Category: Software

  • McAfee Offers Free Virus Scan

    If you have a PC or work around them, you should be familiar with McAfee. They are one of the top computer security companies in the world. If you have an Android device on SK Telecom in Korea you will soon be able to download this free Anti-Malware software to your handset.

    This software is designed for your Android device and it has similar functions to the desktop version of the security suite. Your personal information will also be secured as well as the app will automatically update itself and scan your device. The folks over at Androidguys are reporting this will be a free download for the Motorola XT720 and more Android devices will be added in the near future.

  • New Windows Phone 7 emulator image, developer tools released

    DetailView Microsoft has released an updated version of the Windows Phone Developer Tools CTP. The update can be downloaded from here and brings the following improvements.

    Examples of what’s new & changed include:

    • This release has been tested to work with the final release of Visual Studio 2010.
    • An updated Windows Phone 7 OS image for the Windows Phone Emulator.
    • A few APIs in the frameworks have been added and or changed. See this MSDN pagefor more details.
    • The documentation has been updated with new and expanded topics. See this MSDN page for more details.
    • We’ve provided limited support for launchers and choosers. In cases where the underlying built-in experience is not present launchers and choosers are still not available (i.e. the email chooser asks you to select a contact, but there are no contacts in the emulator and no way to add one).
    • Pause/Resume events are now supported.
    • If the tools are installed as the admin user, non-admin users are now able to deploy to the emulator.
    • A problem with incremental deployment of projects has been fixed.
    • A problem resulting in the error "Connection failed because of invalid command-line arguments" being displayed during project creation has been fixed.
    • A problem where the Windows Phone node was not appearing in VS 2010 on non-system drives has been fixed.
    • Design time skin refresh issues have been addressed.

    Read more about the update at the WindowsteamBlog here.


  • StreamBase Grabs $5.5 Million

    Erin Kutz wrote:

    Lexington, MA-based StreamBase Systems, a developer of complex event processing software, has pulled in a $5.5 million offering of debt, options, and warrants, an SEC filing reveals. The company, which makes software that analyzes real-time data for decision making, closed a $6 million Series D round in January 2009. Its website lists Accel Partners, Bessemer Venture Partners, Highland Capital Partners, and In-Q-Tel as investors.












  • $1.5M for HealthEdge

    Erin Kutz wrote:

    HealthEdge Software, a Burlington, MA-based provider of healthcare payment software, has raised $1.5 million of a planned $3.5 million round of debt, options, and warrants, according to an SEC filing. The company pulled in $3.5 million in equity-based funding last July. The newest financing involved four investors, but they were not named in the filing.












  • Ancestry.com Previews Mac Version of Family Tree Maker Software

    The following news release was received from Ancestry.com:

    strong>No. 1 Selling Family Tree Software Planned for Mac Users By The End of the Year

    PROVO, Utah, April 28, 2010 – Ancestry.com, the world’s largest online family resource, today revealed a Mac® version of Family Tree Maker® at the 2010 National Genealogical Society Family History Conference in Salt Lake City, Utah. The new version of the world’s No. 1 selling family history software is planned for release later this year.

    “Every innovation or update we make is driven by what customers tell us they need to further their family history research,” said Eric Shoup, Senior Vice President of Product. “The Mac version of Family Tree Maker was the obvious next step forward to add to our family of Ancestry.com products and is a much anticipated product for our Mac-based customers.”

    Family Tree Maker has helped users organize their family history research for more than 20 years. The software provides users the tools they need to build a family tree, record memories and organize photos, stories, videos and audio clips in a way that will help easily capture and share the story of their ancestors.

    Family Tree Maker accesses the robust collection of family history records and powerful search features from Ancestry.com – without leaving the software. When connected to the Internet, Family Tree Maker automatically searches Ancestry.com for historical documents about the individuals in the user’s family tree. Ancestry.com subscribers can easily view and import these historical records into their family tree with just a few mouse clicks.

    Family Tree Maker 2010 is the current PC version of the software. The Mac version of Family Tree Maker will be built on the functionality of Family Tree Maker 2010 and constructed from the bottom up to take full advantage of the Mac platform in terms of technology and user experience.

    Early this year, Ancestry.com expanded to another Apple® platform: the iPhone®. With the launch of its Tree To Go iPhone application in January 2010, Ancestry.com now gives users access to generations of family history at every turn. From their iPhone, users can easily upload photos, update sources and edit trees. The Tree To Go iPhone application is available for iPhone and iPod touch® for free through the iPhone App Store or iTunes®.

    Ancestry.com also announced today the launch of its new Ancestry.com Wiki. This wiki will feature a living version of the company’s two largest reference books, The Source: A Guidebook to American Genealogy and Red Book: American State, County and Town Sources. These books, which are exhaustive guides to American genealogy, will now be made available for the family history community to update, expand on and even add to, making it a go-to resource for guidance and information. The beta version of the Ancestry.com Wiki is available to the public for free at www.ancestry.com/wiki.

    About Ancestry.com
    Ancestry.com Inc. (Nasdaq: ACOM) is the world’s largest online family history resource, with more than one million paying subscribers. The company has digitized and put online more than 4 billion records over the past 13 years. Ancestry users have created over 14 million family trees containing nearly 1.5 billion profiles. Ancestry.com has local Web sites directed at nine countries, including its flagship Web site at www.ancestry.com.

  • Four Ways Michigan Can Reinvigorate Its Economy (And One Way to Enjoy the Journey)

    Ed Lazowska wrote:

    1. Invest substantially in targeted initiatives at the University of Michigan, and in programs that encourage the state’s best students to attend. Michigan is one of the nation’s truly great universities, public or private. It has superb programs in biomedicine and in engineering. It is a huge attractor of out-of-state funding—a highly successful multi-billion-dollar business. And, like all great universities, its most important output is educated and entrepreneurial young people.

    2. Invest in jobs that create other jobs. Policymakers don’t seem to understand the leverage that tech provides. It’s the same here in the State of Washington—they’ll move heaven and earth to keep a sheet metal bender from leaving Tukwila, but when it comes to attracting Intel Labs or Google, we’re pretty much on our own. Jobs are not created by big businesses or by small businesses—they’re created by new businesses and by expanding businesses. Fight to attract startups, and to create them. Don’t be held hostage by incumbents.

    3. Seize competitive advantages. Software. Biotech and life sciences. The integration of software with advanced manufacturing. And innovative leaders who think out of the box, like Ford Motor CEO Alan Mulally (a former Boeing executive from Washington state. You’re welcome, Michigan!).

    4. Hold candidates for public office responsible for appropriate approaches to education and economic development. Once elected, hold them responsible for walking their talk.

    5. Root for the Red Wings (the Tigers are going nowhere).

    [Editor’s note: To help launch Xconomy Detroit, we’ve queried our network of Xconomists and other innovation leaders around the country for their list of the most important things that entrepreneurs and innovators in Michigan can do to reinvigorate their regional economy.]

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  • Under-the-Radar in New England: 16 Startup Financings Under $1 Million

    Erin Kutz wrote:

    March was a big month for little deals—at least when it comes to investing in New England’s startups.

    A couple of weeks ago, I wrote about the venture investing deals worth $1 million and up for March, which totaled to $194.5 million across 17 deals, according to data provided to us by private company intelligence platform CB Insights. That made March the slowest month this year for $1 million-plus deals, but at the other end of the spectrum New England companies inked 16 deals under $1 million, by far the biggest list this year. (There were 10 such “under-the-radar” deals on the January list, and nine on February’s.)

    Not only did the number of under-the-radar transactions increase in March, so did the proportion of them that were based in equity. March’s list had a dozen equity-based transactions, and four debt-related financings. As far as February under-the-radar deals go, there were five equity-based transactions, three debt-based fundings, and one sale of securities to be acquired through the exercise of options and warrants.

    We like to look at our under-the-radar list as helping to paint a richer, more complete picture of startup investing in the region, and I think March’s list revealed that the startup investing for the month was much more diverse than one would conclude from the $1 million-plus deals. The healthcare industry accounted for more than half of the big-dollar deals, and nearly 75 percent of the total money invested, but the under-the-radar list includes companies working in a vast array of sectors. In addition to the few medical device and health IT companies, March’s under-the-radar list included companies in online learning, marketing automation and customization, solar energy, energy auditing, water treatment, and mobile travel guides.

    Also, for the first time this year, Massachusetts companies didn’t take the majority of New England’s smaller transactions. Connecticut took the top spot with seven deals, and Massachusetts followed with six. (My allegiances are conflicted here; I’m a Connecticut native but have been in the Bay State for about five years.) Two startups grabbed under-the-radar funding in New Hampshire, and Vermont inked …Next Page »

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  • Advanced Home Tab 2.2.1 Released

    Cookie Home Tab seems to have brought forward a whole new generation of Sense Mods into their imageWindows Phones world. The very popular mod seems to have created a whole new mod that requires it to run. This mod called Advanced Home Tab brings something that even HTC themselves did not think of. This mod brings a scrollable home screen, task, and more.

  • New: Full CHT 1.7.1 integration in appointment list (home layout editor support)
  • New: Use custom task application (ThumbCal is now supported)
  • New: Extended view support (view up to 7 tasks in CHT extended view)
  • New: Improved scrolling
  • New: Task counters – See numbers of tasks for each filter (all, today, overdue)
  • New: Filter buttons – Use the buttons on the upper right to switch between 3 different filters: All, Due today, Overdue
  • Swipe-to-left / Swipe-to-right gesture to switch between appointments and tasks
  • Scrollable task list (show nearly any number of task items)
  • Due date is colored red when the task is overdue
  • Complete your tasks using the checkboxes (with vibration feedback)
  • Ascending and descending sorting of tasks by Status, Priority, Subject, Start Date or Due Date
  • Filter completed tasks by age
  • Automatic refresh on switch / on edit
  • Configurable colors for due, today and overdue tasks
  • Removed: Weather & clock modifications (now done by CHT)
  • Removed: Filter gesture
  • Co0kie’s call history & voice mail fully supported (hidden, always, dynamic)
  • CHT Home layout editor support
  •  

    You can try this application on XDA


  • What Do Techies Know About the Future of Healthcare? Find Out on May 12

    Health IT, people, events

    Health IT
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Health IT is one of those innovation sectors that is exploding around us here at Xconomy. Every day we’re hearing about a new company, or health-related website or gadget, or experienced financier who’s getting into the act. It’s still pretty early, but it won’t be for long. And the Northwest is already positioning itself as a big player in this complex field. (Just look at top business leaders like Jeff Bezos, Michael Dell, and Nick Hanauer getting involved with Seattle healthcare firm Qliance, for example.)

    Which is why Luke and I are particularly psyched as we gear up for our Seattle event on May 12 titled, “How Information Technology is Transforming Medicine and Healthcare.” This half-day forum is loaded with more than a dozen expert speakers who are using IT to create more effective medicines, help consumers monitor their health, enable providers to deliver healthcare more efficiently, and store and analyze the vast piles of data from our genomes that are the key to the future of medicine. (See Luke’s recent preview of the event and speakers here.)

    Coming on the heels of our successful Boston healthcare IT event earlier this week, I’m particularly pleased to highlight a couple of recent additions to the Seattle program here.

    —Peter Gelpi, the CEO and co-founder of Seattle-based Clarity Health Services, is working to make referrals between doctors a much more efficient process, through a simple Web-based interface and a deeper understanding of the health community. That’s just part of the story, though; Gelpi, a veteran of Aldus, Adobe, and MedOrder, will tell us more at the event.

    —Sujal Patel, the CEO and founder of Seattle-based Isilon Systems, is finding that biomedical and genomic data storage is one of the fastest-growing markets for his company’s technology. As of last fall, the medical and health sector made up about 10 percent of Isilon’s revenue, thanks to A-list customers like Merck, Sanofi-Aventis, the J. Craig Venter Institute, and the Broad Institute.

    What do these folks have in common with our other invited speakers, like Don Listwin, the former No. 2 executive at Cisco and founder of Canary Foundation, Rod Hochman, the CEO of Swedish Medical Center, and David Cerino, general manager in Microsoft’s Health Solutions Group? They’re all using IT to help create the future of healthcare. Come find out how on May 12 (registration info is here).

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  • How to Predict Whether a Startup Will Succeed or Fail: Testing the “Disruptive Innovation” Model

    startups, ideas, strategy

    Disruptive Innovation---it may not be what you think
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Thomas Thurston is a startup predictor. Tell him about your company, and he’ll tell you whether it will survive or fail.

    No, he’s not an investor, or a psychic. By day, Thurston is a mild-mannered researcher and consultant whose training is in law and business. He’s the founder of Portland, OR-based Growth Science International, a research firm that works with entrepreneurs, investors, and corporations on their business strategy. By night, though, he’s testing every possible angle of a theory that could change the way a lot of people think about startup strategy.

    Here’s the upshot of Thurston’s recent research, and why it’s important. Pretty much every startup you’ll ever meet will say it is better than its competitors. However you want to measure it—speed, technology, revenue model, whatever—a young company will say it outperforms others in its class. What’s more, it’s smaller and nimbler than the big companies, so it will be able to innovate faster and stay ahead of the curve.

    Just one problem: That’s exactly why it will fail.

    What a startup should do instead—to give itself the best chance of surviving—is enter the market at the low end of performance, Thurston says. That is, offer a product that’s not necessarily as good as its competitors, but is cheaper and more accessible. “Lower cost, lower performance, and gets better over time,” is how Thurston puts it.

    If this sounds familiar, you’ve probably read Clayton Christensen’s books on business innovation. Christensen, a Harvard Business School professor, is the author of The Innovator’s Dilemma, The Innovator’s Prescription, and Disrupting Class, and he is coming to Seattle on May 17 to give the keynote at the Technology Alliance’s annual State of Technology Luncheon. The connection to Thurston is that he and Christensen have collaborated on testing predictions about startups and other companies.

    In 2005, Thurston was working at Intel Capital when he got interested in whether a mathematical model could predict startup success or failure better than chance. He plowed through obscure academic papers and popular books, tried different things, and settled on building a sophisticated model based on Christensen’s principles of “disruptive innovation” (more on this definition shortly). Thurston got a hold of 48 business plans from within Intel—new businesses that had corporate funding—and checked how they did (survive or fail) against what Christensen’s model would predict. To his surprise, the model made accurate predictions more than 85 percent of the time, and the results were highly statistically significant.

    Thurston decided to take a year off from his job in 2007 to continue the research with Christensen in Boston, co-sponsored by Intel and Harvard. They expanded their analysis to include all new businesses Intel has supported (roughly 100), as well as hundreds of outside companies across different industries and geographies. The result was the same: 85 percent accuracy.

    Skeptics would say the model was tested by its own proponents, so it’s not surprising they would find it accurate. But Thurston maintains he is an independent researcher; he would happily switch to another model if it worked better, he says. He has since returned to Portland and continued the work at Growth Science, where doing the modeling is part of his consulting gig. He says he’s been getting lots of interest from companies and venture capitalists seeking advice.

    So here’s how the predictions work, in a nutshell. First, a company is classified according to whether its market strategy is “sustaining” or “disruptive.” Sustaining means it is positioned as …Next Page »

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  • Chopper 2 Uses Your iPhone As a Fancy iPad Controller [Games]


    Click here to read <i>Chopper 2</i> Uses Your iPhone As a Fancy iPad Controller

    We’ve already seen some innovative uses of the iPhone in iPad gaming—specifically, as a pricey tile board for Scrabble—but Chopper 2‘s iPhone-as-controller is one of the first of its kind. How’s it look? Um… awesome. More »







  • ZDNet reviews the HTC HD Mini

    Sometimes it is useful to see what they mainstream media think of our phones. ZDNet has reviewed the HTC HD Mini, likely one of the last Windows Mobile phones released by HTC, and have not found too much to complain about.

    They note the screen is small, but otherwise excellent, calling it sharp and bright with excellent viewing angles. The size did however impact the ability to type on the on-screen keyboard, which may be a problem for users with large fingers.   They liked the touch sensitive buttons, but would have preferred hard ones, and while they found the yellow internals cute, felt this touch was amusing but pointless.

    They appreciated the WIFI Internet sharing and also the 15 day trial of CoPilot, and found the 5 megapixel camera surprisingly good, despite lacking a flash.

    Battery life was however an issue, and they note they were never comfortable going for 24 hours of use without access to mains power.

    In this first review of a Windows Mobile 6.5.3 device they conclude:

    Conclusion
    We found the HTC HD mini a pleasure to use. Its small format makes it pocket-friendly and easy to handle, and only very keen mobile web users will find the 3.2in. screen restrictive.

    Although the latest version of HTC’s Sense user interface for Windows Mobile is a step forward from its predecessor, the real question here is not about usability. It’s whether business users will upgrade now or hunker down and wait for Windows Phone 7 devices to arrive.

    Read their full review here.


  • MHS Nabs $7M Series B

    deals, funding, Health IT

    Erin Kutz wrote:

    Management Health Solutions, a Fairfield, CT-based provider of inventory management software for hospitals, has pulled in a $7 million Series B round of equity funding, which enabled it to acquire mobile supply chain software provider AtPar, the company announced yesterday. The financing was led by Enhanced Equity Fund, a private equity fund focused on growth investing in the healthcare industry, and will also go to hiring new employees and expanding products and services.

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  • Cleartemp 1.3.0.1 reviewed

    ClearTemp gives the user an easy way to delete the unwanted cache files and unused registry keys/values on your windows phone to free up storage space on your device. Running this app to clear up space is an effective way to boost the performance of your device , today we take a closer look at what this app offers.

    Read the rest of the review at BestWindowsMobileApps here.


  • Firefox Mobile arrives on Android

    A new version of the Mozilla Firefox browser for Android has been released, under the company’s “Fennec” codename.  As well as browsing, Mozilla have also whipped up a version of Weave to synchronize bookmarks, history, passwords and tabs between the desktop and mobile versions.

    There are a couple of issues to bear in mind – this is an pre-alpha release, after all – with the biggest limitation being that the browser currently requires Android 2.0 or above.  You’ll also probably need to have an OpenGL ES 2.0 capable device, you can’t open links from other apps in Fennec as yet, and there are bugs that will chomp through your available memory and likely end up forcing you to reboot the phone altogether.

    Still, if you want to give it a try then head into your Android phone’s settings, check the option that allows you to install non-Android Market apps, and then head here for the package.  Initial feedback seems to be that the UI needs some work, especially when trying to scroll without triggering the browser’s controls.

    [Thanks Stalker!]

  • Fixmo Tools Updates To v1.1.0 With More New Available Features!

    I was so excited to see this, and had to share. Fixmo Tools is one of my most fave apps because of what all it does. When I received the notification today to update, I was elated, but even more so after I found out what the update entailed! Check it out…

    Fixmo has some fantastic features we have gone over many times: Undelete; Flame Retardant; Silencer; Forward/Reply With Edit; Battery Watch; and Memory Monitor. I didn’t think it could get better than that but I was wrong! It now has more features that you can download free in addition to your “Fixmo Tools” box.

    New Features Include:

    • Call Indicator-enable the Call Indicator and specify the LED color so you can tell when you are receiving a phone call when your phone is in silent mode.
    • Speedtest- Click “Start Speedtest” to measure the download and upload of your network. Use the Network Setting menu item to specify which network to measure.
    • MeetMe- Select MeetMe or Meet4Lunch from the menu as you write an email to automatically insert times you are available to meet.

    If you have any version of OS before 5.0, you will also see the option of OneLastCall allowing you to make a last call on low battery.

    If you have Fixmo Tools, update it through the app, if you don’t, you are missing the most comprehensive and can’t do without app that has ever become available for your BlackBerry. Don’t take our word for it, try it out and find out for yourself why there are those who love it and those who haven’t tried it.

    Right now, Fixmo Tools is available for 50% off, which brings it to $9.99 until the end of April!

    Grab your copy of Fixmo Tools v1.1.0 for $9.99 until April 29th here in the BlackBerry Sync Store here

    You’re reading a story which originated at BlackBerrySync.com, Where you find BlackBerry News You Can Sync With…

    This story is sponsored by the new BlackBerry Sync Mobile App Store. Grab your free copy today at www.GetAppStore.com from your BlackBerry.

    Fixmo Tools Updates To v1.1.0 With More New Available Features!

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  • Go Back to the Basics, Take Care of Your Customers

    Biotech, Devices, startups

    Clif Alferness wrote:

    There’s no getting around it, these are tough times for entrepreneurs. We all are strapped for cash, both in our households and in our business enterprises. What keeps coming back to me is a philosophy one of my old mentors, the late W. Hunter Simpson used to say: “Take care of your customers, and the dollars will take care of themselves.”

    So, let’s get back to basics. We’re all in the same boat. Regardless of the particular field we’re in, there is always a customer. As a group, let’s focus on what makes our customers’ lives easier. If you’re in the healthcare technology field, as I am, we should be focusing on simple, reliable, concepts that save us all money, leaving more cash for other things regardless of who is picking up the tab. If you’re in an IT field, focus on making your technology last longer and at a lower price point, while improving performance. If you’re in an energy field, then focus on bringing new technologies that reduce reliance on foreign sources at reduced (future) costs. If you’re in a transportation field, then focus on making transportation easier and less expensive for those who need it.

    Of course, all of this is just common sense, but we often get so wound up in our quest for our own benefit that we forget about the customer. We make things disposable that really don’t need to be so that we can get ongoing revenue, and forget that the overall cost may be raised in the process. We sometimes make things less reliable than we could with the excuse that future versions or models will generate more revenue for us and be even better for our customers. I think there is growth opportunity in the basics, and the dollars will take care of themselves.

    [Editor’s note: To help launch Xconomy Detroit, we’ve queried our network of Xconomists and other innovation leaders around the country for their list of the most important things that entrepreneurs and innovators in Michigan can do to reinvigorate their regional economy.]

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  • High-Tech Jobs Stayed Resilient Amid Last Year’s National Job Losses, TechAmerica Says

    Layoffs, Innovation Economy, employment

    Job Market Visual
    Bruce V. Bigelow wrote:

    The high-tech industry lost 245,600 jobs, or about 4 percent of the nationwide technology workforce, as the recession hit bottom last year, according a report being released today. But there are still jobs to be had in high-tech fields. Unemployment in several high-tech sectors remained below 5 percent at a time when overall unemployment soared above 9 percent nationwide, according to the 13th annual Cyberstates 2010 report issued by the TechAmerica Foundation.

    All tech sectors lost jobs, but “even during the depths of the recession, most high-tech workers were still employed,” says Kevin Carroll, TechAmerica’s regional director for Southern California. The report, which relies on the most recent data available from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, covers tech employment nationwide in 2009—and provides state-by-state information on employment, wages, and other data in 2008.

    Considering all that has happened to the economy over the past year, Carroll acknowledges that the 2008 data for California and other states is too outdated to provide many insights. But he says a few points are worth extracting from the 2009 data:

    —The four main components of the high-tech industry—manufacturing, communications services, software services, and engineering and tech services—all lost jobs in 2009.

    —Software services experienced the smallest decline nationwide, losing 20,700 jobs in 2009. That’s about one percent of the 1.7 million software jobs that existed in the previous year.

    —Communication services lost …Next Page »







  • Warner Bros. Acquires Turbine, Athenahealth Taps IBM, Alkermes Reveals Diabetes Drug Royalty, & More Boston-Area Deals News

    Roundup, deals, Life Sciences

    Erin Kutz wrote:

    News of financings, partnerships, royalties, and acquisitions among New England’s video game, transportation, biotech, and energy companies have kept us buzzing in the last week.

    Westwood, MA-based online games maker Turbine was purchased by the Home Entertainment Group of Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment, a unit of Time Warner (NYSE: TWX). Turbine produces the massively multiplayer online game franchise Lord of the Rings Online, based on the books by J.R.R. Tolkien. Time Warner didn’t disclose the terms of the deal, but a source in a Boston Globe story pegged the transaction at $160 million, which would represent a modest return for Turbine investors, who have put slightly more than $100 million into the 16-year-old company.

    Zipcar, the Cambridge, MA-based car-sharing service, announced it had acquired Streetcar, a U.K.-based company with a similar business model. The terms of the deal weren’t disclosed, but Zipcar said it brought the companies’ combined memberships to more than 400,000 and gives it the opportunity to further expand in Europe.

    Qualtré, a Marlborough, MA, maker of motion sensors for consumer electronics, announced it closed an $8 million Series B round of funding, which included contributions from Matrix Partners and Pilot House Ventures. The money brings the company’s total funding pot to $13 million, and will go to operations, sales, and development of its products, which have applications in cellular handsets, navigation devices, and gaming controllers.

    —France-based bioMérieux shelled out $5 million for an equity stake in Cambridge-based genomics analysis company Knome, as part of a partnership deal in which it will use Knome’s technology to develop diagnostics. BioMérieux appointed its CEO Stéphane Bancel as a director on the Knome board as part of the deal.

    —I rounded up the top 10 largest venture deals inked in the first three months of 2010, with data from Dow Jones VentureSource, CB Insights, and the MoneyTree Report. Healthcare companies took seven of the 10 top slots, with the biggest transaction going to Andover, MA-based TransMedics at $36 million.

    —Pluromed, a Woburn, MA-based maker of medical devices designed to stop bleeding during surgery, raised $1.1 million of a planned $3.9 million equity offering. Last year the company received a $500,000 loan as part of a Massachusetts initiative to further the life sciences industry in the state.

    —Lebanon, NH-based Mascoma, a company developing methods for converting wood fiber and other non-edible plant material into ethanol, has raised $3.4 million of a planned $10 million round of convertible debt, an SEC filing showed. The company received a $15 million grant from the Michigan Economic Development Corporation in June 2008 to build an ethanol plant in Kinross, in Chippewa County, and the state later pledged another $8.5 million toward the site. The new funding, which came from …Next Page »







  • How to Change Windows Screen Resolutions Using Hotkeys

    [Windows only]: Changing Windows screen resolutions can be a bit tiring, when you have multiple monitors attached to your system. Or may be you are designing something and want to see how the design looks in different screen resolutions. HotKey Resolution Changer is a free utility for Windows which can change Windows screen resolutions in one click.

    The best thing about this freeware is that it’s portable, does not require any installation and can thus be used from a removable drive.

    To get started, Download HotKey Resolution Changer, unzip the package and run the executable. Double click the system tray icon and you will see the following interface:

    Pull the dropdown menus to select a custom Windows screen resolution and click the “Set” button to assign a unique keyboard shortcut. When you hit the keyboard hot key, the resolution is changed immediately. You can set  a maximum of 9 hot keys and resolutions below 800 X 600 are not supported yet. The application stores the hot key information in a configuration file, so you do not have to enter the hot keys again and again.

    Techie Buzz Verdict

    Overall, it’s a very basic yet useful app for those who need to frequently change Windows screen resolutions. Sure, you won’t need this app for day to day computing jobs but it will be quite handy when you are designing something or using multi monitor setups.

    Techie Buzz rating: 4/5 (Excellent).

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    How to Change Windows Screen Resolutions Using Hotkeys originally appeared on Techie Buzz written by Amit Banerjee on Tuesday 27th April 2010 08:55:40 PM. Please read the Terms of Use for fair usage guidance.

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