PA Turnpike hires IT consultant: Maybe using IT to improve safety would be a good idea



Tom Paine



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Ironically, the day before the latest traffic apocalypse on the Pennsylvania Turnpike
on Valentine's Day, the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission announced it had chosen Decision Lens, which describes itself as "the leading provider of cloud-based prioritization and resource optimization software," to assist its CIO and senior management in prioritizing and planning future IT pojects. The release indicates that Decision Lens is used by several other state transit authorities, including PENNDOT, which is managed separately from the Turnpike.




I don't know whether the types of projects the Commission may consider would include any that help better manage traffic, detect hazardous road conditions (perhaps using road sensors), and create better systems for warning motorists of approaching trouble. Might
not be a bad idea, since the PA Turnpike seems to have more than its share of these incidents.


Philly Tech People News 2/16/2014









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Loretta J. Mester Named President and Chief Executive Officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, Effective June 1, 2014
(Business Wire)

Marianne Brown Joins SunGard as Chief Operating Officer, Financial Systems (Business Wire)

Heartland Payment Systems® Announces New Chief Branding Officer (Business Wire)

Shared Spectrum Company Names Mike Daniels and Bill Merritt to Board of Directors (Business Wire)

Peter Luukko Appointed to the Board of Pointstreak Sports Technologies Inc. (Company Press Release)





Sunday Highlights: PACT award finalists named



2014 Enterprise Award Finalists and Honorees (PACT)

What's coming for SAP in 2014? (John Appleby/SAP Community Network)

Three Technology Revolutions (Pew Research Internet Project)

Start-up opens digital door for students with autism (Philadelphia Inquirer)




Hoopla Software raises $8 million led by Trinity Ventures; moving to larger Malvern-area offices




Tom Paine



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Hoopla Software, which is headquartered in Silicon Valley but has an R&D office in West Chester, announced last week it had raised an $8 million Series B round led by Trinity Ventures. The round also included participation from previous investors Safeguard Scientifics (NYSE: SFE), Illuminate Ventures and additional private investors.

Hoopla, founded in 2010 by veteran Philadelphia-area entrepreneur Michael Smalls, provides cloud-based software that uses gamification techniques and insights gained
from data analysis to boost performance for groups such as sales and customer
service teams. The company said it grew over 250 percent in 2013, adding over 150 new customers.

Hoopla's LinkedIn page shows 26 employees, 9 of whom are based in the Philadelphia area. Hoopla hopes to double that headcount by the end of the year, and also plans to release
a mobile version in the Spring.

Salesforce participated in Hoopla's Series A, and Hoopla's website still emphasizes its
product's close integration with Salesforce's CRM platform. California-based Trinity Ventures also invested $6.25 million in Philadelphia-based RJMetrics last year.

Hoopla raised $2.8 million in its Series A round in 2012, led by Safeguard Scientifics.

Prior to founding Hoopla, Small's Philadelphia area experience included executive roles at Destiny Websolutions, TurnTide and ClickEquations.

Update 2/16: Responding to my email inquiry, CEO Michael Smalls tells me that Hoopla
is moving from West Chester to the Malvern area "with expanded space to enable us to continue to add to the engineering team there and add sales resources to give us better east coast coverage. John Galvin, our CTO (and colleague from Destiny and ClickEquations) runs the Philly area office." Smalls says he is now living in San Jose but makes frequent trips back to the area.

Hoopla was also named a finalist for the PACT Enterprise Awards ( to be presented on May 8) in the category of "Technology Startup Company."



Comcast/TWC merger: What some commentators are saying to date



There are many angles to the Comcast/Time Warner Cable saga, and many more that will
come out over time.

I've tried to highlight articles that capture some of the key points so far here:



Two mayors far apart on Comcast deal (Philly.com: Philly Deals)

A Bigger Comcast May Beget More Deals (New York Times: DealBook)

DOJ Antitrust Chief Uncertain for Comcast Review (Wall Street
Jounal: MoneyBeat)

Comcast taps its ex-SEAL, Neil Smit, to lead bulked-up cable group (LA Times)


Wolff: NBC odd man out in Comcast merger (USA Today)

THE REAL PROBLEM WITH THE COMCAST MERGER (Tim Wu/The New Yorker)


Comcast-Time Warner Cable merger: Is Apple TV toast? (Fortune Tech)

Comcast vs. the Cord Cutters (New York Times)

State wired in for huge impact (Denver Post)


Analysts Watch Cox After Comcast-Time Warner Cable Deal
(Wall Street Journal: MoneyBeat)






Links 2/14/2014: SAP serious about opening HANA startup cafes





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Putting on PennApps: 2 days and $200,000 (Daily Pennsylvanian)

SAP founder outlines start-up strategy as small firms call on the "tank" to be agile
German enterprise software giant opening new start-up spaces to foster collaboration

(Techworld)

Hedge Fund Takes Stake in Malone’s Liberty Interactive (New York Times: DealBook)
Liberty Interactive is QVC's parent company. It is expected to spin out QVC as a tracking stock some time this year.

Tech vendors and cable companies push for more Wi-Fi spectrum (Ars Technica)


TAKING THE PULSE OF MEDICAL APPS AT MOBILE MONDAY MID-ATLANTIC (Mobile Week)

4 questions raised by Castlight Health IPO filing (Med City News)


MicroStrategy Launches In-Memory Analysis Engine (Information Week)


Comcast's objectives in acquiring Time Warner Cable






Tom Paine



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Comcast's proposed deal to acquire Time Warner Cable for $45 billion (if approved) could accomplish four primary objectives:

First, it would assure in terms of nationwide economies of scale in the video content business, that Comcast would continue to maintain a considerable size advantage. This is important for achieving technological leadership, the ability to spread technology investment costs across as many customers as possible, greater marketing power, and bargaining power with content providers as well as technology vendors. Some cable execs have tried to downplay the value of the latter because they don't want those words used against them in front of an FCC or congressional hearing, but it is important.

While Charter backer John Malone has options, he couldn't come close to matching the scale of a combined Comcast/Time Warner Cable. Lets say he were to pick up the all of the three million subs Comcast says it would shed as part of the deal and somehow buy out the next five largest systems and add them to Charter's base subscribers. That would give Charter approximately 20 million subs versus Comcast's forecasted nearly 30 million. And that's unlikely to happen for a number of reasons.

In broadband, it gives Comcast the ability to build a stronger network, particularly along the east coast but also one with nationwide reach. This will make it more competitive with the telcos, including Verizon and AT&T. Some industry observers consider broadband to be a more attractive future market than delivering packaged video content.

If you look at Comcast's existing markets plus the ones it is likely to pick up from
Time Warner Cable
, you can see how many of them are major national or regional communications hubs. It would put Comcast in a very powerful position in the telco world.

Regionally, it will strengthen Comcast's position in key metros such as New York,
Los Angeles, and Charlotte. In New York, Comcast already has some pieces in the area in
Connecticut and New Jersey. However, a combined Comcast/TWC would face strong competition there from Verizon's FiOS (often for the same subs) and in terms of regional presence from Cablevision (on Long Island and in Connecticut and New Jersey). Could Cablevision be Comcast's next target to round out its New York footprint? Remember what it did in the Philly market.

The fourth objective is to build an infrastructure capable of competing for larger enterprise accounts in business services.

A fifth tentacle of the octopus may be wireless. The cable industry has largely given up
on trying to build its own 4G LTE-type network, and I don't think much has come out of the joint product marketing agreement with Verizon Wireless. But cable operators see Wi-Fi
as a increasingly valuable option
, not just for in-home or near-range network extension but possibly for building significant networks on the back of Wi-Fi hotspots, of which both Comcast and TWC have an ample supply.

What's next: Unless Comcast wants to buy a fill-in cable acquisition (such as Cablevision), my guess is its next large acquisition will be outside of the US.




Cable Consolidation History (Graphic: Wall Street Journal)





Some early views of Comcast/Time Warner Cable deal on Twitter



A quick look through the Twittervrse suggests some knives are already out for the Comcast-TWC deal: