Award (Business Wire)


Ernst & Young Names Sparta Systems' CEO Eileen Martinson as an Entrepreneur Of The Year 2013 Award Winner in New Jersey (Marketwire)

TMG Health Appoints Michael Walsh Senior Vice President and General Counsel (PR Newswire)

Dawn Bonnell Appointed Vice Provost for Research at Penn (Penn News)

Penn chooses nanotech center's first director (Philadelphia Business Journal)

Board of Directors for Ben Franklin Technology Partners of Southeastern Pennsylvania Welcomes Timothy C. Scheve, President & CEO of Janney Montgomery Scott
(Ben Franklin Technology Partners SEP)

Mustafa El-Rafey Joins QVC as Senior Vice President, Talent Management and Rewards (PR Newswire)

The Cline Group Names Jade Trombetta Vice President (Globe Newswire)

Communications Media, Inc. Appoints Adam Scott Roberts as SVP, Group Media Director (PR Web)




Saturday Highlights 6/22/2013: Danny Sullivan on why DuckDuckGo's post-PRISM bounce doesn't mean that much



Duck Duck Go’s Post-PRISM Growth Actually Proves No One Cares About “Private” Search (Danny Sullivan/Search Engine Land)

A Private Search Engine? (A VC)
A different point of view from Fred Wilson (whose firm is an investor in DuckDuckGo) and some interesting comments.


GSI COMMERCE BECOMES EBAY ENTERPRISE – WHY THIS IS MORE THAN JUST A RE-BRANDING EXERCISE (Peter Sheldon/Forrester Blogs)

Workday CEO Bhusri on why the company’s next big bet is finance (Gigaom)


Finding the next AWS, VMWare or EMC: Five areas where cloud startups can make it big (Gigaom)


Daily Links 6/21/2013: Ernst & Young names Philly Entrepreneurs of the Year





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The Ernst & Young Entrepreneur Of The Year
2013 Greater Philadelphia award recipients
(E & Y Website)

Oracle's Ellison Spills Beans on Upcoming SAP HANA Competitor and Database 12c Plans (CIO.com)

Oracle’s Ellison Leaks New Alliances, Including With Microsoft
(Wall Street Journal: Digits)

Oracle Sales Miss Estimates in Cloud Shift; Dividend Doubled (Bloomberg)

Oracle in transition, just like SAP – only different (Dennis Howlett/Diginomica)

SAP Falls to 8-Month Low on Oracle Sales Miss: Frankfurt Mover (Bloomberg)

Oracle and Salesforce: a Data-Sharing Deal (New York Times: Bits)

Artisan: Functional tools for mobile apps (Philadelphia Daily News)

Startup office space provider (Benjamin's Desk) raises $150k, will expand (Philadelphia Businss Journal)

Comcast’s Big Data Perspective in Prep for NBC Streaming (Multichannel News)



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GSI Commerce renamed eBay Enterprise





Tom Paine



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Today, eBay announced that it had rebranded its King of Prussia-based GSI Commerce unit as eBay Enterprise, two years after acquiring it.

Looking through eBay Enterprise President Chris Saridakis' statement on its website, I don't see any specific organizational changes announced. Rather, Saridakis emphasizes eBay Enterprise's role as an "omnichannal" ecommerce solution for enterprises, with increasing cross-utilization of other eBay assets, including eBay Marketplaces, PayPal and other eBay
technologies. (For example, the company recently said it would integrate eBay's Magneto ecommerce software with GSI Commerce (now eBay Enterprise) technology and make it available to GSI clients.

A recent Gartner Magic Quadrant report showed IBM, Oracle and Hybris (recently reached agreement to be acquired by SAP) as the leaders in ecommerce,with eBay-GSI Commerce as one of the challengers.


eBay completed its $2.4 billion (cash + debt) acquisition of GSI Commerce, founded by Michael Rubin, precisely two years ago today. Rubin went on to start Conshohocken-based Kynetic LLC, in which eBay has a 30% stake in two of its three operating businesses.




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Daily Links 6/20/2013: NY Times compares RJMetrics' funding strategy to GoodData's





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Self-Finance or Raise Money? A Quandary for Start-Ups (New York Times)
Comparing Philly startup RJMetrics' approach to GoodData's.

How John Malone Could Start a War Between Broadband and Web Content (Wall Street Journal: Corporate Intelligence)

Amazon’s Invasion of the CIA Is a Seismic Shift in Cloud Computing (Wired)

Microsoft sees itself as one of the public-cloud horsemen, but time will tell (Gigaom)

Oracle Shares Fall On Weaker Than Expected Q4 Sales (All Things D)

Integration between SAP Data Services, Business Warehouse on the rise (SearchSAP)


Philly Fed Notes Rebound in Manufacturing (Wall Street Journal:
Real Time Economics)

Reed Technology Announces Launch of USPTO Public Data Dissemination Site, Expansion of Reed Tech Patent Advisor Service (Business Wire)
Reed Technology is based in Horsham.





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(Update) Report: SunGard Availability Services up for sale?





Tom Paine



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A story from Reuters suggests that Wayne-based SunGard Data Systems is looking to sell all or part of its $1.4 billion (revenue) SunGard Availability unit. The story is, in fact, confusing and not precise regarding whether SunGard would sell all of SunGard Availability or only the "Managed Servics" portion of it.

Reuters cites sources as saying the sale could raise up to $2 billion, ten times the unit's (to be sold) earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) of around $200 million.

SunGard Data Systems was taken private in a $11.4 billion leveraged buyout (LBO) in 2005.

SunGard Data Systems sold its Malvern-based SunGard Higher Education unit to Datatel (now Ellucian) for $1.7 billion in early 2012. SunGard Data Systems' largest remaining unit is SunGard Financial Systems, which accounted for 62% of its $4.3 billion in revenue in 2012. SunGard Fnancial, which is run out of New York, is a powerful force in the banking & finance industries, but it also has not grown much recently due to the financial crisis and other factors.

There had been talk in recent years (fueled by the company itself at times) of spinning off SunGard Availability in an IPO, but the unit has probably not shown enough growth momentum to make such an offering attractive. SunGard Availability's overall revenue has been essentially flat over the past several years, although some areas of the business are
growing while others are declining. SunGard Availability is based in Wayne, and has major data center operations in (the city of) Philadelphia and many other locations in North America and Europe. It provides disaster recovery and business continuity services, as well as cloud hosting services.

SunGard has not commented on the Reuters story.


MentorTech Ventures joins MissionOG in CloudMine round





Tom Paine



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UPenn-connected MentorTech Ventures has joined MissionOG in a new investment round in Philly-based startup CloudMine, MentorTech Managing Director Brett Topoche said via a tweet yesterday and confirmed to Philly Tech News via email. The Form D filing related to the offering dated in March said it was for up to $750,000, and that $505,000 had been raised at that time. I can't confirm the total amount raised to date, or whether there were any other investors in this round. The financing was in the form of convertible debt. MissionOG's investment had already been made public. Topoche says he will join CloudMine's board as an advisor.

CloudMine was in DreamIt Venture's 2011 Philadelphia class and raised an additional $480,000 in 2012 from investors that included Ben Franklin Technology Partners SEP and RobinHood Ventures. MentorTech's investments always have some Penn connection, and CloudMine CEO Brendan McCorkle received his Master of Science in Engineering in Computer and Information Science (a program sponsored by the school of engineering and Wharton) from there.

CloudMine competes in a hot, emerging market: backend-as-a-service (BaaS). It provides a cloud-based platorm that helps enterprises build mobile & web-based backend solutions and connect data sources such as Salesforce.com and SharePoint.




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