Daily Links 7/11/2013: Roberts, Cook reportedly talk about something at Sun Valley










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Cooking up a deal
Apple, Comcast CEOs talk turkey
(New York Post)

Malone Urges Ergen to Merge Dish With DirecTV (Bloomberg TV Video)
Malone's got free advice for everybody.

Microsoft Revamping Structure and Management to Foster Collaboration (New York Times: Bits)

Carl Icahn Says He Will Add to His Bid on Dell Tomorrow (All Things D)

VC-Backed Veeva Quietly Files IPO, Credits Salesforce’s AppExchange (PE Hub)
Surprisingly little coverage of Veeva Systems' announcement in late June that it had filed for its IPO, although the S-1 is still under review by the SEC right now. I wrote about it on the day it was announced. Although based in California, Veeva has a significant presence in the Philly area, and this could be a fairly sizable offering, based on the multiples to revenue that similar SaaS/Cloud companies have received. The fact that Veeva has actually been profitable is another plus.



EMC to buy ScaleIO and boost its flash savvy (Gigaom)

Workday parades new customers from push into Europe (ZDNet)

New Hostess IT Centralizes Twinkie Control and Oversight
(Wall Street Journal: CIO Report)
Upgrades SAP system.

Jeff Gelles: Phila. start-up scores with a photo tech turn (Philadelphia Inquirer)
Curalate opens new offices.


College IPTV Service Makes Grade (Light Reading)
Raises $6.3 million from investors including Home Box Office (HBO) and Larry Cuban.




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T-Mobile formally launches 4G LTE in Philadelphia, speeds up MetroPCS integration




Tom Paine



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T-Mobile announced today in New York that its 4G LTE network is now live in Philadelphia, along with several other newly launched major markets. The company says its 4G LTE network now reaches 157 million (potential) users in 116 metro areas across the US, and that it would reach than 200 markets by the end of this year.

I'm not sure exactly what T-Mobile's 4G LTE coverage is in the Philadelphia area right now, but the company said in a statement that "T-Mobile 4G LTE covers a large portion of the Philadelphia area and landmarks including: Liberty Bell, Constitution Center, Declaration House, Betsy Ross House, and Geno’s and Pat’s cheesesteak restaurants."

Some T-Mobile customers reported seeing 4G LTE live in Philly as early as late May. There are many others reporting picking up Sprint 4G LTE around Philly, although a formal launch hasn't been announced here yet. Of course, Verizon and AT&T already provide 4G LTE in the market.

T-Mobile is also accelerating the integration of recently acquired MetroPCS into the T-Mobile network in Philadelphia and other markets.

Also today, T-Mobile introduced JUMP!, a new program that allows T-Mobile customers to upgrade their phones when they want, up to twice per year. The program also includes total protection against device malfunction, damage, loss or theft, for $10 per month.

I thought it would be interesting to look back on where T-Mobile stood last year when I wrote this post compared to where they are today, and how they have addressed some of their strategic issues (but alas, no more Carly Foulkes).




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Daily Links 7/10/2013: Coursera raises another $43 million; Sun Valley conference prelude to cable deals?








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Arena now the SAP Center — and a few words from owner Hasso Plattner after today’s official name change (San Jose Mercury News)

Coursera, an Online Education Company, Raises Another $43 Million (New York Times: Bits)
UPenn had invested in a previous round and is an active participant.

Malone, Cable Deals in Spotlight at Sun Valley Conference (Reuters via CNBC)

Microsoft switches up CRM Online licensing model, aims at Salesforce.com (PC World)

iControl Sues Alarm.com
Comcast, Cox, TW Cable and Rogers are Among iControl’s Top MSO Clients
(Multichannel News)

The SoftBank deal is done: Sprint, Clearwire officially turn Japanese (Gigaom)


Andesa Services Positioned in the Challengers Quadrant of the Magic Quadrant for North American Life Insurance Policy Administration Systems
Evaluation Based on Completeness of Vision and Ability to Execute
(Business Wire)




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Delco insurance software firm InsPro Technologies sees continued rapid growth



Tom Paine



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Eddystone (Delaware County)-based InsPro Technologies has flown under the radar among Philly area startups until recently, but now appears to be emerging as a significant factor in the insurance software industry, providing enterprise solutions to life, health and annuity providers. Revenue in the first quarter of 2013 grew 92% over 2012 to $4.6 million. Loss from continuing operations was $64,791 in the first quarter of 2013, compared to a loss of $744,517 in the first quarter of the prior year.

Bob Oakes
There may still be a certain uneveness to InsPro's financial results as it grows since revenue can vary widely depending upon the timing of when it brings new customers, some of whom can be quite large, online, so I would be careful about making straight-line projections going forward. Since InsPro has a small amount of its equity in publicly traded common shares (OTCMKTS:ITCC ) though most of the company is owned by investors holding preferred shares not publicly traded, CEO Robert Oakes is limited in what he can say about the company's growth prospects, but in a recent interview with Philly Tech News he was willing to repeat a comment he made to me late last year (see my previous article on InsPro ) that annual revenue growth of 50% over the next couple of years is achievable.

As it moves beyond the initial challenge of getting its first few major clients rolled out, Oakes says InsPro is gearing up and building the infrastructure for broader growth.

During 2012, InsPro brought onboard 40 new employees, bringing its total headcount to 115. It strengthened its senior management depth in areas such as customer service, strategic partnership management and marketing (InsPro's new Chief Marketing Officer, Sandra Taylor, has a Ph.D.; even though her's is more related to English literature than marketing, there are similarities between then two fields).

In March of 2013, InsPro announced the expansion of its Senior Market portfolio with the addition of fixed and indexed annuity product support, significantly expanding its addressable market. Fully integrated with InsPro Enterprise, the new capability recognzises the emergence of annuities as a preferred portfolio component for many seniors and the increasing need for tightly integrated insurance administrative systems' support.

In February, IGate, one of the world's largest business process outsourcers (BPOs), announced it had selected the InsPro Enterprise application suite to manage its Third Party Administration (TPA) business. The InsPro/iGate relationship dates back to 2010. InsPro said iGate went live with InsPro Enterprise in June.

Its a relatively small world among insurance software firms in the Philadelphia area, and many of the principals of the different firms know each other and have worked together before. Alumni of AdminSever, the Chester-based insurance tech firm acquired by Oracle in 2008, are sprinkled around Philadelphia startup Adminovate, InsPro and Exton-based iPipeline. While Adminovate and InsPro are competitors, both have working relationships with iPipeline and are listed as "solution partners" on iPipeline's website. While iPipeline's forte has been more on the front-end (enrollment) side of the business, Adminovate's and InsPro's strengths are more on the back-end policy administration side, and the two latter firms may eventually handle such functions for some iPipeline customers, although no deployments of joint customers have been announced yet by either InsPro or Adminovate.

Oracle remains a major competitor in the policy administration space. In March, SAP made a splash by acquiring Montreal-based Camilion, although Oakes says Camilion seems more property & casualty-focused and he hasn't seen much of a presence from SAP in the Life/Annuity/Health space yet. (Camilion also partners with Oracle in some areas.)

Global insurance IT spending is $140 billion annually, according to industry research firm Celent, and there is still considerable room for third party software solutions to replace inhouse systems. Also, under the Affordable Care Act, health insurers presumably face increased pressure to reduce administrative costs. InsPro at this point still has a fairly small number of customers, several of whom are quite large. The life/health/annuity industry is relatively concentrated universe of mostly large competitors, but Oakes says InsPro has just begun to broaden its scope to market to more potential customers. Areas he sees for expansion are the Blues (Independence Blue Cross is an investor in InsPro, for example) and international markets.

InsPro's technology platform is built around Java, is database agnostic, and uses thin clients as end-user devices. InsPro Enterprise is available on premise or as a remote hosted application.

InsPro Technologies has received total VC investments in the $12 to $14 million range, Oakes said. (My earlier article cited a higher figure based on past SEC filings, but when I asked for clarification Oakes said the additional amount was related to a predecessor firm which has since been sold.) Radnor-based Cross Atlantic Capital Partners has been a major funder. InsPro Technologies was ranked 140th on Deloitte's national Fast 500 for 2012, and Philly Tech News recently ranked InsPro 31st among Philly tech startups, which Oakes thinks is too low (and he may have a point).



Daily Links 7/9/2013: Perelman sues Milken over educational software deal








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Comcast Expands Prepaid Internet Trial (Multichannel News)
Trial began in Philadelphia area.

Universal Sports Inks Time Warner Cable Carriage, TV Everywhere Pact (Multichannel News)


What’s next for Dish? It’s got a lot of options centered around broadband (Gigaom)

Perelman Sues Old Friend Milken (Not to Worry. It Isn’t Personal.) (New York Times via CNBC)

Why the big city still lures young founders (Philadelphia Business Journal via Upstart)

SAP, Esri Step Up Geospatial Analysis (Information Week)

Ex-Business Objects CEO's startup focuses on workforce analytics
Visier's approach to BI starts from 'a clean sheet of paper,' says CEO John Schwarz

(Computerworld)

Get Ready for More Tech Acquisitions This Year, Just Not Big Ones
(All Things D)
Mentions Radnor-based QlikTech as one of the possible targets.

Magnolia Broadband Secures $3 Million from SCP Partners (Business Wire)
Magnolia Broadband is based in North Jersey; SCP Partners is based outside Philadelphia.

Greenphire and Ernst & Young Announce Strategic Partnership (GreenPhire Press Release)



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Daily Links 7/8/2013: HBR on "Why Comcast Would Rather Be Feared Than Loved"








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Cable consulting group thrives on Phila. as base (Philadelphia Inquirer)

DirecTV among pay-TV distributors seeking over the top rights (LA Times: Company Town)

Arris' Horsham unit largely escapes job cuts (Philadelphia Business Journal)

Why Comcast Would Rather Be Feared Than Loved (Justin Fox/Harvard Business Review Blogs)

DirecTV Makes Hulu Bid as Time Warner Cable Seeks Stake
(Bloomberg)


Proxy firm ISS backs Michael Dell's offer for PC maker (Reuters)

Amazon’s Diapers.com Founders Jump Ship (Wall Street Journal: Digits)
Jersey City-based Diapers.com (Quidsi) had several UPenn connections, including backing
from MentorTech Ventures.


The Ad Tech Shakeout is Coming (Digiday)

Mercer entrepreneurs see surge in angel-level investing (Times of Trenton)

Sources: Hundreds Of Oracle's Most Experienced Salespeople Have Quit — Or Want To (Business Insider)

Box launches comprehensive Salesforce app (PC World)

Predictive analytics software provider to help hospitals improve outcomes raises $20M (Med City News)

Princeton University Creates Bionic Ear With Superhuman Hearing Abilities (Video) (Medgadget)



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Philly Tech People News 7/7/2013









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Tami Fratis Appointed CEO of IPR International (PR Newswire)

CableFAX 100 - Comcast's Steve Burke and Neil Smit (Cable 360)

Ex-Verizon Exec Joins Arris board
Doreen Toben Retired From Verizon in 2009
(Multichannel News)

Moffett Hires Ex-Nomura Analyst Michael Nathanson (Bloomberg)

Freedom Systems Appoints Charles McNew as Chief Executive Officer (pdf) (Press Release)



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Sunday Highlights 7/7/2013



Microsoft Quietly Shuts Down MSN TV, Once Known as WebTV (All Things D)


PandoDaily interview with DuckDuckGo's Gabriel Weinberg (audio)








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PandoDaily's Hamish McKenzie conducted a lengthy audio interview with DuckDuckGo founder
Gabriel Weinberg
, which focuses primarily on privacy issues raised by the Snowden case and other recent revelations. It also takes on numerous other issues, such as what its like running a startup in some place called Paoli, PA (Weinberg cites the real value of being around "normal people, outside the tech bubble").



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Daily Links 7/5/2013: Solve Media raises another $6 million; PA legislature passes $75M tech-funding program








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Solve Media Raises $6 Million to Continue to Transform CAPTCHAs Into Ads (All Things D)
First Round Capital participated again in latest round in the New York/Philly-based startup. CEO Ari Jacoby recently said that Solve would do $13 to $16 million in revenue this year.

PA legislature passes $75M tech-funding program (Philadelphia Business Journal)

Silver Lake Abandons Hulu Purchase Effort, as Final Bidding Deadline Arrives Today (All Things D)

Dell: Bloomberg Reports CEO Dell Won’t Increase $13.65 LBO Offer (Barron': Tech Trader Daily)

Verizon pursues all-wireless phone service in seaside N.Y. town
(Washington Post)

Verizon would end “century of regulation” by killing wireline phone, says NY AG
AG thinks Verizon should be fined $100,000 per day for pushing wireless plans.
(Ars Technica)

BuLogics Returns to Philadelphia, Continues to Recruit Software Developers (BuLogics Press Release)




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