Links 6/3/2014: SAP opens Sapphire user conference; Safeguard-backed MediaMath raises $73.5 million









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SAP relents, will provide new UI technology at no extra charge (PC World)


SAP Speeds Finance Tools to Bolster Hana’s Appeal Against Oracle (Bloomberg)

SAP: Put a little more HANA in your Red Hat (InfoWorld)

MediaMath Raises Huge $73.5 Million Series C Round (Ad Age)
New investors Spring Lake Equity Partners and Akamai Technologies, Inc. join existing investors Safeguard Scientifics, Catalyst Investors, and Observatory Capital. The company debt facility was led and syndicated through Silicon Valley Bank.

In April, Safeguard reported having invested $18.5 million to date in MediaMath for a
23% interest.



Labeled the “fastest growing SaaS company ever,” Zenifits raises a $66M Series B just five months post-Series A (PandoDaily)

Offerpop turns your tweets & Facebook posts into ads — & it just got $15M (VentureBeat)
Edison Ventures leads round in New York firm.


AT&T U-verse Strategy Eyed Amid DirecTV Deal
(Investor's Business Daily)

Comcast serves up public-private SMB wireless service (ZDNet)


DuckDuckGo to be included as built-in option in Safari on iOS & OS X (Business Wire)

Apple Partners With Epic, Mayo Clinic For HealthKit (Information Week)




Allentown's Trifecta Technologies sells IBM ecommerce practice to focus on fast-growing Salesforce.com business





Tom Paine



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Allentown-based ecommerce software development firm Trifecta Technologies sold its IBM Smarter Commerce practice (built around WebSphere) in early May to focus on its rapidly growing Salesforce practice. St Louis-based IT solutions provider Perficient Inc. (NASDAQ: PRFT) acquired the IBM business line, which had annual revenue of about $8 million, for $12.7 million in cash and $1 million in stock. More than 40 Trifecta employees, split between Toronto and Allentown, have joined Perficient.

Doug Pelletier / Trifecta Technologies

What remains for Trifecta and its founder and CEO, Doug Pelletier, is what he described to Philly Tech News as a booming Saleforce.com ecommerce software development business with 72 employees in Allentown and India. (There is one employee left in Toronto who is in the process of building staff there.) Trifecta's Salesforce business is focused on the same niche as the IBM business was: building transactional-oriented ecommerce applications, in this case interweaving Salesforce's Force.com platform with off-the-shelf web and mobile tools Trifecta has built inhouse, and its custom software development. Current clients include Carlo's Bakery, Varsity Spirit, Starwood Hotels & Resorts, and Brandywine Global Investments.

Trifecta has been doing interesting things around Salesforce's Cloud PaaS (platform as a service) Heroku, I've been told by others, and Pelletier tells me his firm's work is recieving attention at high levels within the cloud software giant. Salesforce often spreads small VC investments around within its ecosystem, and Pelletier says Salesforce has discussed that possibility with him and he is open to it, although he intends to maintain majority ownership of the company. Pelletier says in addition to staff growth in Allentown, Toronto and Visakhapatnam, India, he may also consider making small specialty acquisitions.

Just this week Trifecta solutions architect Peter Knolle earned Force.com MVP Recognition from Salesforce.com, one of only 27 individuals so recognized to date.


Pelletier's own background is interesting. A native of Canada, he attended the University of Waterloo in Ontario, and received an MBA from Lehigh before going to work as a rep for IBM in the eastern PA/ western NJ area. The primary reason he ended up in the Lehigh Valley was because his father, Alfred, was CEO of Mack Trucks for 10 years. (Mack had long had its global headquarters in Allentown but it was moved to North Carolina a few years back, though most manufacturing remains in the area.) After a few years with IBM, he decided he didn't have enough control over his future career direction, so he left and put up his own shingle. Trifecta was founded in 1991, and success took a while to achieve.

As his father was, Doug is active in civic affairs in the Lehigh Valley, and has also
helped the tech community grow. In some cases, he has assisted startups in getting off the ground with the help of Trifecta's technology, sometimes taking a small equity stake in lieu of payment. Two startups he mentions working with are Sarbari, which recently relocated from Boston and builds software that help restaurants buy food efficiently, and MyNetwork, which helps young people just entering the professional world build career-related social networks.

Trifecta is serving as the first corporate partner and mentor for a new downtown incubator, Velocity AI . Tifecta is also relocating its own headquarters from Lower Macungle Township to the rennovated 103-year-old Schoen's furniture building (to be renamed The Trifecta Building), further committing itself to helping to revitalize downtown Allentown. They are on target for a July move-in date.

The Trifecta Building / Rendering



Although his name may connote images of someone who might have played for the Montreal Canadians (he is of French Canadian ancestry), Pelletier is an avid hockey fan who's favorite team is the Maple Leafs of his native province Ontario. Trifecta has also purchased 19 season tickets for Allentown's new hockey team, the Phantoms, who begin play this Fall at the new PPL Center, and hopes to share them with Trifecta associates and their families and other partners and friends.


Links 6/2/2014: Apple adds DuckDuckGo to Safari as private search option; SAP apps to run on IBM's SoftLayer








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Big Win For DuckDuckGo: Apple Adding To Safari As Private Search Option (Search Engine Land)

If Comcast Doesn’t Want to Be Hated, It Might Want to Avoid Ads Like This One (Video) (Re/code)

Tierney returns, Lexie Norcross out at Inquirer parent (Philadelphia Business Journal)

SAP to create cloud services for industries (PC World)


IBM launches SAP apps on SoftLayer (ZDNet)

HP Releases New Hardware for Running SAP HANA (Re/code)

ExactTarget Co-Founder Scott Dorsey Leaves Salesforce, McCorkle New CEO (TechCrunch)

Battle-scarred Unisys still fighting fit as better days loom (The Australian)






Lewis Katz, co-owner of The Inquirer, dies in plane crash (Philadelphia Inquirer)


He Said, He Said: the Comcast-Netflix Edition (Video) (Re/code)

On The Eve Of SAPPHIRE Conference, Vishal Sikka Puts SAP In The Rearview (TechCrunch)



Saturday Highlights 5/31/2014: Intel TV creator leaves Verizon; Selig concerned over Astros-Comcast conflict







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Intel TV Creator Leaves Verizon Months After Deal (Re/code)


Bud Selig concerned with Astros’ suits involving Comcast and Drayton McLane (Houston Chronicle)

Hedge fund, ShopHQ parent trade broadsides as proxy fight looms (Minneapolis / St. Paul Business Journal)
ValueVision, which previously operated under the brand name ShopNBC, has a top management which includes several QVC vets; Comcast owns a small stake.

Microsoft: Dynamics CRM ain't chopped liver, despite Salesforce tie-up (PC World)

SAP, Ariba, and The Future of B2B Networks (Joshua Greenbaum / Enterprise Applications Consulting)






Links 5/30/2014: Are developers disappointed in Comcast?; New SAP channel chief readying new partner business models








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Comcast-Spectacor combines ticket companies; 15 jobs eliminated (Philadelphia Business Journal)

Why Google, Comcast, and AT&T Are Making Power Utilities Nervous (Business Week)

The epic technological transition that explains this year’s spate of tech mergers (Washington Post: Switch)


Comcast, Blasted By Customers, Disappoints Developers Too (ReadWrite)
Not sure if this is an accurate reflection of everything going on in Comcast's tech
ecosystem. Also, on X1, I think Comcast has been focused to this point on maintaining
the quality of the Cloud environment as it rolls out before opening it. Any comments?

Comcast To Give Video Devices A Shot In The ARM (Multichannel News)


Cloudy glasnost for Microsoft and Salesforce.com, but what must Bernard think? (Diginomica)

SALESFORCE MUSCLES IN ON SAP TERRITORY WITH MICROSOFT PARTNERSHIP (Computer Busines Review)

Event Report: Answers To The Top 12 Questions About SAP Ahead of #SapphireNow #ASUG2014 (R "Ray" Wang/A Software Insider's Point of View)

New SAP Channel Chief Readying New Partner Business Models (CRN)

Alibaba among companies looking to invest in AppNexus -WSJ
(Reuters)
AppNexus is a First Round Capital portfolio company. It is reported to be seeking a valuation in the $1 billion range.



Edison Ventures Exits Contact Center Solutions Leader – Uptivity Acquired by inContact (PR Web)
Edison says exit generates 50% IRR for it.

Maryland poaches another start-up (Washington Post)






Links 5/29/2014: PSERS removes unexpectedly exposed investment contracts from web; Microsoft, Salesforce in Cloud partnership






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Report: Verizon FiOS claimed public utility status to get government perks (Ars Technica)

Pay TV Consolidation: Who Are the Potential Winners and Losers?
(Knowledge@Wharton)

Hastings: Comcast wants to become the 'post office' (USA Today)



Pennsylvania pension explains its unexpected disclosure
(Fortune Term Sheet)

PSERS removes hundreds of state investment contracts from public scrutiny (Philly.com: Philly Deals)



SAP and IBM Collaborate to Serve Transportation and Logistics Industry (PR Newswire)

Microsoft, Salesforce Said to Discuss Cloud Partnership
(Bloomberg)

Microsoft and salesforce.com announce global, strategic partnership (Press Release)


Veeva Announces Fiscal 2015 First Quarter Results
(Business Wire)


Mobile security SaaS provider Mobile Iron sets terms for $100 million IPO (Renaissance Capital)



City of Philadelphia Selected as One of Seven US2020 City Competition for STEM Mentorship Winners (Business Wire)

Md. lures software firm Salsa Labs with $1 million investment (Baltimore Sun)
Edison Ventures leads $5 million follow-on round.





Links 5/28/2014: NJ online gambling a dud to date







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Workday raises revenue forecast as software subscription grows (Reuters)

Fat-fingered admin downs entire Joyent data center (The Register)

SAP acquires Boston e-commerce software company SeeWhy (Boston Business Journal)

EY buys fast-growing technology consulting firm
(Philadelphia Business Journal)

SAP Business Suite powered by SAP HANA Exceeds 1,000 Customers (SAP
News)

The cloud questions facing SAP at Sapphire Now (Diginomica)



Katz and Lenfest win Inquirer parent with $88M bid
(Philadelphia Inquirer)

Mary Meeker Tamps Down All That Bubble Talk (Re/code)
My memory is that Meeker largely missed on the 2000-2001 bubble, but here she uses comparisons to that period to contend that things aren't so overvalued now.

Exclusive: Dave Scott's game plan for Comcast-Spectacor (Philadelphia Business Journal)



New Jersey Rolls Snake Eyes in Online Gambling (Bloomberg Video)

Teva (U.S. headquarters in North Wales) Harmonizes All Commercial Teams Worldwide with Veeva Systems’ Cloud-based CRM Solution (Business Wire)


Checkpoint Systems Launches Next Generation of EAS Solutions (Business Wire)










NY Times editorial opposes Comcast/Time Warner Cable merger



Tom Paine



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The New York Times yesterday published an editorial unfavorable to the proposed Comcast/Time Warner Cable merger, writing that the merger would create "a telecommunications colossus the likes of which the country has not seen since 1984 when the government forced the breakup of the original AT&T telephone monopoly." It added, "By buying Time Warner Cable, Comcast would become a gatekeeper over what consumers watch, read and listen to."
While suggesting that the FCC and DOJ should impose conditions on the deal if it is to be approved, it concludes: "Federal regulators should challenge this deal."

Of course, the New York area contains one of the largest concentrations of Time Warner Cable subscribers.

I'm not sure newspaper editorials have the sway they once did, but the major opinion leaders definitely have an influence, and their editorial opinions are likely to be reflected in the way they report content on the issue.

Other major papers to have weighed in include the Washington Post last month (FCC should approve the Comcast-Time Warner Cable merger but keep a watchful eye), and an April editorial from Comcast's hometown Inquirer saying the deal would be a "slam-dunk" from Philadelphia's perspective but raises major questions from the point of view of the customer.


Links 5/27/2014: Inquirer, Daily News sold for $88 million; Hall out as Inky publisher



A Cable Merger Too Far (New York Times Editorial)

Three show interest in Houston rights (Sports Business Daily)


Poll: Comcast First Choice for OTT Plunge (Light Reading)

Inquirer, Daily News sold for $88 million (Poynter)

Hall out as Inquirer publisher; Lenfest interim replacement (Philadelphia Business Journal)


Workday's Q1: Loss not as bad as expected; Sales up 74 percent
(ZDNet)

Workday Q1 2014-15 is another blow out with 74% growth (Diginomica)



SAP to Launch New Cloud-Based Sales Support Application (Wall Street Journal: Digits)



ARE MICROSOFT, ORACLE AND IBM FAILING THE BUSINESS INTELLIGENCE MARKET? (Computer
Business Review)
Interview with QlikTech's Donald Farmer.

City of Philadelphia Selects AssetWorks Fleet Management Software
(Globe Newswire)
AssetWorks is based in Wayne.