Powell: Resist Covering Net with 'Dirty Quilt' of Title II (Multichannel News)

Comcast to Follow 1 Million Who’ve Fled Bankrupt Detroit (Bloomberg)

Comcast could reprogram Phillies plan ((Philadelphia Inquirer)


Syapse Expands Customer Solutions Team and Opens East Coast Office in Philadelphia (Syapse Blog)


Salesforce launches a program to target startups (VentureBeat)





Comcast's Secret Service better than White House's?




Tom Paine



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Comcast's Secret Service is evidently better than that of the White House's.

In lieu of the resignation of former USSS head Julia Pierson, President Obama named former
White House special agent in charge Joseph Clancy to replace her on an acting basis. Clancy had been Director of Security for Comcast for the past three years.

Here's his Linkedin profile showing his position at Comcast, which doesn't add much detail.

More on Clancy from Villanova, which he attended.


Links 10/1/2014: Will Comcast launch online-only sub plan?; Oracle CEO Catz rips SAP deal



Comcast’s Cloud DVR Now Streams Recordings over Any U.S. Internet Connection (Variety)

Why Comcast May Soon Launch An Online-Only Subscription Service (BuzzFeed)

NFL Sunday Ticket stays on DirecTV for the next eight years (Engadget)

Oracle CEO Catz Rips SAP and Misfit Deals (Blooomberg)


eBay and PayPal could be takeover targets (Internet Retailer)

Tech of the future versus apps of the past (Peter Coffee/Diginomica)


'Ashamed' Saridakis gets prison (Wilmington
News Journal)
Former PointRoll, GSI Commerce, EBay exec.









Links 9/30/2014: EBay to spin off PayPal; Neat partners with HP


EBay to Spin Off PayPal, Adopting Strategy Backed by Icahn
(New York Times: DealBook)

HP and Neat partner for home and small office organization (TUAW)

SAP, Customers Plan Joint Cloud SIS Project to Simplify Higher Education (MarketWatch)
Higher Ed space getting busy. This comes on top of Salesforce and Workday announcements last week, and Google is doing something (see below).

Google Launches Drive For Education With Unlimited Storage (TechCrunch)

Oracle speeds up software portfolio with big data, mobile in mind
(ZDNet)


MRO Announces Partnership with Imperial Capital Group Ltd. (Yahoo
Finance)

Comcast Shifts ‘Streampix’ Strategy (Multichannel News)
Not totally gone, but repositioned.

Ratings for Dodgers, Astros show the challenges of starting RSN (Sports
Business Daily)


Qubit Bags $26M To Grow Its Ecommerce Personalization Platform (TechCrunch)
A Monetate competitor.




Villanova-based RoundCorner partners with Salesforce.com Foundation for non-profit, higher ed SaaS




Tom Paine



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Seven years ago, a little startup called Verticals onDemand got its start, headquartered in California and having an east coast office focused on sales and customer service located along the Main Line. Concentrating on the life sciences industry and using Saleforce.com's software as a service (SaaS) platform, Verticals onDemand eventually became Veeva Systems, which did an IPO last year and now has a market value of nearly $4 billion.

Then, in April of this year Salesforce.com laid out a strategy to enter specific verticals through partnerships, investments or acquisitions, using Veeva's success as a model to emulate.

One example of that strategy is based right here in Villanova. RoundCorner describes its mission as "changing the way people change the world" and aims to provide "lifetime constituent management for non-profits." In the past two weeks RoundCorner was featured in two major announcements by Salesforce.com and the Salesforce.com Foundation addressing two verticals: one for serving the non-profit market with an offering called NGO Connect, and the other for higher education recruitment, marketing and building lifetime relationships, under the label Salesforce1 for High Ed. That includes a app created by RoundCorner, Advancement Connect. NGO Connect's initial clients include the Girl Scouts of the USA and the Sierra Club. Salesforce1 for Higher Ed has started with the University of Southern California, Arizona State University, College for America at Southern New Hampshire University and Cornell University (also a Workday client).



Dan Lammot/LinkedIn

RoundCorner's President and one of its founding partners is Daniel Lammot, a Southern California native and Villanova graduate with a degree in psychology. Dan co-founded OKERE Inc., a New York-based implementer of Salesforce.com CRM installations that was acquired by Fujitsu in 2007. Lammot stayed on at Fujitsu for a while after the acquisition until leaving to start RoundCorner in 2009.

RoundCorner now has about 60 employees primarily in three offices; Villanova (headquarters), San Francisco and New York. In the non-profit market earlier this year RoundCorner acquired FoundationConnect, a cloud grants management application for non-profits, from NPower.

In the higher ed recruitment space, Lammot told me in a phone interview that RoundCorner was partnering with TargetX of Conshohocken, which also uses the Saleforce1 platform.

I asked if it was a coincidence that the Salesforce/RoundCorner higher ed announcement
occurred on the same day as Workday's announcement of a very similarly targeted product, and Lammot assured me it was merely that. Both Workday and Salesforce execs have experience with Oracle Peoplesoft (Workday's execs founded it), which was a leader in higher ed systems but has not transitioned well into the cloud and is seen as very vulnerable. Veeva has had much of its success taking share from another Oracle acquistion, Siebel Systems, which is also a legacy competitor in the non-profit CRM market. Larry Ellison is addressing Cloud and SaaS issues at this week's Oracle OpenWorld, but its not clear to what extent its aging product lines will be upgraded.

Workday's announcement Thursday was of one module of what is expected to be a full suite of higher ed offerings. I ask Lammot whether either RoundCorner or Salesforce could expand further into higher ed beyond the initial module, and he said that was certainly a possibility.

Salesforce made an investment in RoundCorner last year, the size of which is not known. The investment was the first time Salesforce.com (the corp entity) made an investment in a company (roundCorner) focused on the mission of the Salesforce Foundation. The Salesforce.com Foundation is actively involved in the RoundCorner partnership, offering incentives and discounts to new clients.

Lammot says he is happy to be back in the Villanova area with his family. He serves on the advisory board of the Villanova School of Business' Center for Innovation, Creativity and Entrepreneurship, and is involved in other civic and charitable causes.


Links 9/29/2014: Ellison claims Oracle already dominates cloud





Tom Paine



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Oracle's Larry Ellison throws down the cloud gauntlet (PC World)

Ellison: Oracle already dominates cloud computing
(Fortune)

Oracle rolls out analytics cloud services (PC World)


Tibco Taken Private at 21% Premium; FBR, Mizuho See Heating up of Software M&A (Barron's Tech Trader Daily)

Computer Sciences Said to Contact Buyout Funds for LBO (Bloomberg)


FCC Proposes Defining 'Linear' OVDs as MVPDs (Multichannel News)
Another option for Aereo?




Amazon North American Fulfillment Center September 2 2014 by ChannelAdvisor







Smartphone payment system changing business loans (Philly.com: Philly Deals)
Jack Dorsey in town. Hope Square's credit policies are better designed than Advanta's.

Who are the winners and losers in SAP's acquisition of Concur?
(SearchSAP)








Newtown company's system hacked, 300 eateries affected (Bucks County Courier Times)

As Oracle’s OpenWorld approaches and deck chairs shuffle, has Oracle finally figured out the cloud? (Gigaom)


Comcast posts letters to FCC, many from local businesses, expressing support for Time-Warner Cable Merger





Tom Paine



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Comcast has submitted numerous letters in support of the Time Warner Cable merger to the
FCC, including many from Philadelphia area small businesses and associations. It has also
included them in an SEC filing and posted them on its website.

Among those submitting letters was Tracey Welson ‐ Rossman of Chariot Solutions, citing among other things Comcast's support for TechGirlz.org, the organization she founded;
Evan Urbania, CEO, ChatterBlast Media, who praises the expansion of Comcast's business services; and the CIO of Hanover-based Utz Quality Foods, who cites Comcast's assistance in
upgrading Utz' communications infrastucture.



Links 9/26: Comcast turns off Streampix, appoints new customer service chief








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Time Warner Cable merger critics take jabs at Comcast’s shots (NY
Post)

Comcast Turns Off Streampix (Light Reading)

Comcast seeks to fix awful customer service, admits “it may take a few years” (Ars Technica)

Bentley takes project management to the cloud (Graphic Speak)

Oracle, Salesforce.com trade moves in marketing software battle (PC World)