Links 11/8/2013: Comcast testing IP video service targeted to universities; Seamless, Box said to be planning IPOs







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Comcast Tests IP Video Service Targeted To Universities (Multichannel News)

Looks like Comcast is quietly pushing a 300 GB cap and overage charges (Gigaom)


Supremes Grant Aereo More Time to Respond to Broadcasters
Extends reply deadline to Dec. 12, but amicus briefs are still due Nov. 12
(Broadcasting & Cable)




EPAM Systems Reports Results for Third Quarter 2013 (Thomson One)
Revenue up 27% to $140 million for Newtown-based EPAM.

Universal Display blows past 3Q expectations (CNBC)
Shares up 25% on the day.

Seamless Eyeing IPO For 2014 (Business Insider)
Conshohocken-based SeventySix Capital was one of Seamless' early backers; Aramark acquired it and later spun it off to private equity firms.


Neat Cuts The Cord With The New NeatConnect Scanner (TechCrunch)

EXCLUSIVE-Hot tech start-up Box picks banks for '14 IPO -sources (Reuters via Fox Business)



Nine Questions for Andy Jassy, Head of Amazon Web Services (All Things D)

Three of the dumbest things you can do with clouds (David Linthicum/Gigaom)


SAP Targets SMEs with PartnerEdge (ASUG News)





Links 11/7/2013: Ewing's Universal Dislpay posts strong gains, raises guidance






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Twitter Flies On Its First Day As A Public Company: Shares Pop 74% On First Trades, Debuts At $45.10 And $31.8B Valuation (TechCrunch)

IBM or Amazon Web Services? Place your bets, engines are running (Diginomica)

Should you build on Force.com? (VentureBeat)

Is A Tsunami Of SAP Attacks Coming? (Dark Reading)



The Philadelphia Inquirer is melting down (Eric Wemple/Washington Post)

Jeff Bewkes: HBO’s Streaming Deal With Comcast Won’t Promote Cord Cutting (Deadline)

Universal Display Corporation Announces Third Quarter 2013 Financial Results (Business Wire)
Profitable as revenue than doubles on strong materials sales; raises guidance.

Cloudnexa Announces Strategic Business Investments (PR Newswire)
Raises $2.3 million; Locates at Philadelphia Navy Yard.


Checkpoint Systems, Inc. Announces Third Quarter 2013 Results (Business Wire)
Shares down 22% today on reduced guidance.



Links 11/6/2013: Passport Health; with King of Prussia unit Healthworks, acquired for $850 million






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Experian Acquires Passport Health Communications for $850 Million (HISTalk)
Passport's Healthworks unit is based in King of Prussia.

Is Philly's top health insurer cancelling small-business policies? (Philly.com: Philly Deals)

Official who oversaw botched Healthcare.gov launch resigns (The Verge)

Square Exploring 2014 IPO With Banks (Wall Street Journal: Digits)
First Round Capital was an early investor in Jack Dorsey's other venture.



MeetMe Reports Third Quarter 2013 Financial Results (Business Wire)

Workday readies OpenStack cloud (ZDNet)

Thumbing nose at Oracle, Rimini Street to file for IPO (PC World)

Veeva Systems' CEO On Why Pharma Needs His Cloud Software (Forbes)

Henkel signs seven-year ITSM and security deal with Unisys (Computerworld UK)

McGraw-Hill joins edtech accelerator trend, possibly disrupting itself (PandoDaily)
In partnership with Penn.



U.K. tech company to open U.S. headquarters in Philadelphia
(Philadelphia Inquirer)








Links 11/5/2013: QVC US results up: How QVC survives in the Age of Amazon









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Liberty Interactive Corporation Reports Third Quarter 2013 Financial Results (Business Wire)
QVC US revenue increases 5% and US operating income increases 10%. QVC.com revenue now 41%
of US revenue.

QVC's Manual for Survival in the Amazon Era (Megan McArdle/Bloomberg)



QlikTech's Lars Bjork: When public really means private (Philadelphia Inquirer)

Canada's Open Text to buy cloud services company for $1.17 billion (Reuters)

Chen’s BlackBerry Revival Task Mirrors Sybase in 1990s (Bloomberg)

Comcast's Xfinity TV Go app now available, offers live TV anywhere there's Wi-Fi (The Verge)

Charter Communications loss narrows as sales grow (MarketWatch)

Bigger than Google Fiber: LA plans citywide gigabit for homes and businesses (Ars Technica)
Skeptical of what will come of this.



ValueVision asks dissident stockholders to delay showdown over company control (Minneapolis Star Tribune)

BioTelemetry, Inc. Reports Third Quarter 2013 Financial Results (Globe Newswire)






Activist investor groups takes aim at home shopping channel operator ValueVision; Several Philadelphia connections (QVC, Comcast)



Tom Paine




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Activist investor group Clinton Group is challenging home shopping channel operator ValueVision Media in an effort to replace its CEO and appoint some new board members.

Eden Prarie, Minnesota-based ValueVision, which I like to call QVC West as it is managed by so many QVC veterans, is 14.4% owned by Comcast, a stake inherited though its NBCU acquisition. It has operated under the ShopNBC brand, but decided to rebrand as ShopHQ and discontinue its license fee payments to NBC. Comcast has a representative on ValueVision's board.

ValueVision is not profitable and only has a tiny fraction of QVC's or HSN Corp's revenues, even though its distribution is almost as broad. Although Clinton Group credits current CEO Keith Stewart with stabilizing an even worse situation he inherited at ValueVision in 2009, it says the progress made since then has not been substantial enough. Stewart previously had spent 15 years as an executive at QVC.

Another specific shot Clinton took at ValueVision management was aimed at a number of top execs said to be living in East Coast cities 1,000 or more miles from the company’s Minnesota headquarters, the New York Post reported (Eden Prarie is almost 1200 miles away from Philadelphia, Google Maps tells me). Clinton singled out COO Carol Steinberg, a former QVC and David's Bridal exec, citing a Facebook post by Steinberg last month saying she’s in her hometown of Philadelphia on Mondays and Fridays, according to a presentation to the ValueVision board, a copy of which was obtained by the Post.

Clinton Group and another challenger, Cannell Capital, own a combined 10% stake in the company, which would allow them to call for a vote. It hasn't at this point recommended its own candidates for board seats, although its expected to do so shortly. Clinton has had discussions with ValueVision's board for a while.

ValueVision shares have almost tripled this year and its current market value is $255 million, but revenue of $587 million for its fiscal year ending in February is down from $782 million in 2008 when the company last reported a full year profit.

Its hard to tell what Comcast's interests will be in this; it once owned QVC but hasn't shown an interest in getting directly involved in the home shopping space since then. I would watch QVC owner Liberty Interactive though; its openly talked about possibly consolidating the home shopping industry by acquiring the 62% of HSN it doesn't already own and ValueVision might also be something it would look at.

But a basic conclusion in looking at ValueVision would be that a channel with that much reach is being underutilized and not sufficiently monetized.

Update: ValueVision asks for delay; Clinton responds



Philly Tech People News 11/3/2013: Bloomberg reports Goldman analyst to head Comcast IR; FRC adds Ricketts as content editor











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Two Ex-Moto Execs To Exit Arris (Multichannel News)

Goldman Sachs’s Armstrong Is Said to Leave Firm for Comcast Job (Bloomberg)
Armstrong would head up Investor Relations, according to Bloomberg.

First Round Capital has hired Camille Ricketts as editor for its online content journal, Fortune's TermSheet and Greentech Media reported. She was most recently content manager for Kiva.org, and had worked for Tesla Motors and VentureBeat prior to that.
Ricketts also confirmed it on Twitter:





Synygy Appoints Erich Sachse to Lead Consulting Services Group (Business Wire)

TMG Health Appoints Michael McGarrigle Vice President of Service Operations (Press Release)



Links 11/4/2013: Pennsylvania booming with ecommerce warehouse building








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SAP opens up on cloud overhaul (iTNews)

SAS, SAP Partner to Boost Big Data Analytics (CMS Wire)


Urban Outfitters, others plunge aggressively into online sales (Philadelphia Inquirer)

BlackBerry Scraps Bid to Find Buyer, Replaces CEO Thorsten Heins, Gets $1 Billion Investment (All Things D)
Former (SAP) Sybase CEO John Chen now running BlackBerry.

Twitter to close IPO books early on strong demand -sources (Reuters)

Gross Loses World’s Largest Mutual Fund Title to Vanguard
(Bloomberg)

Breaking News Takes a New Approach to the Personalized News Feed — A News Feed That’s Only Partly Personalized (All Things D)

Hedge Funds Plan Proxy Battle for ValueVision Media (New York Times: DealBook)
Comcast owns 14.4% of ValueVision through NBC Universal. ValueVision formerly operated under the ShopNBC brand name under license from NBC until this year, when it dropped the license arrangement and changed the channel's name to ShopHQ.

New FCC chief Tom Wheeler taps media watchdog Gigi Sohn for role (LA Times: Company Town)

Startup valuations soar to highest levels in 10 years (report)
(VentureBeat)














BI Wars: Tableau growth spikes while Radnor-based QlikTech's slows; a look at area user groups




Tom Paine




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Data visualization software vendor Tableau Software reported 90% quarterly revenue growth to $61.1 million last week as its headcount topped 1,000 and it filed for a secondary offering of $450 million. Tableau did its IPO, which brought in about $250 million, about four months ago.

Meanwhile, in the previous week Radnor-based QlikTech reported somewhat disappointing results, with revenue growth slowing to 21% ($104.1 million) on weakness in Europe and Asia, and its shares fell 19% the following day. There are different clusters of business intelligence vendors, but many industry analysts consider Tableau, QlikTech and Tibco's Spotfire to be grouped fairly closely together as competitors. Spotfire's revenues aren't broken out by Tibco, but are said to be growing in the 30% range. QlikTech at an earlier stage of its history was growing at a rate close to what Tableau is experiencing now, but Tableaus' latest results reflect a somewhat surprising surge of growth.

All three use in-memory processing and other techniques to enable users to analyze data quickly without excessive IT staff involvement to find answers to questions. They are distinguished from many earlier generation BI tools by faster setup times, faster processing, and the ability to do more on-the-fly ad hoc analysis. But they are not all the same. Tableau is the leader in data visualization, the ability to represent analysis visually and graphically in a variety of ways. Although QlikTech's QlikView certainly has "DataVis" capabilities, they are still playing catchup to Tableau in this category and made a small acquisition earlier this year as part of that effort. On the other hand, QlikView may be better for hard-core data analysis and has better scripting tools for building models. But Tableau may require less IT knowledge or support.

Another distinction between Tableau and QlikTech is geography. Tableau is a west coast company which, at the time of its IPO, had very little penetration outside of North America. QlikTech was founded in Sweeden and its revenue base reflects a broader global distribution, although the Americas continues to be its highest growth area. QlikTech now has over 1500 employees, although they are geographically dispersed and the last I heard only a little more than 10% were based in Radnor. (Update: an Inquirer article on QlikTech today puts its total employment at 1600, 200 of whom are in Radnor.)

Many in the QlikView and BI community in general seem genuinely excited about the upcoming release of QlikTech's next generation product, QlikView.Next.

Tableau has a Philadelphia area user group founded by Bruce Segal, principal of E*S*Q Unlimited, a former attorney who found data analysis a more interesting field. The group regularly draws 20 to 30 people to each meeting, which is held in a variety of locations around the area, including occasionally the Comcast Center (they also meet in the burbs).
Segal has turned over active management of the group to two others, but remains heavily involved in it. While Philly does not have one of Tableau's super whiz "ninjas" in the area, they are accessible to some and Tableau does have a rep here. Segal told Philly Tech News overall support is excellent.

Segal said one of the biggest challenges in setting up databases for Tableau is often converting what was once on spreadsheets into usable formats. Data is often laid out illogically, or not at levels that can be easily manipulated. Also, the original data sources upon which spreadsheet items are built are often inaccurate, out of data or out of sync. More fundamentally, Segal says he often has to answer the question of whether the data address the basic issue his client is trying to find answers for.

QlikTech (Qlikview) also has a Philadelphia User Group. Both the Tableau and QlikView groups require approval for new members on LinkedIn, presumably so members don't get spammed. I haven't been able to locate one specifically for Spotfire, though I imagine there probably is one. Spotfire gets a good deal of use in the biomed and biotech communities. Also I don't mean to omit the Pentahos, Jaspersofts, and Birsts of the world, as well as the larger enterprise vendors who have some excellent tools.

Both Tableau and Qlikview offer free personal editions which you can download and use to get familiar with their products. (Correction: while Tableau's personal edition is available for a limited trial period, QlikTech's is available for unlimited use.)








Hip Trip: Nutter taking his sales pitch to London, Tel Aviv
(Philadelphia Inquirer)

McGraw-Hill Education Collaborates with University of Pennsylvania to Invest in Education Technology Startup Incubator (PR Newswire)




Saturday Highlights 11/2/2013: Raymond Perelman offers to buy Inquirer; J&J's sparse presence on Twitter



Perelman offers to buy Inquirer (Philadelphia Inquirer)

J&J Is Curiously Absent From Twitter -- Does That Matter? (Ad Age)

Ed Murray: ‘To infer that I’m some hack for Comcast doesn’t bear out the facts’ (GeekWire)

Will SAP Business ByDesign Weather the Storm, Again? (ASUG News)





Links 11/1/2013: Day & Zimmermann’s Oracle to SAP Sybase ASE database migration








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The Other SAP Database: Day & Zimmermann’s Oracle to ASE Migration (ASUG News)

Interior takes financial management system to an enterprise cloud (CGN)
Unisys implementing cloud solution for SAP implmentation.

Marin County seeks new software vendor to replace SAP system (Computerworld)



A Year Later, Sandy Still Has Lessons for IT (Business Week)


Nine early-stage companies get $2.2M (Philadelphia Business Journal)

Comcast Launches Non-Authenticated ‘TV Sampler’ App (Multichannel News)

Time Warner Cable Stock Spikes on Merger Talk (Hollywood Reporter)


Fab has lost its special sauce (PandoDaily)