Philly Tech People News 7/13/2014








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EXTOL International Names Peter Harper Vice President, Sales (PR Newswire)


InterDigital Appoints Industry Veteran Marie MacNichol as Chief Licensing Counsel and Chief Licensing Officer
(Globe Newswire)

Life Sciences Industry Veteran Paul Sekhri Joins Veeva Board of Directors (Business Wire)

Acurian Further Strengthens Patient Recruitment Efforts in Europe with Hiring of Paul Mitchel
Business Wire)

Digital First Media Announces the Appointment of Steven B. Rossi as President (Marketwire)

Lehigh University names 1984 graduate as interim president (Express-Times)






Philadelphia Technology Park acquired by St. Louis firm




Tom Paine



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Philadelphia Technolology Park / via PTP website


St.Louis-based TierPoint LLC, following its recent acquisition and recapitalization by a new ownership group, late last month announced it had acquired the 25,700 square foot Philadelphia Technology Park, which is located at the Navy Yard. It will be rebranded under the TierPoint name.

It brings to seven the number of centers owned and operated by TierPoint, the others being in Dallas, Oklahoma City, Tulsa, Spokane, Seattle and Baltimore. The smaller Baltimore unit was owned by the same company that owned the Philadelphia facility before this most recent transaction, Enterprise Technology Parks, until it was acquired by TierPoint predecessor Cequel Data Centers last year.

Philadelphia Technology Park was originally planned to support data center operations of the Philadelphia Stock Exchange (PHLX), but after the PHLX was acquired by the NASDAQ in 2008 the facility was repositioned for other uses in the local market. I've had difficulty in tracing the precise ownership structure of the prior owner (Enterprise Technology Parks), but a article in Web Host Industry Review at the time of the park's opening in 2010 said "PTP has worked closely with the PIDC (Philadelphia Industrial Development Corporation) on this expansion into the local marketplace."

Liberty Property Trust remains owner of the physical building, the Inquirer reported.


TierPoint looks at areas that are relatively underserved but growing, said TierPoint CFO Andy Stewart in an interview with Philly Tech News. The Philadelphia market is a good example of that, nestled between the highly served New York/Northern NJ and DC/Northern VA markets.

TierPoint looks to expand within the markets it locates in, Stewart says. While there is certainly plenty of room to grow by optimizing the configuration and utilization of the Navy Yard site, Stewart suggests that TierPoint may ultimately chose to expand in the area by acquiring other sites, rather than physically expanding at the Navy Yard site.

While SunGard Availability Services is a large player in the Philadelphia market in terms of colocation, managed services and disaster recovery, Stewart sees TierPoint's role more as a retail provider to the midmarket, competing against firms such as Xand.

TierPoint offers colocation, cloud and managed services. Cloud services can be public, private, or a combination thereof, and cloud offerings include production, disaster recovery, and backup cloud. TierPoint's cloud platform is built around technologies from vendors such as VMware, Dell, and Fortinet.

Terms of the acquisition of TierPoint LLC last month by a group of investors were not disclosed. Members of the investor group include Jerry Kent, founder of Charter
Communications and presently CEO of the seventh largest cable provider, Suddenlink Communications, and the powerful Stephens Group of Arkansas.

The Philadelphia Technology Park originally cost $25 million to build. The terms of its recent sale were also not disclosed.




Tesla Gets OK to Open Pa. Dealerships (CSN Philly)

Comcast stock treads water during tough FCC merger review (Philadelphia Inquirer)





Germany’s 12th Man at the World Cup: Big Data (Wall Street Journal: CIO Journal)

Google, Canon, Dropbox and Others Pool Patents to Ward Off Trolls (Re/code)

The FCC is overhauling how it subsidizes WiFi for schools and libraries (Washington Post)

Why Salesforce needed to buy RelateIQ (VentureBeat Guest Post)



Links 7/10/2014: Arris (& its former Motorola Home unit) have big role to play in changing TV tech









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Arris Group Plays Big Role In TV's Next Revolution (Investor's Business Daily)

Complaints About Comcast-Time Warner Cable Deal Now Being Accepted
(Re/code)

As Moguls Descend on Sun Valley, Let the Deal-Making Commence (Wall Street Journal: Blogs)

Verizon Wireless adds more than 1.4 million contract customers (CNET)

It's a barnyard brawl between Comcast and RFD-TV (Philadelphia Inquirer)


Multiplatform TV: Comcast/TWC ‘Tipping Point’ For Advanced Ads (Broadcasting & Cable)


Kent Goldman’s New Seed-Stage Fund Is A Partnership Where Founders Share In The Upside
(TechCrunch)
Kent Goldman left First Round Capital as a Partner earlier this year.

Syapse Raises $10 Million Series B Financing Led by Safeguard Scientifics (Globe Newswire)

Gas attack: U of Delaware kills $1 billion data center/power plant (Philly.com: Philly Deals)

Giant Creative/Strategy Opens Philadelphia Office
(Business Wire)


Amazon Goes After Box, Dropbox And Huddle, Launches Zocalo For Secure Enterprise Storage (TechCrunch)








Cloud vendor RackWare, with area presence, gets more funding from investors including Osage Venture Partners




Tom Paine



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RackWare (not to be confused with the much larger RackSpace), which helps companies manage their data operations and scale them as needed using both public and private clouds, has raised $2.3 million including a return investment from Bala Cynwyd-based Osage Venture Partners, bringing its total funding to date to more than $7 million.

New and expanded partnerships over the past six months with major industry players SoftLayer, CenturyLink, and Peer1 contributed to RackWare’s growth, RackWare said in a statement. The company said its achieved three consecutive quarters of record growth and a 75 percent gain in new customers.

Although last year RackWare, headquartered in Santa Clara, had indicated Wayne (Pa) was a key location for it, chief executive officer and co-founder Sash Sunkara told me by email "we still have an office in the area - Collegeville."






Links 7/9/2014: Bell Labs pushes 10Gbps over copper telephone lines








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Bell Labs pushes 10Gbps over copper telephone lines (Ars Technica)

Level 3 Launches Channel Origination Platform (Multichannel News)

Comcast, TiVo Complete VOD Connection (Multichannel News)

Aereo Lays Out New Survival Strategy in Letter to Judge (Hollywood Reporter)


Dish tells FCC to block Comcast-Time Warner Cable deal (LA Times)

White House pulls plug on controversial Patent Office nominee after tech sector backlash (Gigaom)


PayPal Makes Good On Its Braintree Acquisition With Launch Of New Developer Tools, The Braintree “v.zero SDK”
(TechCrunch)
Braintree says Venmo now doing over $1 billion in annual volume, growing 60% year over year.

Microsoft debuts cloud storage service for enterprises (PC World)

Microsoft to strike back at Salesforce.com with CRM cloud for government (Computerworld)



Penn-founded Yodle files for IPO to raise about $75 million






Tom Paine



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Local business advertising website Yodle filed today for an IPO to raise about $75 million in an initial public offering (IPO). It plans to list its shares under the ticker symbol "YO" (yes, true).

Founded in 2005 and originally named "NatPal", its founders included Penn grads Nathaniel Stevens and Ben Rubinstein. A 2007 Knowledge@Wharton article describes how the venture got off the ground, with the help of the Wharton Venture Initiation Program and a Wharton professor.

Now based in New York, Yodle reported a 30 percent jump in revenue to $45.7 million for the three months ended March 31, and a loss of $5.9 million. Competitors include Yelp, Angie's List and others. Investors include Draper Fisher Jurvetson, Bessemer Venture Partners and Jafco Technology Partners. Penn-related MentorTech Ventures is also an investor.




Sun Valley: 5 Possible Deals Likely to Be Discussed (Hollywood Reporter)

Moguls Set To Converge on Sun Valley (Multichannel News)

Comcast race discrimination suit certified as class action
(Chicago Tribune)

Adidas taps MicroStrategy, SAP HANA for big data insights on customers (Business Cloud News)

Oracle Transition To Cloud Could Take Three Years (Investor's
Business Daily)



Report: Edison Ventures to begin raising 8th fund for $250 million





Tom Paine



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Lawrenceville, NJ-based Edison Ventures, which has been busy lately, is planning to begin raising its eighth fund for about $250 million later this year, according to Dow Jones VentureWire (as reported by the Washington Business Journal).

Edison closed on its seventh fund for $250 million in 2012. At the time, the firm emphasized its intention to make considerable investments in the Philadelphia area, although it has not really done so. In fact, Edison's investment activity in the Philly area has been spotty going back several years before that, though it has no particular obligation to invest here as far as I know.

Instead, more of its investments have gone to New York and North Jersey, New England, the Washington DC area, and the midwest. My sense is that they have scaled into larger investment positions than perhaps they can find easily in the Philadelphia area in the sectors they are most interested in (SaaS, Big Data, FinTech).