Links 12/12/2014: NY State launches $50 million venture fund; Comcast expands hyperlocal EveryBlock service







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CenturyLink bulks up its cloud, buys Cognilytics (ZDNet)
Cognilytics does SAP Hana implementations.

CenturyLink expands high-speed gigabit Internet in Seattle to 20K homes (Geekwire)
CenturyLink advancing on two different fronts.


East Beats West In IT Rivalry, Investors Say (CRN)


Comcast Expands Reach Of Hyper-Local Info Service (Multichannel News)

New Relic’s IPO Spikes 31% In Initial Trading (TechCrunch)

Chinese Tech Giant Baidu to Invest $600 Million in Uber, Says Report (Wired)


The 30 Most Successful UPenn Alumni Of All Time (Business Insider)
Interesting list, although I'm not sure I agree with some selections. One who I didn't realize went to Wharton was John Sculley.

New York State Will Start $50 Million Venture-Capital Fund (Bloomberg)
First Round Capital's Howard Morgan will lead a voluntary advisory committee, and the fund will be managed by Brian Keil, a former managing director of a $250 million venture-capital fund sponsored by NBC Universal and General Electric Capital Corp (before Comcast acquired NBCU).

N.J.'s $118 million canceled social service contract did not protect state's interests, auditor says (NJ.com)

Princeton Scientists 3D Printing LEDs Into Contact Lenses (Medgadget)

Marin County Board OKs $14 Million for Civic Center Computer Program (TechWire)
Replaces scrapped SAP implementation.


Links 12/10/2014: Charter's Rutledge: OTT is ‘Playing With Fire’; First IBM-Apple niche apps released






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Virginia-based Canvas raises $9M for enterprise mobile app platform (VentureBeat)
Return investor Osage Venture Partners participated in the round.

Marketing tech: $6.2 billion in funding and acquisitions in last 3 months (VentureBeat)


News Analysis: Inside the First Industry-Specific Mobile Apps by the IBM MobileFirst for Apple iOS Partnership ( R "Ray" Wang / Enterprise Irregulars)

IBM Apps For Apple iOS: Not Siri Meets Watson (Information Week)

2014 Year in Review: Evaluating SAP
(ASUG News)


SAP Jam is Now iOS App Ready
(Mobile Enterprise)


Engineers on the rise (Philly.com)
Check out the way Philly.com's new website design is used in this story.

Comcast on home Wi-Fi lawsuit: Customers get “real benefits” (San Francisco Chronicle)

Rutledge: OTT is ‘Playing With Fire’ (Multichannel News)

Exclusive: WeWork finalizing massive new funding round (Fortune)
Can't find any plans for Philadelphia now.

Lending Club Prices I.P.O. at $15 a Share, Surpassing Expectations (New York Times: DealBook)

Meet Xtium’s new Chief Executive Office
(Xtium Blog)

The Effect Of HubSpot’s CRM Launch On Salesforce (TechCrunch)


Where in the world is Kenexa founder Rudy Karsan? In Philadelphia, investing in startups





Tom Paine



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Rudy Karsan / Twitter profile


Human Resources Executive Online reports that Kenexa founder Rudy Karsan, who sold Wayne-based Kenexa, the Human Resources SaaS business he built, to IBM for $1.3 billion in 2012, left IBM at the end of August after serving as GM of IBM's Smarter Workforce group. Apparently IBM wasn't interested in pursuing some of his more far-reaching ideas.

Karsan has started a new venture, Karlani Capital, woking out of downtown Philadelphia. It is described as more of an operating company than a VC firm, although it is investing mostly in early-stage ventures. There are already 13 portfolio companies. Only one, Relay Network, is in the Philly area. Another, FanDuel, based in New York, is a fantasy sports site that has already reached a valuation near $200 million.


Interestingly, the article reports that Karsan has also moved from his suburban mansion to a condo near his downtown office.


Links 12/9/2014: Oracle wants you to try its cloud; Comcast sued for turning home Wi-Fi routers into public hotspots






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Reveal more, negotiate lower fees, Pennsylvania Auditor General tells pensions (PE Hub)

Comcast sued for turning home Wi-Fi routers into public hotspots (San Francisco Chronicle)

Time Warner Cable CEO Targets TV Sub Growth in 2015, Talks Comcast Deal (Hollywood Reporter)

Cheaper viewing packages to charm 'cord-cutters' (Philadelphia Inquirer)

Rutledge: OTT is ‘Playing With Fire’ (Multichannel News)

Exclusive: HBO to outsource streaming technology in blow to 'backstabbing' CTO (Fortune)
Outsourcing to MLB Advanced Media, which I believe is an Amazon Web Services user (as it Netflix).


Why LinkedIn Should Pay Attention to Salesforce’s Most Important Acquisition to Date (Sandhill)

Oracle humbly suggests that you try its cloud (Gigaom)
Effort led by former SAP exec Shawn Price.

SAP’s Concur Says It Continued to Invest in Travel Tech Startups (Skift)


Tech’s Lost Chapter: An Oral History of Boston’s Rise and Fall, Part One (Re/code)

Bergdorf Goodman enhances customer service with cell phone chargers (Luxury Daily)
Provided by Philly startup ChargeItSpot, which just finished raising a round of $3.2 million, as reported by Technical.ly Philly.


Links 12/8/2014: Did you know Lincoln Financial owned radio stations? (now they won't); Comcast revives @Home name in a way






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SAP Readies a Big Business Marketplace (New York Times: Bits)

SAP CEO sees company staying independent in long term -paper (Reuters)

EnosiX Raises $4.25 Million to ‘Mobilize’ Data From SAP Software

‘Things’ Are Heating Up: What’s New in the Internet of Things (Knowledge@Wharton)

Senate Bill Exempts Low-Risk Medical Software, Apps from Regulation (Health Data Management)

In Wake of Delhi Ban and Rape Allegations, Uber to Make Changes Abroad (Wired)


Entercom to Acquire Lincoln Financial Media for $105 Million (Radio World)
Had forgotten Lincoln Financial was in the radio business. Think it picked it up as part of some other financial transaction. Entercom is based in Bala Cynwyd. (As I thought, it came along from the acquisition of Jefferson-Pilot in 2006.)

A token farewell: SEPTA, Philly transit embraces tech, paying by phone (AP via Lansdale Reporter)

Meet the Inventor: Comcast chief software architect Sree Kotay (Steve Donohue/The Donohue Report)

Comcast Business Reinvents Telework with New Ethernet @Home Service (Business Wire)
Interesting choice of name. Comcast's original internet service carried the @Home name, until the JV of the same name (later Excite @Home) it operated under went bust around 2000 and Comcast operated its own service.

Qlik Takes On Tableau In Data Visualization (Information Week)
Qlik is headquartered in Radnor.

Gartner, IDC: Hyperscale Data Centers Drive Server Sales (Data Center Knowledge)

Microsoft and Accenture partner to build new hybrid cloud system (TechFlash)


Why CenturyLink just bought disaster-recovery company DataGardens (VentureBeat)


Philly Tech People News 12/6/2014: Concur president Raj Singh on going from $8 million to $8 billion through a ‘series of pivots’







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Concur president Raj Singh on going from $8 million to $8 billion through a ‘series of pivots’ (GeekWire)

Evan Shapiro Joins NBCUniversal as Exec VP of Digital Enterprises (Variety)

Kony appoints former SAP cloud, mobile head to lead ME, APAC (Business Cloud News)

Pfizer exec leaving to run Bucks County CRO BioClinica (Philadelphia Business Journal)

BizTech’s Applications Practice Director named Oracle ACE
(BizTech)

RAM Technologies, Inc. Adds New Director of Implementation Services to Support Record Growth (PR Web)

Philip Faris Joins Citadel as Vice President, Digital Delivery (Citadel Banking Blog)


HackPrinceton Draws More Than 600 College Students, Tech Mentors and Sponsors

Todd Nakamura
Esther Surden



HackPrinceton opening ceremonies | Todd Nakamura

More than 600 students, mentors, corporate sponsors and other tech enthusiasts descended on Princeton University the weekend of Nov. 14-16 to compete for $6,500 in prizes at the Fall 2014 HackPrinceton hackathon.

The opening ceremonies kicked off around 7 p.m. on Friday night in a packed auditorium at Dickinson Hall, with event organizers Tony Jin, Raeva Kumar and Major League Hacking commissioner Mike Swift addressing the crowd.

The team explained the event format and teased out some of the upcoming items on the agenda, such as the formation of teams, API talk sessions and an all-you-can-eat ice cream truck that would be arriving on campus later on that night. 

Jin also introduced representatives from some of the major corporate sponsors of the event, including the lead sponsor, Infosys, as well as Apple, Bloomberg, Bridgewater and D.E. Shaw.  The Infosys presentation provided a rundown of the company’s product lineup, while the Apple presentation stood out, with a demonstration of how to get access to the company’s mobile security API and an offer of iPads to every member of the team that made the best use of the Apple framework. 

Also notable during the opening ceremony was the announcement that the following hardware would be made available to all participants: Nod motion ring (courtesy of Nod), Oculus Rift DK2, Myo armband, Leap Motion, Electric Imp, Tessel, Arduino; Raspberry PiSpark CorePebble watchesNvidia Jetson TK1 (courtesy of Nvidia), and Google Cardboard.

The API sponsor session began around 9:30 p.m. in Sherrerd Hall. Among the speakers was Michael Liguori, the founder and CEO of Vognition, who offered his company’s voice control platform; and Albert Wenger, of ziggeo, who demonstrated an API for recording and playing back video in the cloud.  Other API demos were offered by Microsoft, Bloomberg, Nvidia, MongoDB, Twitter, Facebook, the Princeton Undergraduate Student Government, Comarch/IsaaCloud and Kimono Labs.
Jean Wang, writing in the Princeton Alumni Weekly, reported on a team headed by Princeton student Rachel Margulies’16. This team was stationed next to the Apple table, which was staffed with Apple engineers offering on-site support for participants.

Team member Eric Principato ’16 told Wang, “I think we’re doing a lot of learning. I think we’re doing as much learning as we are coding.” The team was working on a project to use Twitter for cloud storage, "an idea they came up with on Friday," according to Wang.

On Sunday, the pitching began. A group of Canadian students pitched GottaGo, an app that crowdsources bathroom locations.  This was that group's “first hackathon, and they chose Princeton at the urging of one of their members, Natan Weinberger, who grew up nearby," Wang wrote.

Downstairs, more projects were being judged, including Mini-Med, created by Sreela Kodali ’18, Bertha Wong ’18 and Vivian Mo ’18.  According to Wang, Mini-Med was designed as a portable health-care device to collect biomedical data and display the information online.

“We didn’t know how to make a website before this, and we’d never worked with an imp,” which is a hardware and software platform that works with the Internet of Things, Kodali told Wang. “We’ve learned a lot in the last 24-hours.” Mini-Med was the winner of the Best Electric Imp Powered Project.

At the end of the event, JusText took first place for software. Teammates Rohan Doshi ’18, Juan Sepulveda ’18, and Ruiqi Mao told observers, "Think of us as a Siri for SMS." Users text an assigned phone number with a request, and internet-connected servers text back a response.

Princeton students also won the hardware prize. Their hack, called ASLTegra, is an American Sign Language translator for the NVidia Jetson TKI, written with OpenCV. It uses letters only, and each letter can be mapped to a system call (for example, to launch Firefox).

Find all the projects at HackPrinceton here.


[Todd Nakamura is founder and organizer of the Google Development Group North Jersey]


Esther Surden is Publisher and Editor of NJTechWeekly, and a contributor to Philly Tech News. This article originally appeared in NJTechWeekly, and is republished here with her permission.


Saturday Highlights 12/6: A foggy hint of SAP's new strategy; Benioff doesn't think VCs add much value to startups


SAP Readies a Big Business Marketplace (New York Times: Bits)

Move over, iBeacons — here come mesh beacons (VentureBeat)

Salesforce.com CEO Marc Benioff Thinks Most VCs Don't Add Any Value To Startups (Business Insider)

CBS, Dish Reach Retrans Accord (Multichannel News)
After CBS briefly went dark.

Uber to Portland: We’re Here. Deal With It. (New York Times: Bits)

Misty-eyed Ray Ozzie celebrates 25th birthday of Lotus Notes by tweeting about it ... (The Register)


Comcast's little blog slip: Amusing, but of little consequence





Tom Paine



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On Wednesday, Comcast watchdog The Consumerist posted about how Comcast obviously left some editing out in the open briefy on its corporate blog, Comcast Voices, that included a comment to "nuance" the description of any overlap between Comcast and Time Warner Cable territories.

The exact sentence read:




It was an embarrassing and somewhat amusing minor error, but some Comcast critics (there is a group of them who draw dire conclusions from the tiniest things because it gets hits for them, and I don't include The Consumerist among those) were talking about this being a 'smoking gun' that would bring down the Comcast/TWC merger.

This is not a 'smoking gun'. Any overlaps (by my knowledge, not relying on Comcast's evidence) are probably tiny historical oddities. After all, the whole point is that cable operators (except for the occasional overbuilders) didn't want to enter each other's territories. It didn"t make any sense for them to do that. In some cases, there are pieces of old systems out there that are difficult to track, so it may be hard to come up with an exact number.

Comcast spokesperson Sena Fitzmaurice told me by email that Comcast "has previously disclosed in its FCC filings that there may be some de minimis overlaps between the Applicants, which FCC precedent makes clear pose no competitive issues."

It estimated that 2,800 overlapping residential or small- or medium-sized business customers, and approximately 215 business customers, in Comcast and TWC service areas. This number would be substantially reduced after the merger is completed, Comcast said. There is also some Comcast-Charter overlap and TWC-Charter overlap of similar magnitude in some zip+4 area, although its not clear whether those customers could receive services from both providers. There are also some minor overlaps (again of similar magnitude) in areas that Insight had overbuilt (supplied a competitive system) in TWC territories. TWC acquired Insight in 2011.

These are out of tens of million subscribers of these companies, collectively. There definitely are issues to consider in this merger, but eliminating (currently) overlapping competitors isn't one of them. The question of whether TWC and Comcast could be future competitors if there is no merger is a different one.


Below is the complete text of the (partial) FCC filings provided to me by Comcast:


“The Comcast-TWC Public Interest Statement noted de minimis overlaps of approximately 2,800 residential or small- or medium-sized business customers, and approximately 215 business customers, in Comcast and TWC service areas.12 As a result of the system exchanges and other changes in the Divestiture Transactions, these numbers will be further reduced. Specifically, the number of Comcast residential or small- or medium-sized business customers in these areas will decrease from approximately 2,800 to approximately 780, while the number of Comcast and TWC business services customers in these areas will decrease from approximately 215 to approximately 190. Also, there are similarly de minimis overlaps between certain Comcast systems and some of the systems acquired from Charter in the exchange.13 See Public Interest Statement at n.307; TWC Supplement Letter, June 5, 2014 (4-5).”

“While Comcast, Charter, and TWC serve distinct markets, approximately 2,800 Comcast residential or small- or medium-sized business customers are located in zip+4 areas where Charter serves residential or small-business customers (and the number of Charter customers is similar). And there are approximately 1,500 TWC residential or small- or medium-sized business customers (and 790 Charter customers) located in zip+4 areas where Charter serves residential or small-business customers. These customers are scattered across various 5-digit-zip areas, none of which has more than 260 customers, and it is quite possible that Comcast and Charter (and TWC and Charter) are not even providing overlapping services in some of these fringe areas but rather just have facilities within the same zip+4 area. The overlap for all business services (Ethernet, backhaul, wholesale, voice, etc.), if any, is likely even lower. As Comcast noted, the Commission has previously recognized that such de minimis overlaps are no cause for competitive concern. See Comcast-TWC Public Interest Statement at 127 n.307.”

As the Commission has previously recognized, such de minimis overlaps are no cause for competitive concern. See Insight-TWC Order ¶ 20 (“[W]e find here that the 2,600 Insight customers (out of approximately 643,000 customers system-wide) in the overbuild area represent a de minimis reduction in competition that is unlikely to have an adverse effect warranting divestiture or other conditions.”); AT&T Broadband-Comcast Order ¶ 153 (“Comcast and AT&T Broadband largely compete in separate geographic markets, and, to the extent their service areas overlap, we find no material increase in concentration that would raise the potential of competitive harm.”); Adelphia Order ¶¶ 81, 82 n.287 (“Since the Applicants generally operate in non-overlapping territories and do not compete with each other in the distribution markets they serve, the proposed transactions would not reduce the number of competitive alternatives available to the vast majority of households. . . . In the few areas where Time Warner and Comcast have overlapping service areas, the number of affected subscribers is very low.”).

If anyone out there is located somewhere where they currently have a choice between Comcast and TWC, please let me know.


Links 12/5/2014: SAP to 'learn from Concur'; Hopewell's ongoing battle with Verizon







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SAP Seals Concur Deal: Desperate Or Strategic? (Information Week)

SAP to ‘Learn from Concur’ on SMBs, UX
(ASUG News)

2014 Year in Review: SAP’s Development Platform Strategy (ASUG News)

Verizon's battle with N.J. town shows strong thirst for rural wireline broadband (FierceTelecom)


Gigabit DSL (with a fiber boost) to hit market next year (Ars Technica)