Links 2/12: Jet.com gets $590 million valuation before selling anything; LinkedIn cracks down further on API access



Jet.com secures a $600M valuation — before it’s even launched a site (VentureBeat)
Founded by the Wharton grad who founded Quidsi (Diapers.com), which was bought by Amazon. Penn-related MentorTech Ventures has a (small) stake in Jet.com, as it did in Quidsi.

Amazon challenger Jet is worth $590 million... sort of (Fortune)

Billionaire John Malone buys big stake in Lionsgate; Starz may benefit (LA Times)

Gulfstream a Memory, Apotheker Hauls His Bag to Tech Startups (Bloomberg)

hybris takes charge of front-facing SAP assets – launches marketing tool to fill gaps (Diginomica)

Marketo, Sprinklr Partner with Hybris on Marketing Solution (CRM Magazine)


Dropbox Replaces Insider CFO With Former Motorola Executive (Re/code)
Dropbox' new CFO was CFO at Adelphia, the Pennsylvania-based cable company, after it imploded due to an accounting scandal. Comcast later picked up part of it.

LinkedIn takes aim at developers with plans to lock down most of its APIs (The Next Web)


To save on IT outsourcing, Minneapolis takes over help desk
(Minneapolis Star-Tribune)
Dumping Unisys.

Make Enterprise Software People Actually Love
(Harvard Business Review)


Swiss firm acquires Malvern's Akcelerant for $50 million plus potential earnout

Tom Paine



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Swiss financial software firm Temenos Group AG has acquired Malvern-based financial software provider Akcelerant. The price is $50 million plus a $5 million potential earnout.

Akcelerant's website carries the tag line "not just for collections any more," reflecting its roots. It says it now has a full set of modules covering the entire financial services customer relationship management function. Its primary market is the credit union space.
Jay Mossman / LinkedIn 

Jay Mossman, who founded Akcelerant in 2000, is a veteran Philadelphia area entrepreneur, having run another financial services software firm, Premier Solutions (sold to SunGard), earlier in the 90s. His earlier experience was mostly in technology with financial services companies.

Akcelerent has 130 employees and is expected to achieve revenue of $15 million this year, and be at breakeven, Temenos says.

Temenos said in a statement that "the acquisition is key to Temenos’ North America growth strategy, especially within the US. It follows the 2013 acquisition of Trinovus, a software-as-a-service technology provider, and creation of the Temenos USA division. The purchase of Akcelerant will also give Temenos additional scale and presence in the region and enable it to offer a broader portfolio of products to new and existing customers."

Mossman and his current management team will remain in place.


Links 2/11/15: Decline and fall of NBC News?; Conshy's Gladstone Analytics gets partner, investment







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Skies darken over Comcast merger (The Hill)

The decline and fall of NBC News(Politico)

Tech Dealmakers See Media Content, Chips Driving M&A (Bloomberg)

The Daily Startup: AppDirect Raises $50M to Distribute Cloud-Based Software (Wall Street Journal: Venture Capital
Dispatch)



Aequitas Capital Partners with [Conshohocken-based] Gladstone Analytics (PR Newswire)
Aequitas Capital says it "has made an investment in and established a partnership" with Gladstone Analytics.

Cerner closes 2014 with big revenue, earnings gains (Modern Healthcare)

Fieldglass Achieves Significant Growth In 2014, Accelerates Strategic Initiatives (PR Newswire)
Fieldglass was acquired by SAP last year.

S/4 HANA: It’s not R/3, and it’s not 1992 either (part II) (Joshua Greenbaum/EA Consult)

Salesforce.com's Revamped Partner Program: New Tier Calculations, Training, Annual Fee (CRN)

IBM sues Priceline over patents, because Prodigy was cool (Ars Technica)

New Set-Tops for Comcast, Charter (Light Reading)

Comcast revamps Xfinity stores to improve customer experience (Philadelphia Inquirer)


MSG, Cablevision chief Dolan rips Knicks fan for complaining in email



Tom Paine



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James Dolan/
Cablevision website
I had to wait and make sure that James Dolan, CEO of Cablevision Systems and Executive Chairman of MSG (Garden, Knicks, Rangers) actually wrote the email attributed to him in response to the fairly polite complaint of a long suffering Knicks fan. Deadspin first broke the story on Sunday. MSG confirmed that Dolan sent the emsil.

Dolan's response, dated January 23 and sent to retired computer salesman Irving Bierman, read:

"You are a sad person. Why would anybody write such a hateful letter. I am.just guessing but ill bet your life is a mess and you are a hateful mess. What have you done that anyone would consider positive or nice. I am betting nothing. In fact ill bet you are negative force in everyone who comes in contact with you. You most likely have made your family miserable. Alcoholic maybe. I just celebrated my 21 year anniversary of sobriety. You should try it. Maybe it will help you become a person that folks would like to have around. In the mean while start rooting.for the Nets because the Knicks dont want you."


The NBA has indicated it has no plans to discipline Dolan.

Despite the long, sad recent history of the Knicks (I think Jeremy Lin was the only bright spot, and they let him go), MSG has done well financially, and the value of its stock has more than tripled in the five years since it was spun off from Cablevision. And of course, the Rangers actually made it to the Stanley Cup finals last year. And MSG is considering a plan to break up its operations.

Last year, Dolan passed on the  title of President at Cablevision to another while remaining CEO, and his wife Kristin, from who he was separated at last report, became COO. Kristin Dolan is a long-time executive at the company.

When everybody started talking merger in the cable industry last year, there were some murmurs that Cablevision could be a seller at the right price. The most obvious buyer would be Comcast if it can complete the Time Warner Cable deal, since Cablevision would round out its New York metro footprint. But that would be tough to get past the regulators.

I'm sure Dolan won't need a job, but he might fit right in with Comcast customer service.


Update 2/14: Dolan addressed
the incident at a team charity event
yesterday, the New York Post reported.

"I knew I shouldn’t have done that, but I did it anyway because it made me angry — it was a personal, hateful attack. Basically it’s over and we got All-Star Weekend. I’d love it if we all just focused on that."


Links 2/10/2015: Brian Williams suspended 6 months without pay; SevOne reports 63% growth in 2014







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Brian Williams Suspended From NBC for 6 Months Without Pay (NY Times)

Making sense of the cloud ERP conundrum (Denn Howlett/Diginomica)

SAP’s Hybris launches ‘contextual marketing platform’ to fix what is ‘broken’ (VentureBeat)

Hitachi to Buy Pentaho to Bolster Data-Analysis Software Tools (Bloomberg)

10 In-Memory Database Options Power Speedy Performance
(Information Week)

SevOne Achieves 15th Quarter of Record-Breaking Revenue and Growth Results (Marketwire)

Why private, late-stage valuations are skyrocketing (Fortune)



Comcast-Time Warner Deal Chances Improve With Tighter Web Rules (Bloomberg)

Republican Complaints About FCC Net Neutrality Plan Grow (Re/code)

40 Under 40 (Wharton Magazine)



Bentley acquisition allows 3D modelling direct from digital photographs (Infrastructure Intelligence)

eBay Bans One of Its Own Divisions From Selling Ads on eBay (Re/code)


The Real Opportunity for Cloud in the Enterprise
(George Krautzel/MissionOG)


Links 2/9/2015: Safeguard, Merck innovation unit lead $14 million round in Denver healthcare software vendor






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Tim Wu on the FCC’s net neutrality proposal: ‘The middle of the road is for roadkill’ (Washington Post)

Is Google Ready to Go to War With Wireless Carriers? (Ad Age)


Sling TV launches today with AMC, new sports channels available for $5 more (Ars Technica)

Looks like Apple wears the pants in this IBM pact (Gigaom)

Ed Sabol, founder of NFL Films, dies at age of 98 (NFL.com)
Built South Jersey empire.


Acquisition boosts Maryland company's share of global email traffic to near 30 percent (Washington Business Journal)
Philadelphia-based LLR Partners is a major investor in Message Systems.

Aventura Raises $14 Million Series C Financing Co-Led by Safeguard Scientifics and Merck GHIF (Marketwire)
Denver-based company provides healthcare workflow optimization software solutions.

Edison Partners – Fuels Growth For Next Generation Startup Companies
(Superb Crew)

Aerva Software Powers Philly's First Digital Billboard for Advertising (Digital Signage Connection)

NavPort Launches Mobile App Providing Access to Oil and Gas Industry Data and Information (Business Wire)
NavPort is based in Plymouth Meeting.

Writing Off the Knicks (Wall Street Journal)




Comcast-Time Warner Cable Deal Still Up in the Air a Year Later (New York Times: DealBook)


Philly Tech News Quotes & Tweets 2/9/2015: Hasso Plattner, Frank Eliason (ex-Comcast customer care), Verizon CEO McAdam & more






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"It seems to me to be an excessive approach," he said, noting that Charter has never run into any net neutrality problems with Internet video providers. "I think we have a heavy-handed regulatory solution to a problem that doesn't exist. And while it doesn't change anything in any way, it's like someone having a bazooka pointed at you; that's uncomfortable."
-Charter CEO Tom Rutledge, as quoted by Light Reading.




“Who can compare with Fidelity? I didn't tell them at the time, but they were a clear winner.”
-Edmond Walters, founder and CEO of Conshohocken-based eMoney Advisor, on agreeing to being acquired by Fidelity Investments, after he said his company was approached by more than 40 suitors.







SAP Chairman Hasso Plattner: “If this doesn’t work, we’re dead. Flat-out dead. It’s that simple.”
as quoted by Re/code, at the introduction of SAP's new core business suite on Hana.





"I am most disappointed in these situations because I know and love many people at Comcast. It should not reflect on them, but it ultimately does. To me, Comcast is a Philadelphia icon. I want to see them experience continued growth, and I wish success for everyone who works there. They have the opportunity to be a pillar of the community, but they are struggling to truly reflect the values of Philadelphia."
-Frank Eliason, the original @ComcastCares, in a piece on LinkedIn.




Philly Tech People News 2/8/2015: Luukko to run Florida Panthers; New Unisys CEO Calls For Stronger Software Solutions, Vertical Focus








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Peter Luukko to be named Florida Panthers executive chairman (CSN Philly)

Winiarski Joins NBCU as Exec VP in Ad Sales (Broadcasting & Cable)

New Unisys CEO Calls For Stronger Software Solutions, Vertical Focus (CRN)


Janney Capital Markets hire new analysts to work outside Philadelphia (Philly.com: Philly Deals)

Brian Sweeney to Become Chief Financial Officer of Cablevision (Business Wire)


Weidenhammer Names Lewis Vice President (Marketwire)


Tableau, chasing exploding demand, catches up to Radnor's Qlik in revenue (Updated 2/12 for QLIK earnings)



Tom Paine



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Seattle-based Tableau, the data visualization software vendor, continues to grow at an amazing pace. Its fourth quarter revenue, announced Wednesday, grew 75% to $142.9 million. It also reported net income of $20.7 million.

Tableau, founded in 2003, continued to outpace its longer-established rival, Radnor-base Qlik Technologies. In fact, Tableau's revenue surpassed that of Qlik's latest reported quarter, Q3 2014, of $131.2 million. Qlik reports its full year 2014 results on February 12. While Tableau continues growing at 70-90%, Qlik has been growing in the mid-20s for the past couple of years, and has historically been nominally profitable at best. While there is no question about the value of Qlik's products and 20% plus growth isn't mince meat, it seems that Tableau has struck a broader vein in the market for now.

Tableau Visualization

The two came at the business intelligence space from different angles. Tableau emphasized data visualization, and tools that non-technical end users could easily work with (it produces all sorts of beautiful graphs and charts). Qlik has emphasized a more rigorous data model that typically requires more acquired skills, and perhaps produces better analyses as a result.

In November, Qlik introduced Qlik Sense, its self-service tool aimed at the data visualization market, while maintaining its QlikView platform for developing more sophisticated dashboard applications. The introduction was well received, and maybe we will see some indication of how it is doing next week.

Qlik went public in 2010 and has a market capitalization of about $2.7 billion. Tableau went public in 2013 and has a market cap of $6.7 billion.

While Qlik originated in Sweeden and has long gotten much of its revenue from outside the Americas, Tableau built its early revenue base almost entirely in the US and is just now seeing significant growth internationally, although that area still accounts for less than a quarter of its revenue.

Tableau and Qlik's closest pure play competitors in the BI space are probably TIBCO's Spotfire, MicroStrategy and Birst. Other legacy vendors, including SAP and Microsoft, are trying to catch up with the next-generation products, and Salesforce.com introduced its analytics product, Wave, at last year's Dreamforce.

Update 2/12: Qlik announced its 4th quarter and full year 2014 results this afternoon. Revenue for the quarter beat expectations, but was only up 13% from a year ago (at $182.8 million), although Qlik said it increased 20% on a constant currency basis. For the year, revenue was $556.8 million, up 18%, with a GAAP net loss of $24.6 million.

Lars Björk, Chief Executive Officer of Qlik, stated in the earnings release, "We believe we are well positioned entering 2015 as our dual product strategy, QlikView for guided analytics and Qlik Sense for self-service BI, opens up even more opportunity for us to fulfill companies’ complete BI requirements." However guidance for the first quarter was well below consensus expectations, and Qlik's full year revenue forecast for 2015 was for growth of between 10 and 12%.

Diginomics's Denn Howlett provides some more details from Qlik's earnings call. Management does not expect a significant contribution from its new QlikSense self-discovery platform in the first half of 2015. Its more in the pipeline building stage.

Update 2/13: Qlik announced the acquisition of Vizubi and its NPrinting product line, with its "market-leading report generation, distribution, and scheduling application for QlikView". The company, which has 17 employees on LinkedIn (many in Italy), has been a Qlik partner since 2013.


Saturday Highlights: Williams taking leave from NBC Nightly News-for now



Brian Williams pulls himself off ‘NBC Nightly News’—for now (Capitol New York)

IPO Calendar: Health Data Firm Inovalon Among 11 IPOs (Investor's Business Daily)

Motorola Solutions to Explore Sale of 87-Year-Old Company (Bloomberg)

Game Thinking at Comcast (ATD Blog)