Category: Internet

  • Sony and Google Plan ‘Internet TV’

    Bruce V. Bigelow wrote:

    Japan’s Sony Corp (NYSE: SNE), today unveiled plans to launch a Sony Internet TV this Fall that will rely on Google’s open-source Android OS platform. Sony, which announced the move with Intel and Logitech at Google I/O in San Francisco, says the new Internet TV embodies a new generation that not only offers new forms of TV viewing through unprecedented Internet integration, and is also able to “evolve” by downloading apps. Sony and Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) also announced they have formed a strategic alliance “to provide a range of new and rich entertainment experiences.” Sony Electronics’ North American headquarters is in San Diego.

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  • Un futuro de aplicaciones descargables para los Audi

    audi-a8-navegacion.jpg

    Así como en la época actual podemos descargar parches, aplicaciones y mejoras para nuestros ordenadores y portátiles, en el futuro se podrían descargar las mismas utilidades, pero para los coches. Y la primera novedad viene de la mano de Audi, que ha anunciado dicha posibilidad, antes de que termine esta década.

    De acuerdo a Peter Schwarzenbauer, jefe de comercialización y ventas de Audi, la posibilidad no muy lejana de que casi todos los coches cuenten con conexión propia a Internet, hará las cosas más fáciles para la descarga de aplicaciones especiales que mejoren las características de tu coche. Para ello, los vehículos tendrían que estar dotados de fábrica con el hardware apropiado para que se pueda activar en el momento oportuno, con la descarga de las aplicaciones.

    Uno de los ejemplos que Schwarzenbauer mencionó, sería la descarga de la característica de asientos calefactables, o de nuevas características que mejoren el navegador, o mejoras para el sistema de sonido, por ejemplo. También sería de uso por los concesionarios quienes podrían seleccionar y descargar todos los opcionales del coche al momento de la compra.

    Si estas descargas se generalizan, el paso inmediato es evidente: mejoras “no oficiales” en la gestión del motor, más entrega de potencia, desbloqueo de limitadores electrónicos y consumos más eficientes aún que los homologados de fábrica, entre otras cosas.

    Vía | Autocar



  • InsideTrip Goes Mainstream, Rates Itinerary Quality, Provides Broad Lessons in Online Travel

    InsideTrip
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Think about the last time you flew anywhere. How would you rate the overall experience? Unless you’re a bird, there were probably things that could have been a lot better—legroom, connection time, delays, quality of service, and so on. In fact, the general level of misery in air travel feels like it’s always going up.

    But when you made your last travel reservation, your decision was probably based on price more than any other factor, with connections and seat assignments as secondary considerations. The question is, would you want more information about the flights themselves before you book them, if it were available?

    That’s what entrepreneur Dave Pelter is currently exploring with his Seattle-based online travel startup, InsideTrip. The company rates each flight based on 12 metrics, such as the age and type of plane, baggage handling record, on-time record, and how crowded it is. For Pelter, it all boils down to one thing: “Do people care about quality?” he asks.

    InsideTrip is part of a new wave of technologies and business models in online travel. It’s not too surprising that Seattle would be a leader in the sector, since this is the backyard of Expedia (which includes TripAdvisor and SeatGuru), Farecast (now part of Microsoft’s Bing Travel), and numerous smaller companies like Yapta and Raveable. Maybe it’s because of the combination of a strong tech community and lousy weather.

    Indeed, several travel startups have been bubbling up around town lately. The newest ones aren’t talking publicly yet about what they’re up to. But they have attracted some interesting players. One of them, TravelPost, was founded by former Expedia execs and backed by Ignition Partners and General Catalyst. Another, Off & Away, is being incubated by Madrona Venture Group.

    Unlike those startups, InsideTrip is ready to talk about what it’s doing. Pelter, a former airline executive and Farecast vice president, sat down with me recently to chat about his company, where it’s headed, and how it fits into the broader story of online travel businesses. As of today, InsideTrip has officially emerged from beta testing mode and is opening its consumer website to the general public. It is also in the process of raising money and signing up new partners and customers for other parts of its business.

    This isn’t the first we’ve heard of InsideTrip. Pelter rolled out the beta version of his website back in March 2008 and got a fair amount of national press. And just last month, he pitched InsideTrip to investors at the “First Look Forum” organized by the Northwest Entrepreneur Network in Seattle—and won as the audience favorite.

    But to fully appreciate what InsideTrip is doing, you need to know Pelter’s background. …Next Page »

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  • Redfin, Bonanzle, TisBest Win Seattle 2.0 Awards

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    The second annual Seattle 2.0 Awards, a celebration of local software startups and tech entrepreneurs, took place in Seattle last night. Jonathan Sposato, the former CEO of Picnik (recently acquired by Google) gave the keynote talk. The award winners were Glenn Kelman of Redfin (best entrepreneur blog), Eric Koester from Cooley (best service provider to startups), Greg Gottesman of Madrona Venture Group (best venture capitalist), Rich Barton of Zillow (best startup CEO), Redfin (best startup), Jenny Lam of Jackson Fish Market (best startup designer), Ignite Seattle (best event for startups), Andy Liu (best angel investor), TisBest (best nonprofit startup), Scott Porad from Cheezburger Network (best startup technologist), and Bonanzle (best bootstrapped startup). Congratulations to all the nominees and winners.

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  • C-Crete Wins $100K, BioSphere and Double-Take Get Taken Out, General Compression Adds to Series A, & More Boston-Area Deals News

    Erin Kutz wrote:

    We saw a mix of headlines on early funding rounds, business plan competitions, and acquisitions from startups in the software, mobile hardware, Internet, energy, and biotech sectors.

    —Cambridge, MA-based Sand 9, a maker of tiny timer and frequency control technology for wireless devices, said it secured a $12 million Series B financing, led by new investor Commonwealth Capital Ventures. The company, developing a resonator that could make devices such as GPS units, mobile phones, and wireless routers smaller and more integrated, previously raised an $8 million round that included backing from Flybridge Capital Partners, General Catalyst Partners, and Khosla Ventures.

    —General Compression, a Newton, MA-based maker of compressor systems for storing wind energy, brought its Series A financing total to $20.9 million, with an additional $3 million from the Northwater Intellectual Property Fund. The earlier part of the Series A round included investments from Duke Energy and U.S. Renewables Group.

    C-Crete nabbed $100,000 as the winner of MIT’s $100K Entrepreneurship Competition. The team, led by MIT civil engineering PhD candidate Rouzbeh Shahsavari, is developing a nanoengineered form of concrete that emits less carbon dioxide in the production process, and is cheaper and stronger than the traditional form of the building material. C-Crete lost earlier in the week in MIT’s Clean Energy Prize, where Stanford University team C3Nano took home $200,000 for its work in photovoltaic solar panels.

    —-Cambridge-based LocaModa, which makes place-based social media software, raised $150,000 of a planned $1.5 million offering of equity, debts, and rights, an SEC filing revealed. The company had previously …Next Page »

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  • Dashwire, Ground Truth, Swype Win Awards

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Seattle-area mobile startups Dashwire, Ground Truth, and Swype have been named to FierceWireless’s Fierce 15 list. The 2010 awards recognize innovation and intelligence in emerging companies in the wireless sector (follow the link above to read the FierceWireless writeups of each company). Dashwire makes software to sync people’s phones with the Web and help them share digital media. Ground Truth provides data and analysis on how consumers use the Web on mobile devices. And Swype has developed a new kind of text-input technology for touchscreen devices that could change the way people enter information on the go.

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  • Google set for probes on data harvesting

    Via Prison Planet.com » Prison Planet

    Joseph Menn, Daniel Schäfer and Tim Bradshaw
    Financial Times
    Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

    Authorities on both sides of the Atlantic on Monday moved towards investigating Google following the internet group’s disclosure that it had recorded communications sent over unsecured wireless networks in people’s homes.

    Peter Schaar, the German commissioner for data protection, called for a “detailed probe” by independent authorities into the practice by Google.

    He said the group’s explanation of the collection of data as an accident was “highly unusual”.

    “One of the largest companies in the world, the market leader on the internet, simply disobeyed normal rules in the development and usage of software,” he said.

    In the US, the Federal Trade Commission was expected to launch an inquiry as well, according to people who spoke to agency officials.

    Full article here

    Google set for probes on data harvesting  100210banner1

  • Inspired by Iron Man, Zazu Makes Mobile App for More Intelligent Wake-Up Calls

    ZazuLogo
    Erin Kutz wrote:

    Punit Shah used to think that there was no good reason that JARVIS, the artificial intelligence personal assistant to the Iron Man comic series protagonist Tony Stark, shouldn’t exist in real life.

    It’s an idea that he brought with him to Boston’s Startup Weekend in December, an event where aspiring entrepreneurs team up for 54 hours of translating their ideas to reality. There, Shah joined forces with fellow Northeastern University students Marc Held and Aaron Gerry.

    Together, the team developed a prototype for the mobile app that they call the “smartest damn alarm clock,” which wakes up its users with information that’s most helpful for getting their days started, such as weather, news headlines, upcoming appointments, and e-mails, much the same way Stark’s JARVIS delivers the superhero the details he needs for his day. (Or so the Zazu guys say—in the interest of full disclosure, I haven’t actually seen the Iron Man movies.) Shah, Gerry, and Held won third place at Startup Weekend, and early this year incorporated under the name Zazu, inspired by the bird personal assistant character in Disney’s Lion King movie.

    Now, they’re putting together a private beta version of the app that’s due for release in June. Initially the Zazu app will be available on phones running Google’s Android operating system, a platform the company chose because it allows you to run beta testing before hitting the marketplace for sale, but they ultimately hope to expand to other platforms such as Apple’s iPad and iPhone. The goal is to get the product to market later this summer.

    Zazu’s app works by first scanning the Web for information that users designate as relevant to them, and delivers that to the users’ mobile phones. It uses third party text-to-voice technology to translate that information into the sound that wakes the users up for whenever they have set their alarm clocks. A typical user might wake up to something like; “Good morning Bob. The weather in Boston is 65 degrees, with a chance of rain,” followed by a headline and lead sentence of a news story from a source of his choosing.

    “Being able to hear it audibly is a great, engaging way to get up and know what you need to do to start the day,” says Shah, who has the role of CEO at Zazu.

    With this first release, Zazu is starting with more elementary features, such as weather, and headlines from a list of pre-selected RSS feeds that users can choose from. For those who don’t have a smart phone, it’s also implementing a service that calls users’ phones automatically with the same information.

    With later releases of its app, Zazu looking to tap into other information such as users’ e-mail and Twitter accounts, and personal calendars, to better engage them with starting their days. It will also let them specify the RSS feeds they’d most like to be woken up to, rather than …Next Page »

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  • 10 Tips For an Effective LinkedIn Profile

    With the job market tight and qualified graduates continuing to pour from colleges and universities, making use of networking sites such as LinkedIn may mean the difference between finding a job and being unemployed. But how can you make the most of such a site and really make your LinkedIn profile shine? If you’re looking for some ways to improve your LinkedIn profile, here are ten tips you might find useful.

    1. Proofread

    Proofreading probably sounds like common sense, right? However, reviewing the information you place on your LinkedIn profile before you make it public can make a world of difference when it comes to presenting your profile information in a professional manner.
    10 Tips For an Effective LinkedIn Profile
    2. Have Someone Else Review Your Profile

    Proofreading isn‚Äôt always enough to ensure your profile is up to par and ready to be seen by the world. Therefore, before putting yourself out there, consider having someone else review the information – preferably an objective third party, not your mother, a spouse or significant other who may be looking to prop up your ego.

    3. Structure

    There’s another thing to consider before stepping back and resting on the laurels of the good work you’ve done on your profile. While you may have cut and pasted or copied information that you knew beforehand was proofread and polished from a resume or some other source, this doesn’t mean it made the transition to LinkedIn as you assumed it would. Once you’ve placed your information on LinkedIn, you should ensure it is presented as you want it to appear.

    4. A Proper Balance

    Okay, so you have your profile up and running with plenty of great information about yourself – now what? There is a fine line when creating your LinkedIn profile between blatant self-promotion and eating a little too much humble pie. Certainly you want to sing your praises, but you to much “me, me, me” can sound egotistical and be a turn off to those viewing your profile.

    5. Websites

    The “Website” portion of your LinkedIn profile can be a useful tool or a dangerous enemy. As a tool, you can use this section to guide people to other sites that might contain relevant information about you and your work. However, placing links to certain social networking or non-subject related sites could give away a little too much information about you and your personal life or distract those who are viewing your profile from more relevant information.

    6. Twitter

    Adding a link to your Twitter account on LinkedIn, could be a great way let people know you are up on latest social networking trends and give them easier access to information about you. Just remember, if you put it out there, the information it reveals becomes a part of how prospective employers might view you, your work ethic, and personality.

    7. A Professional Picture

    You probably won’t want your profile picture to be one of you hanging with your friends at a bar, doing body shots, or you in some sort of compromising or unprofessional pose. Even a picture with a child or significant other could be a detractor to some. You never know what messages even seemingly innocent images may send. A good headshot is typically the safest route to go.

    8. Staying Updated

    By check and updating your profile with regularly and when changes occur in your personal and work history, you can better avoid falling behind the curve when it comes to staying ahead of the competition. While a history of past work experience is important, most employers will likely want to know what you’ve been up to lately when it comes to keeping you and your resume current.

    9. Utilize Recommendations

    Getting recommendations from others on LinkedIn can be a useful tool in providing evidence of real world experience as well as work ethic and education.

    10. Specialties

    By listing areas and applications in which you are qualified or have certain experience, you may be able to set yourself apart from the competition. Be careful not to over-embellish though, as doing so can leave you looking bad if or when it comes to an interview and you are asked to explain or describe your supposed qualifications.

    This guest article was written by James Adams who works for Cartridge Save where he writes reviews of various products such as the HP 336 ink cartridge and helps manage their blog.

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  • [TV Online] Onde ver o Mundial 2010 ?

    Mundial 2010

    Já falta menos de um mês para o inicio do mundial de futebol 2010 que se realiza na África do sul, para todos os aficionados por futebol este é um evento sempre aguardado com expectativa, mas por vezes devido à hora em que dão os jogos é complicado acompanhar,  pelas mais diversas razões como por exemplo os jogos darem em horas de trabalho.

    Pois bem na web existem algumas soluções para os que não podem estar à frente da televisão mas podem usar o computador, aqui ficam algumas soluções de web tv:

    Meocomando.com – Neste site podem encontrar cerca de 22 canais completamente gratuitos, se em relação a outros concorrentes o número de canais é relativamente reduzido, este site destaca-se pela exclusividade dos mesmos, disponibilizando na maioria canais em português que normalmente só estão disponíveis em pacotes pagos, como por exemplo, AXN, Disney Channel, Fox Life, Sporttv(ups…), Benfica TV, Discovery Channel, PFC, Sic noticias etc;  certamente uma boa solução para o próximo mundial.

    Tvtuga.com – É um dos sites mais utilizados conta com um vasto numero de canais, mais uma vez o site é completamente gratuito, contando ainda com uma comunidade bastante activa, é certamente mais uma boa solução.

    Extralive.tv – Como acontece com a primeira opção este é um site que conta com vários canais de pacotes pagos disponiveis gratuitamente, como, AXN, Disney Channel, Fox Life etc. dá grande destaque aos eventos desportivos, e certamente uma das melhores soluções, apesar do seu design/navegação serem algo confusos

    Myp2p.eu – Ao contrário das outras soluções este é um site em ingles que disponibiliza essencialmente links para as transmissões de eventos desportivos, tem a seu favor a cobertura de vários desportos e uma grande quantidade de opções para o mesmo evento.

    Comentem, deixem o vosso feedback relativamente a opção que gostam mais ;-)

    WebTuga[TV Online] Onde ver o Mundial 2010 ?

  • Evri Absorbs Twine, Goes Mobile for Tech News on Android Phones

    Evri
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Twine.com is officially no more. As of Friday, the semantic and social news service has been discontinued, and most of its features have been folded into Evri.com, the Seattle-based semantic information discovery site. Both companies were backed by Paul Allen’s Vulcan Capital, and in February, Evri acquired Twine (Radar Networks, based in San Francisco) for an undisclosed amount.

    All along, we’ve been saying the real story is about how semantic and social search are converging, with the goal of giving consumers better ways to discover the news and information they’re looking for. The “semantic” technology involves trying to understand the meaning of search queries, and drawing connections between online entities like people, places, and products. So how are things moving forward at Evri?

    Last week, I spoke with CEO Will Hunsinger, who gave me an update on the company and its plans. He says, “We wanted to be as mindful as we possibly could about the Twine user base.” That means preserving the Twine data, including users’ bookmarks, and letting customers port their data over to Evri by downloading Web links and text commentary, he says. Twine has several hundred thousand registered users and hundreds of thousands of unique visitors per month, Hunsinger says.

    The main difference between the two sites, as Hunsinger puts it, is Twine let you bookmark topics and follow areas of interest, while Evri uses semantic technology to “search the Web for you, distill it for you, and it’s up to us to deliver” the relevant information. If you want to follow the latest news on the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, for example, you don’t have to do repeated searches for different keywords or set up new Google news alerts. The idea is that Evri understands what Web content is related to the oil spill at a deeper level, and tries to serve it up for you. “We can disambiguate who the players are,” Hunsinger says. “We know that BP is connected to Halliburton.”

    The next release of Evri’s software, in the next few weeks, will let people “follow any topic on the Web,” Hunsinger says. And the next step after that will be to “allow users to curate and personalize their experience, and create their own content channel.”

    Evri's mobile app (tech news vertical)In another interesting move, Evri has just released a technology news reader application for Android phones called Evri Thing Tech. (The company also has an iPhone app currently being reviewed.)

    The tech news channel, a free app, lets you follow developments in areas like venture capital, big corporations, and social media (see screen shot left). This is the company’s first “vertical” mobile app, but Hunsinger says, “We intend to be in dozens of verticals.”

    “We think it’s a huge opportunity for us,” Hunsinger says. He adds that the launch of Apple’s iPad and the rising consumption of Internet content and services on mobile devices is giving companies the ability to reach consumers wherever they are—while taking the train to work, say, or waiting for their flight. “It’s hard to search on a mobile device, so why not have someone pushing content to you?” he says.

    Lastly, I asked what specific feedback Paul Allen has given the Evri team lately. Hunsinger wouldn’t bite, saying only that “the entire board is excited by the push into mobile.”

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  • Microsoft to Pay VirnetX $200M

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Microsoft said today it will pay VirnetX Holding Corp. $200 million to settle patent infringement cases brought by VirnetX against the Redmond, WA-based software company. VirnetX (NYSE AMEX: VHC), an Internet security firm based in Scotts Valley, CA, filed a lawsuit in 2007 alleging that Microsoft Windows, Office, and other products infringed on two of its patents by including virtual private networking technologies. In March 2010, VirnetX won a first round of litigation and filed another lawsuit, alleging patent infringement in Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008. As part of the overall settlement, Microsoft will take a license to the VirnetX patents.

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  • Google’s “Passive Sniffing” Technique May Have Paved the Way for Wi-Fi Privacy Flap, Skyhook CEO Says

    google-logo-new
    Wade Roush wrote:

    Every Wi-Fi network in every home and business broadcasts both public data—such as its network name and unique machine identifier—and “payload data,” or actual content such as e-mails and Web pages. For the last several years, Google said on Friday, the Street View teams who crisscross the world taking pictures and collecting Wi-Fi network location data have inadvertently been recording fragments of payload data traveling on those networks.

    To stem concerns about the potential misuse of the data, the search giant has temporarily grounded its Street View fleet and is working with regulators in Europe—where an audit request this month triggered the discovery—to ensure that the private data is properly deleted. But while Google has traced the problem to a communications breakdown between its software engineers and Street View project leaders, a local observer familiar with location finding technology says the crisis may have originated earlier, with specific technical decisions about how Google collects Wi-Fi data.

    “It’s really a matter of the questions you ask each [Wi-Fi] access point,” says Ted Morgan, CEO and co-founder of Boston-based Skyhook Wireless. “There are a couple of different approaches to getting the signal data; one of them is active scanning, and the other is passive sniffing. Both techniques have their pros and cons, but when you are doing the passive sniffing you have to make sure you are not accessing private network messages. It’s not a hard thing to do; you just do not record those messages.”

    Skyhook has been collecting data on the locations of Wi-Fi networks around the world since 2003, to feed the database behind the location-finding software that it licenses to mobile device makers such as Apple, Motorola, and Dell. Skyhook has used only active scanning to collect the data, Morgan says, whereas Google’s Street View teams employ passive sniffing.

    And that’s what seems to have set up Google for the current crisis. In a post on the company blog on Friday, Alan Eustace, a senior vice president of engineering and research at Google, said an engineer working on an experimental Wi-Fi project in 2006 “wrote a piece of code that sampled all categories of publicly broadcast Wi-Fi data. A year later, when our mobile team started a project to collect basic Wi-Fi network data like SSID information and MAC addresses using Google’s Street View cars, they included that code in their software-although the project leaders did not want, and had no intention of using, payload data.”

    Google surveys Wi-Fi networks for the same basic reason Skyhook does—to provide an additional way, beyond GPS and cell tower triangulation, for phones (in Google’s case, those powered by its Android operating system) to determine their locations. The devil, as always, is in the details. In active scanning, Wi-Fi surveyors driving down a public street send out probe requests that …Next Page »












  • You can now watch UFC on your Roku box

    UFC President Dana White believes the Internet is the future of television, so this Roku deal makes all kinds of sense. Beginning with next week’s pay-per-view, UFC 114, Roku owners will be able to stream live UFC events right to their TV. It’s in HD, too. Nothing but the best for you guys!

    In addition to being able to stream pay-per-view events, Roku owners will also be given access to the UFC Vault, an on-demand network where you can find more fights than you’d probably ever want to see.

    As stated, the deal goes into effect starting with UFC 114, the May 29 pay-per-view event headlined by Rampage Jackson v. Rashad Evans. You’ll recall that these two guys were the trainers on The Ultimate Fighter 10 last fall. They don’t like each other, if we’re to believe the Spike TV specials that have been airing.

    “What’s Roku?” I’m glad you asked. It’s a tiny box, a little smaller than your average cable box, that you plug into your network to stream video content over the Internet. Prices start at $79. There’s no PC required, so don’t worry about having to dive into your Registry just to be able to turn the damn thing on. You’ll need a broadband connection, of course, and the company recommends 3.0 mbps (or higher) downstream to stream video effectively. In addition to UFC, you can use Roku to stream Netflix, Amazon Videos on Demand, and MLB.TV.

    Not bad, no.


  • YouTube Celebrates Five Years [Techversaries]

    YouTube turns five this month, and to celebrate the site is taking a look at the many lives it’s reached over the past half decade. With two billion views every day, it’s hard to imagine an internet without it. More »










    PeopleTelevisionArts and EntertainmentEventsEthnicity

  • Xconomy’s Healthcare In Transition Forum: In Photos

    Healthcare In Transition logo
    Erin Kutz wrote:

    Monday was Xconomy’s first ever event dedicated specifically to exploring how information technology can be used to improve the healthcare system. The event opened with a keynote address by Frank Moss, director of the MIT Media Lab (our venue for the forum), who used a clip from Saturday Night Live satirizing the Middle Age-technique of bloodletting to demonstrate the sluggish pace at which doctors adopt new technologies. This introduced us to a theme that ran throughout the event: that patients will assume much of the power in thrusting the healthcare industry forward.

    John Moore, a physician and MIT Media Lab researcher, offered a look at the technology and interfaces allowing patients to communicate more effectively with caregivers both near and far. Executives from San Francisco-based Keas, the Microsoft Healthcare Innovation Lab, EMC Healthcare Consulting, and Life Image, each took the stage for an “innovation profile.” They talked about how their technologies are putting control of healthcare more in patients’ hands and how the growing volume of data in the medical field will fuel enhanced physician care. Following our rave-drawing executive panel on the Internet’s role in transforming medicine, a slew of audience members lined up to ask questions of the speakers (and in some cases grill them), voicing concern on topics such as the degree of control patients should have in pushing the healthcare system for changes and employers’ management of healthcare costs.

    The day concluded with spotlights of companies that are developing technology to make people healthier, including FitnessKeeper, the startup behind the RunKeeper mobile app, and Vitality, a maker of Internet-connected pillboxes designed to keep patients on track with taking their prescription meds. Many of the speakers addressed the myriad inefficiencies in the system, but also acknowledged that patients need to take greater responsibility in leading healthier lifestyles.

    Click on the photos in the gallery below for snapshots of some of the speakers and sessions I mentioned.

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  • Northwest Under-the-Radar Deals: 11 Financings Worth $1 Million or Less in March

    Under the radar deals
    Erin Kutz wrote:

    When it came to startup investing in the Northwest last month, it was a bit of a give and take. Washington-based companies raised about $21 million across three deals, each worth more than $1 million, plummeting from the $53.5 million that companies pulled in across 10 such transactions in February.

    But the number of “under-the-radar” deals—what we call startup financings worth less than $1 million—more than doubled from February to March. We tracked 11 transactions under $1 million for the region last month, a jump from the five under-the-radar deals that area startups inked in February. The stats are courtesy of our partner CB Insights, a New York-based private company intelligence platform.

    The trend was not unique to the Northwest. Across the country, the list of smaller deals trumped their larger counterparts. The New England under-the-radar funding list for March was the longest we had seen all year, while Massachusetts companies pulled in the smallest amount of funding this year in the monthly list of bigger venture deals we reported on.

    In March, 10 Northwest under-the-radar financings went to companies in Washington, while one Portland, OR-based company nabbed some funding ($500,000 in equity for wind turbine maker Skyron Systems). Of the 11-transaction list, six deals were in equity and five were based in debt. The top deal was a $853,288 offering of equity, options, and warrants that went to Moseo, a Kirkland, WA-based company behind the website SeniorHomes.com, an online directory of elderly care information (which just changed its name last week).

    There are a few companies that, while not at the top of the list, are worth noting. We might not have included Mad Fiber, a Seattle-based maker of carbon bicycle wheels—except for the fact that it is working out of a former bakery, and using the ovens and freezers that previously played a role in constructing dough and pastries as part of its manufacturing process. (Now that’s innovation you can’t ignore.) HomePipe Networks, a Seattle company that pulled in $215,000 in debt-based funding, also struck my interest. It is making networking software that enables you to access content on your home computer anywhere, using your mobile phone. And there’s Fridge Door, a Seattle Web startup that’s too stealthy for a website at this point, but has what I think is a cool name.

    We saw a few names on the March under-the-radar list that are familiar to us. We wrote about online travel site Yapta when it raised a $2 million Series B round last June. In February, the Seattle-based company announced Kayak.com would be powering the flight search engine component of its website. Yapta showed up on our under-the-radar list with a $300,000 mixed offering of debt, options, and warrants. Also, Iverson Genetic Diagnostics reprised its spot on the under-the-radar list, with a $110,000 transaction of debt, options, and warrants in March. (The Bothell, WA-based company also made it on the February list with $341,000 in equity-based funding.)

    Check out the full list of under-the-radar transactions below:


    Moseo Kirkland, WA Providers of SeniorHomes.com, an online elderly care directory Equity* $853,288
    Playteau Seattle, WA A stealthy video game company Debt $620,000
    Skyron Systems Portland, OR A maker of vertical-axis wind turbines Equity $500,000
    Lightfleet Camas, WA A developer of multiprocessing computing systems that use light to speed up data flow Equity $375,000
    Fridge Door Seattle, WA A stealthy Web startup Equity $350,000
    Yapta Seattle, WA An online travel site that tracks airfare and hotel prices Debt* $300,000
    Headsprout Seattle, WA A maker of interactive learning programs Debt* $256,751
    Buuteeq Seattle, WA A provider of hosted digital marketing services for small and medium hotels Equity $249,999
    HomePipe Networks Seattle, WA A provider of mobile networking software allowing users to access information on their home computers Debt* $215,000
    Mad Fiber Seattle, WA A bicycle wheel maker operating out of a former bakery Equity $200,000
    Iverson Genetic Diagnostics Bothell, WA A developer of advanced genetic testing Debt* $110,000

    *includes options or warrants












  • Opera 10.53 disponible para windows y mac os

    Uno de los navegadores mas rápidos, Opera, acaba de recibir su actualización numero 10.53 que sera automática para quienes ya tengan el navegador instalado. Si todavía no lo probaste lo puedes descargar desde su web opera.com o desde aquí.

    La actualización a esta versión es altamente recomendable ya que corrige un bug de seguridad que permitía correr código arbitrario a través del navegador.

    En el resto de los sistemas operativos tristemente seguimos con la versión 10.10.

  • Novartis Buys Alnylam Shares, Xconomy Holds First Ever Health IT Forum, Vertex Alumni Spread Throughout Life Sciences Sector, & More Boston-Area Life Sciences News

    Erin Kutz wrote:

    It was a big news week for the intersection of information technology and healthcare, with our first ever forum completely dedicated to the topic, and a few startups in the space nabbing funding. Headlines from big pharma companies rounded it out for us, too.

    —Athenahealth (NASDAQ: ATHN), the Watertown, MA-based maker of electronic health records software systems, announced it has hired IBM’s Managed Process Business Services unit for IT and administrative support. The deal with IBM (NYSE: IBM) will allow Athenahealth to focus on improving the administrative and reimbursement aspects of its products, it said in an announcement.

    —Waltham, MA-based drugmaker Alkermes (NASDAQ: ALKS) revealed its royalty rate for exenatide once-weekly (Bydureon), a diabetes drug from Eli Lilly and Amylin Pharmeceuticals that uses Alkermes’ chemistry technology. The Waltham company will take in 8 percent of sales of the first 40 million units of the treatment sold per year, which could bring in about $160 million if Bydureon is priced comparably to an existing twice-daily version of exenatide. Alkermes would also take a 5.5 percent royalty rate on sales beyond those first 40 million units.

    Novartis exercised its option to buy 55,223 more shares of Cambridge, MA-based Alnylam Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: ALNY), for a total of about $1 million. The deal allows pharmaceutical giant Novartis to maintain its 13.4 percent stake in the company, which is developing treatments using RNA interference technology.

    Charles River Laboratories International plans to buy Chinese R&D services firm WuXi PharmaTech for $1.6 billion in cash and common stock, the companies announced on Monday. The $21.25-per-share deal, which is subject to shareholder approval, represents a 28 percent premium over WuXi’s closing stock price on Friday.

    —Ryan caught up with the CEO of Cambridge’s Gene Network Sciences, a startup that’s out to match patients with the drugs that best suit them, and help prevent the wasteful spending that results when insurance companies reimburse for treatments that just don’t work. The company formed in 2000 and is widely know for its computer-simulated drug research for big pharma companies, but its new GNS Healthcare subsidiary will attempt to tackle these inefficiencies in the healthcare market.

    —We held our first ever event dedicated solely to exploring the role information technology will play in improving the quality of patient care. Our Healthcare In Transition forum featured speakers from …Next Page »












  • Beyond the Electronic Health Record

    Richard Noffsinger wrote:

    With the passage of health care reform legislation last month, attention has now turned from arguing its merits to understanding its practical implications. In the world of health information technology, or health IT, the electronic health record (EHR) is one focus of this attention, but applications that build on their widespread adoption are where the real transformation in health care will take place.

    In 2009, there were more than 1 billion visits to physicians’ offices, outpatient hospitals and emergency rooms. Each visit represents a shoebox of clinical data that’s sitting dormant, untapped, and utterly disconnected from any other clinical data that person may have generated.

    There are data in stacks of paper files in doctors’ offices and taking up entire floors of hospitals across the country, data in files submitted in medical claims, data in pharmacy claims, in lab records and so on. As clinical data are created, they remain in various forms, stored in isolated silos. The sum total of these data comprises a staggering amount of untapped actionable health intelligence.

    But all that is changing. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) provides $36 billion in incentives for physicians, hospitals and other health care providers to implement a digitized form of medical records. In digitized form, such data can be combined with data from prior visits and used to create a truer, more comprehensive picture of an individual patient. It also can be analyzed in thousands of ways to improve the quality of health care and lower costs.

    Digitized clinical data can be analyzed to prevent adverse drug-related interactions, close critical gaps in care, and help those with a stake in health care—from health plans to hospitals to consumers—directly understand the individual and collective health of their constituencies, and create highly personalized treatment regimens.

    It’s exciting, but it also can be overwhelming to contemplate both the volume of new data that will deluge the system and its ultimate value to the quality of health care. In fact, many companies I’ve met with – including leading health plan providers, pharmacy benefits managers and more – find themselves paralyzed by …Next Page »