SAP CEO Bill McDermott: We took our lumps and made the transition to the cloud (GeekWire)

FanDuel and DraftKings Are Suing New York’s Attorney General (Re/code)

Last-Minute Booking Service HotelTonight Lays Off 20 Percent of Staff (Re/code)
First Round Capital is an investor.

Why Fidelity's markdowns could rock the startup and VC worlds (Fortune)

The Web of Deals That John Malone Weaves (New York Times)




As Linode heads towards Philly, questions remain about best financial strategy to reach its potential


Tom Paine



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In 2003, when Amazon Web Services was still just a speck on a white board in Amazon's headquarters, Chris Aker, who had been working full-time in Nashville, decided he wanted to pursue the dream many people have, to create a self-sustaining business.

He realized that virtualization was going to be the next big thing, and the availability of open source software and cheap Linux servers would provide the building blocks he needed to start a low cost web server business. He opened for business in mid-2003 and it was largely a one man operation for a time. He called it Linode, a conjunction of the words Linux and node. Although Aker had a small server business in Nashville, he went back home to the Jersey shore, near Atlantic City, in a town called Galloway and grew the business there. A key early hire was Tom Asaro, who came on board in 2006 and is now chief operating officer.


During that time in the early 2000s, many people were eager to try out the newly available technologies that were making it less expenisive to start a business, but my guess is an overwhelming majority of them did not succeed. Aker was one who did.
Christopher Aker / LinkedIn
Aker bootstrapped Linode and never accepted any outside funding. "I've been extremely fortunate. The company is privately owned, stable, and 100% debt free", he told the website Virtual Strategy in an interview in February of this year.

Move forward to 2015, and Linode has kept up with the rapid pace of technology change in the virtual server business. Revenue should just about reach $70 million this year, up from a bit over $60 million in 2014, though revenue (though not volume) growth has been reduced by price cuts in the summer of 2014 to meet its most direct competitor, DigitalOcean. Linode now employs 81.

Linode invested $45 million in 2014 (funded out of retained earnings and a credit line, by which I assume is meant more than Aker's credit card) to upgrade its infrastructure. The biggest change was probably shifting to native solid state drives (SSD) over the previously standard hard disk drives (HDDs). RAM available to all plans doubled, and network throughput to each host server increased from 2Gbps to 40Gbps.

Data Center Knowledge described Linode's transformation as going from being a Linux Virtual Private Server hoster to a fully configured Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) platform.

It also opened up Linode to be more competitive in the enterprise market, rather than being dependent mostly on gaming hosters and indy developers.

Linode continued to invest in 2015, opening a second datacenter in Asia (Singapore); launching its second datacenter in Europe (Frankfurt); switched from Xen hypervisor to KVM and experienced significant user productivity gains; and opened a new office in the New Jersey suburbs of Philadelphia.

But Amazon Web Services, its onetime would-be competitor, had exploded into something with a scale that I don't know even its own creators could have imagined. Building incredible momentum, AWS expects revenue of $7 billion this year, and is growing 81% over last year according to it most recent quarterly results.

So although AWS redefined the market with an enterprise 100x Linode's size, and the mega-public cloud providers have largely coalesced into a triumvirate consisting of Microsoft and Google in addition to AWS, there still remains a huge mid-market opportunity to pursue.

Perhaps it was a bit of a shock when a New York startup, DigitalOcean (not to be confused with Digital River, an ecommerce firm acquired earlier this year) announced in early July of this year that it had raised $83 million. Access Industries led the round with participation from existing backer Andreessen Horowitz. Though Access describes itself as "a privately held industrial group," it essentially looks like a VC firm. The valuation was estimated by sources cited by Bloomberg to be $680 million, which is a lot of money for some linux server farms.

DigitalOcean was founded in 2011 in Brooklyn by Alec Hartman, Mitch Wainer, Ben Uretsky, Moisey Uretsky, and.Jeff Carr. It had actually graduated from the TechStars incubator program in Boulder. DigitalOcean received its first institutional check in 2013, and raised its Series A of $37 million led by Andreessen Horowitz last year before raising its big Series B this year.

While there are certainly differences in IT architecture between DigitalOcean and Linode, I'm not sure thst I see any overwhelming technological edge that would constitute a sustainable proprietary advantage for either company.

“We’re not looking to steal the largest customers,” CEO Ben Uretsky said in a phone interview with Bloomberg News. “It’s really about the 20 million software developers that live in the world today and the 30 million that will be there by the end of the decade, for us to build a tool for them.”

DigitalOcean’s revenue grew 193 percent in 2014 after a 6,000 percent increase in 2013, though of course that's off a small base, and has more than 250,000 active users, the company says.

While Linode's capital investment last year was significant, it still pales in comparison to the $173 million Digital Ocean has raised since 2012. Not that cash makes all the difference, but its simply a matter of scale and having state-of-the-art technology, which are both important in this business.


So Aker faces some tough choices. By rejecting VC offers, as I'm sure he has done, he's maintained complete control of Linode, but perhaps is sacrificing the opportunity to maintain a leadership position in the middle market. Each round of capital is going to raise the stakes of the game. Linode can build a niche position, but risks falling behind the technology curve in terms of upgrades. Another option would be to wait until acquiring capacity becomes cheaper than buying, as smaller providers get squeezed. So there are options for Linode, and taking a large round of capital isn't the only one.

The other change Linode's been up to is its gradual migration from the Jersey coast north to suburban Philly and ultimately, it says, Philadelphia itself.

While working near the shore may seem idyllic (despite nearby Atlantic City's woes), Linode has found its current base in Galloway to be to restrictive in terms of conducting business and attracting and retaining talent. So they statrted a gradual process of moving towards Philadelphia. Incidentally, in the process of reearching this article I discovered that Galloway is the largest municipality in New Jersey in terms of land area.

The first stop along the way is in Haddonfield,NJ, at the Kings Hall coworking space, where it had originally hired 15 by the early summer toward a potential goal of 30. The second step is to establish a location in the city itself. A few long-time employees may remain in Galloway where they have roots.






Aker wrote a note in the comment section to a Tecnical.ly Philly article in July that he had already relocated:

I relocated myself to the Philly area a few months ago (woot!). FWIW, there has been no "throwing in" of towels or "changing of minds" - relocating Linode into the Philadelphia area has been our active plan for a while - even going back a few years. We're not just looking for any office space - we're looking for something great. Greatness takes time to find (and also finding buildings that aren't encumbered by banks and foreclosures, politics, and are really for sale. It's been a long road...). A great environment is important - life is too short. Anyway, we're looking forward to joining the tech and larger communities in Philadelphia. Hopefully we can secure a great space very soon.

I'm still not sure whether the intention is too move the entire company to the city or keep some of it in the Jersey suburbs, but company spokesperson Keith Craig told me the company was actively looking and that one area it liked was the N 3rd Street neighborhood. and I've already seen more of a Linode presence on the Philly Tech Scene.

In my conversation with Casey Smith, Linode's VP of Marketing, I got the sense that this company and its founder deeply value their independence, which enables its company culture to works the way it does. While Aker may eventually take outside money, at least the valuation and control issues should be favorable to him since he has not yet given up any equity outside the company yet.

One example of a company thats made it big without any VC money, no IPO or M&A is health database giant Epic Systems, whose revenue should exceed $2 billion this year. Though I think Linode's early needs are a good bit more capital intensive, however.


Links 11/12: S/4HANA -: Simpler ERP for all?; Liberty Media to Create Three Tracking Stocks



SalesforceIQ-Desk.com Integration Gives Small Business Enterprise Capabilities (TechCrunch)

Simpler ERP for all! Well, if you're a SAP S/4HANA customer (The Register)

SAP CFO says confident about full year and mid-term guidance (Reuters)

Adiant Acquires Philly-based Solve Media’s TYPE-IN CAPTCHA Advertising Business (Adotas)

Snapchat Isn't the Only Startup in Fidelity's Crosshairs (Fortune)

IBM Wants To Be Your Cloud Moving Company (PC Magazine)

Liberty Media to Create Three Tracking Stocks (Hollywood Reporter)
John Malone continues to show his love for tracking stocks. Now you will be able to see Atlanta Braves financials broken out separately. TruePosition, however, is not effected by this move, since the Berwyn-based company is already contained in another of Malone's tracking stocks, Liberty Broadband, which also contains Malone's stake in acquisition vehicle Charter Communications.

Liberty Interactive To Spin CommerceHub, Expedia (Multichannel News)

Hulu Service Said in Talks to Sell Stake to Time Warner (Bloomberg)


Malone's biggest mistake: Not buying Netflix (Multichannel News)


Video A 'Melting Ice Cube," But Broadband A Savior? (Investor's Business Daily)


Links 11/11: Greg Bentley answers three questions; SAP S/4HANA expands from financials to other core ERP functions






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Sure, IBM Shares Have Gained 3,400,000% But Are They a Buy Now? (Bloomberg)

3 Questions about 3D Tech: Greg Bentley, CEO of Bentley Systems (Spar Point Group)

Pneuron Finds Itself at the Center of Containers and Microservices (Nate Lentz/Osage Venture Partners Blog)
Osage invested first in Pneuron, and was joined later by Safeguard Scientifics.

Independence Blue Cross and Jefferson Health Hack to Fuel Innovative Solutions to Pressing issues in Health Care Access and Delivery
(Globe Newswire)


Comcast 'Stream TV' goes live in the Boston area (Multichannel News)

Cox inks national X1 deal with Comcast (Multichannel News)

Public hearing set for Comcast deal with city (Phily.com)


DraftKings, FanDuel Go to War with Eric Schneiderman (Fortune)

SAP S/4HANA expands from financials to other core ERP functions (TechTarget)

Four Arguments in Favor of Analytics in the Cloud (ASUG News)


Links 11/10: Comcast resets 200,000 compromised email passwords; NY Attorney General cracks down on Fantasy Sports betting







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Enterprise Software Co Atlassian Files IPO On Sales Of $320M, Net Income Of $6.8M In 2015 (TechCrunch)

Attorney General Tells Daily Fantasy Sports to Stop Taking Bets in New York (NY Times)


Dell’s EMC Deal Could Fall Apart on Tax Rule (Re/code)

Verizon Denies Report It Is Selling Enterprise Business (But It Also Said It Wasn’t Buying AOL) (Re/code)

Verizon won't need more capital to build FiOS customer base (FierceTelecom)


Comcast Resets 200,000 Compromised Email Passwords, But Questions Remain (Information Week)


SAP combines info about full-time staff with external workers in SuccessFactors (FierceCIO)

The quest for growth: Cherry-Hill based AmeriQuest files for a $75 million IPO. (Renaissance Capital)

Rackspace Rises On Q3 Beat; Hybrid Cloud 'Not Dead' (Investor's Business Daily)

Square’s S-1: Of Ratchets And Unicorn Valuations (TechCrunch)


Life among the unicorns in their native habitat



Tom Paine



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The biggest layoff news in Pennsylvania this month came from Erie, where GE Transportation announced it would be laying off about 1500 of 4500 blue collar workers. The cuts had been expected due to a slow down in locomotive orders; in fact, one GE official says the cuts are not as bad as earlier expected. Nonetheless, considerable hardship is expected at the far end of the state.

Less of these / Source: GE website

Jet.com, Marc Lore's somewhat risky anti-Amazon startup, appears to have raised $500 million at a $1 billion pre-money valuation led by Fidelity, according to latest reports (though I'm not sure I've seen a confirmation that the round had closed.) But a Wall Street Journal report, citing a look at the startup's financials, said it was rapidly running short on cash and racing to close the round. Who allowed the Journal reporter to see so much of Jet's financials, and why, is a good question.

The Hoboken-based online retailer dropped its $50 upfront fee requirement in October, and I can only imagine what its breakeven projections might be now. Penn-related MentorTech Ventures, which made out well when Lore's previous venture, Quidsi, sold to Amazon, has a small seat on this ride too, although I would expect it to be a long and bumpy one. But MentorTech doesn't have much to lose, I would guess.

Jet.com did say last week that it had passed the one million customer mark, and a source told Fortune that Jet.com’s total sales reached $20 million in September, and it beat its target for October by 11 percent, selling $33.2 million worth of items.

Alibaba, meanwhile, reportedly plans to invest $80 million in ecommerce retailer Boxed, which is sometimes described as a competitor to Jet. There is certainly some overlap betwwen the two, but Boxed concentrates on larger, bulky grocery store-type items. New York-based Boxed had already raised $30 million from investors including First Round Capital. Alibaba was already an investor in Jet.com.

What about the ongoing FanDuel/DraftKings saga? Well, FanDuel CEO Nigel Eccles opened up in an interview with Bloomberg.

He admitted that people saw the same advertising for too long, and got sick of it. For now, he saw less ads, more regulation, no merger (with DraftKings), and no IPO for the forseeable future. Comcast Ventures owns a stake in FanDuel.

The Telegraph (UK) cites DropBox as its poster child for an overvalued unicorn. DropBox, which was privately valued at $10 billion 2 years ago, hasn't done a great deal to live up to that valuation, the Telegraph implies, asserting that parts of its product line have been commodizised.

And then there's Square, Jack Dorsey's other company and also in First Round Capital's portfolio. The payment processsing startup set its preliminary IPO target at a valuation of around $4 billion, well short of its last private valuation of $6 billion.

But to Marc Andreessen, who's not an investor in Square, this pullback is an indication that there's no tech bubble, since in real tech bubbles of the past the excesses of the private markets were eagerly lapped up by the public markets.


Link 11/9: SAP HANA Must Be Hurting Oracle; but bring bug spray






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Salesforce Volume Deals Add New Twist to an Old Story
(Fortune)

Oracle's Amazon-killer might really be 6 months away (Business Insider)

SAP HANA Must Be Hurting Oracle (SAP Hana Blog)

Dangerous bugs leave open doors to SAP HANA systems (Computerworld)


Wizards, Capitals owner to get equity stake in Comcast SportsNet Mid-Atlantic (Baltimore Businsss Journal)


phillytechnews bytes 11/8






Philly Tech People News 11/8/2015: Eatroff joins Comcast as EVP, Global Corporate Development and Strategy.







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Robert L. Eatroff has joined Comcast Corporation as Executive Vice President, Global Corporate Development and Strategy.
He will join Comcast in January 2016 from Morgan Stanley in New York where he was Managing Director and Head of Mergers & Acquisitions for the Americas. He will report to Michael J. Cavanagh, Senior Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Comcast Corporation.

Mr. Eatroff will succeed Alexander D. Evans who will join Michael J. Angelakis, former Chief Financial Officer of Comcast, in January 2016 at the new strategic company Mr. Angelakis formed in partnership with Comcast that will focus on investing in and operating growth-oriented companies. He also succeeds Bob Pick, Senior Vice President of Corporate Development, who is retiring at year-end and will consult for the company on special projects.

Mr. Eatroff earned his MBA in Finance from Columbia Business School and holds a BS in Electrical Engineering from Bucknell University. He will be relocating from New York City to Philadelphia.

The word "Global" in Eatroff's title probably has particular significance.



Accolade, the Plymouth Meeting-based corporate health services firm, announced that Rajeev Singh has joined the company as chief executive officer and member of the company's Board of Directors. Singh most recently was co-founder, President & COO of Concur prior to its acquisition by SAP last year for $8.3 billion. Also, two other former Concur execs will join the company; Michael Hilton, another Concur co-founder, and Rob Cavanaugh will both be in senior operating positions. Along with their additions a dual headquarters structure will be established with a Seattle headquarters to complement the one in the Philadelphia area.



Quality Systems, Inc. (NASDAQ: QSII), announced this week the election of Jeffrey H. Margolis as the independent chairman of the board of directors, effective immediately. Margolis succeeds Sheldon Razin, 77, founder, who has served as the chairman of the board since the Company’s inception in 1974.

Following his decision to retire as chairman, Razin will continue to serve on the board as chairman emeritus. Since founding Quality Systems more than 40 years ago, Razin has led the Company to its industry leadership position in the continually evolving healthcare information technology sector, with an installed user base that spans 85,000 providers across 4,000 clients.

Quality Systems' principal business is Horsham-based NextGen Healthcare.



Jim Brady, a former sports and executive editor at WashingtonPost.com and currently the CEO of Spirited Media, is the new public editor at ESPN.

Brady will start on Nov. 15 and serve for 18 months in the role, which was formerly called the ombudsman. Brady will be charged with providing "independent examination, critique and analysis of ESPN's programming and news coverage on television, digital, print, audio and other media," ESPN said in a statement.

Brady has more than 20 years of experience in digital and print news at AOL, the Washington Post, Digital First Media (where he served as editor-in-chief) and currently at Spirited Media, which runs the mobile news platform Billy Penn in Philadelphia.


CoreDial, LLC, a leading cloud communications software and services provider, announced that Caitlin Clark-Zigmond has joined the company as Vice President of Product Management for Unified Communications as a Service (UCaaS).

Ms. Clark-Zigmond comes to CoreDial from Comcast Business, where she served as Senior Director of Product Management since 2013. Her core focus, among other responsibilities, was managing advanced voice solutions, specifically Comcast’s Business VoiceEdge platform. She also previously worked for companies such as unified communications wholesaler, New Global Telecom (NGT), and enterprise video provider, Level3. She now joins CoreDial with over 20 years of experience in the telecom and unified communications industries.



The Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania announced Thursday Chris Satullo will be its new professional in residence for the 2015-16 spring semester.

Satullo was the former WHYY executive who was reportedly forced out recently over policy disagreements.






Sunday Highlights: Recounting what happened to GSI Commerce; Comcast responds to cap criticisms






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How Campbell is taking cues from tech to reorganize internally (Digiday)

Trade In, Trade Up (Joseph DiStefano / Philadelphia Inquirer)
On remnants of Ebay Enterprise / GSI Commerce. Amazing how closely Rubin's account of what happened with GSI Commerce and Ebay, as retold by DiStefano, is in sync with my account here written before the IMPACT event, though I've never discussed the matter with Rubin or any of his associates.

Comcast says it publicly outlined its usage-based pricing philosophy back in 2010 (FierceCable)


In the cloud, beware the sinking ships (David Linthicum/Infoworld)

The cloud wars explained: Why nobody can catch up with Amazon (Business Insider)


QVC: Usual pattern; Low overall US Growth, but higher mobile & web growth; Amazon's possible entry threatens status quo

Tom Paine



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QVC Group (QVCA) reported its results for the 3rd quarter 2015 on this past Wednesday.

QVCA (NASDAQ: QVCA) consists of West Chester-based QVC's worldwide businesses, about 38% of HSN, and 22% of the equity in TripAdvisor.

QVC US revenue increased 4% to $1.4 billion in the third quarter, while operating income grew 5%. QVC.com revenue (originating from the website) as a percent of total US revenue increased to 48%; QVC US mobile penetration accounted for 52% of QVC.com orders. Overall, QVC's US web sales grew 15%. The acquisition of Zulily closed at the completion of the quarter, so its results were not included in QVCA results.

However, due to unfavorable cuurency fluctuation, according to QVCA, QVC's consolidated worldwide revenue decreased 1% in the third quarter to $2.0 billion. International revenue decreased 10%.

While the growth in ecommerce and mobile transactions is important and necessary, some percentage of those orders are simply replacing busineess from existing customers rather than coming from new customers. Even if it were all new revenues, it would take quite some time before QVC might emerge as a growth company given the continued detorioration of its older (mostly telephonic) orders base.

"There's been no growth in the number of consumers shopping by television in three years. The majority of their business is repeat customers, but the number of new viewers isn't growing," said Britt Beemer, chairman and CEO of America's Research Group, a retail consulting agency, as quoted by the Tampa Bay Times.


Entrance to QVC headquarters /
Pennsylvania Center
for the Book)



But QVC has been on a well-orchestrated PR campaign recently, seemingly aimed more at the financial community. Besides the Zulily acquisition, they've also been touting a new QVC app on Apple TV , and there was also a well-timed feature in the Washington Post, among other articles.



But the news that sent the closely knit home shopping industry into overdrive was a well-substantiated report by Seattle-based GeekWire posted on October 28 outlining Amazon's plans to enter the market. Obviously Amazon sees TV shopping as one outlet among numerous ecommerce buying possibilities, but its unclear whether Amazon could bring either the technology or showmanship need to increase TV shopping's percentage of the overall ecommerce spend.

There has even been speculation, far-fetched at this point, that Amazon may eventually try to acquire QVC.

Despite its slow growth, QVC has been very good at generating cash flow. That has given it a current market valuation in excess of $19 billion. Actually, QVCA was created as one of Liberty founder & Chairman John Malone's tracking stocks, which help investors focus on a company or group of companies with distinct characteristics, and maybe gives management more freedom to manuever.

One thing executives emphasized in the earnings call - yes, QVCA has its own earnings call now (transcript courtesy of Seeking Alpha) - is the work its put into making its software more responsive and personalized. Personalization often refers to Monetate, though QVC has been working with Monetate for several years now.