Category: Software

  • The Active Network Stops for Overhaul Following a Decade of Acquisitions

    activenetwork_logo
    Bruce V. Bigelow wrote:

    About as far back as I can remember, The Active Network usually has made at least one acquisition by this time of year.

    But it’s been a silent spring over at Active HQ in San Diego’s Sorrento Valley, where the venture-backed company develops software that customers use to manage recreational sports events, including online registration, payments, and marketing. Combining a business that’s focused on helping people to get out and about (triathalons, campground reservations, tennis tournaments) with strong capabilities in software development (I’m imagining code written by pudgy and translucent-skinned programmers who feed at night on bear claws from the snack machine) makes me wonder sometimes how active The Active Network’s 2,200 employees really are.

    But I digress.

    Until recently, The Active Network has been pursuing an aggressive growth-through-acquisition strategy that I once compared to kudzu, “the vine that ate the South.” To fund its growth, the company has raised more than $200 million from VC firms and other investors, including ESPN, Canaan Partners, Tao Venture Partners, Charles River Ventures, North Bridge Venture Partners, Comdisco Ventures, and Performance Equity Partners. But The Active Network made its last noteworthy acquisition more than a year ago, when it bought the online campground reservation provider Reserve America from IAC, (NASDAQ: IACI).

    So what happened? Is there a reason for The Active Network’s inactivity on the M&A front?

    As it turns out, there is.

    CEO Dave Alberga tells me that while the company has made some very small, undisclosed acquisitions, it began an ambitious program in late 2008 to overhaul and replace …Next Page »







  • Azigo Gets $1.8M

    Erin Kutz wrote:

    Azigo, a Wellesley, MA-based maker of software that seeks to securely consolidate users’ various online account information, has pulled in a $1.8 million equity offering, an SEC filing reveals. Ten investors participated in the round for Azigo, which was originally named Parity Communications.







  • Windows Phone 7 series theme for Windows 7 in the works

    rainmeter

    The Windows Phone 7 UI is a pretty different take on presenting information, and has inspired fediaFedia to created a Windows Phone 7 Series theme for Windows 7.

    The software, which is not available yet, puts live tiles and Rainmeter widgets on your desktop and shows information such as temperature, date and time, CPU temp, notes, feeds, twitter timeline and much more.

    Keep on eye on fediaFedia’s DeviantArt web page here to follow the project.

    Via Ithinkdiff.com

  • Under the Radar in February: Five Northwest Startup Financings You Haven’t Heard About

    Under the radar deals
    Erin Kutz wrote:

    For startups, it seems no amount of funding is too small. At least that’s what we like to keep in mind when analyzing monthly financings for area companies.

    February’s list of under-the-radar deals for Northwest startups was half as long as January’s, at just five deals. On the bright side, all five of the February under-the-radar transactions were equity offerings, while the 10 deals in January involved two debt-based financings. We define “under-the-radar deals” as startup transactions under $1 million (even if only by a few dollars), a distinction that separates them from the list of bigger venture deals sent to us earlier in the month by our partner CB Insights, a New York-based private company intelligence platform.

    To be fair, though, we left a few deals off the list originally provided to us by CB Insights, as the companies came from industries that didn’t quite fall into our coverage area. To make the cut, we look for companies that are doing something new and innovative in the industries we report on, such as technology, life sciences, Internet, and energy. (Of course, this can be somewhat subjective.) New businesses in more traditional spaces such as oil and gas or straightforward consumer goods typically get left off the list.

    Last month’s under-the-radar-deals ranged in value from $165,000 to $500,000. Three of the financings went to Washington-based companies, and two to startups working out of Oregon. None of these transactions were big enough that we reported on the deals when they first broke, but we still look to the list as an indication of trends in early-stage investing, or as bellwethers of which stealthy companies might be on the rise. February’s list included companies in software, energy, and biotech.

    The biggest deal was the $500,000 in equity-based funding that went to Eden Rock Communications, a Bothell, WA-based developer of 4G wireless self-organizing networks; this company seeks to more successfully automate the deployment of wireless data services. Iverson Genetic Diagnostics, also of Bothell, WA, came in second with a $341,000 equity offering. We touched on this startup briefly before when it presented at the Angel Capital Expo put on by the Keiretsu Forum Northwest in October. This was the only company on our list that we had heard of before.

    The third-biggest deal went to Home Comfort Zones, a Beaverton, OR-based maker of room-by-room home temperature control systems. It pulled in $300,000 in an equity and preferred stock offering, according to a regulatory filing. We might not typically report on a traditional thermostat maker, but it looks like Home Comfort is innovating in the area by crafting a device that varies heating and cooling by room, and tells consumers how much energy they are using for the task, as a way to help them change their habits.

    At this point, it’s hard to tell what the shorter list means. It could indicate that investors are less inclined to put cash into smaller startups, or it could be a positive sign that startups would rather pursue larger venture rounds. Startup funding in February remained steady, as far as the bigger venture deals go. Earlier this month, Greg wrote about how in February, Washington startups pulled in $53.5 million across 10 deals, keeping that month’s venture funding stats relatively in line with the $57 million that went to eight companies in January.

    We’ll have to wait and see how the startup investing landscape for March turns out. Meanwhile, check out our list of February under-the-radar deals in the Northwest:

    Eden Rock Communications Bothell,          WA A developer of 4G wireless self organizing networks Equity $500,000
    Iverson Genetic Diagnostics Bothell,          WA A developer of advanced genetic testing Equity $341,000
    Home Comfort Zones Beaverton,     OR A maker of room-by-room home temperature control systems Equity $300,000
    Etelos Maple Valley, WA A software platform for delivering Web-based applications Equity* $250,000
    HM3 Energy Gresham,        OR A developer of clean fuel produced from biomass waste Equity $165,000

    *includes some debt, options, and warrants







  • Xtrakt 3D Windows Mobile game reviewed

    Right off the bat I can tell you this game right here is one of the BEST Windows Mobile Game I have ever played. If you have played this game you would agree with me, if not don’t even bother reading the review go ahead and download it already !!!

    Read more at BestWindowsMobileApps.com

  • Two HTC HD2 updates released

    HTC has released 2 hotfixes for the HTC HD2. The updates are for all ROM versions and includes a security update.

    These are:

    1. Update for HTC HD2 Facebook Albums
    According to the description, "this update for your phone’s Facebook client restores the ability to view your friends’ photo albums". I personally never had any issues with Facebook photo albums.
    2. Update for HTC HD2 Java Message Pop up
    This update seems to fix a security issue by preventing "javascript messages from automatically opening when the message notification pops up. This will prevent your phone from opening unwanted and unwelcome applications that are sent to you".

    Hotfixes of course do not wipe your data, but a quick backup via My Phone may still be in order.

    Via Pocketnow.com

  • Adaptive TCR, a Fred Hutch Spinoff, Nabs $4.5M to Uncover Immune System Secrets

    adaptive
    Luke Timmerman wrote:

    Seattle experts in computer science and immunology are rallying around a new spinoff company from the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center.

    Seattle-based Adaptive TCR has nailed down a $4.5 million round of angel investment to get up and running, Xconomy has learned. The basic concept is to provide scientists with a high-speed, high-resolution look into the vast diversity of T-cells of the adaptive immune system that we all produce to ward off infections, and which sometimes go awry and cause disease.

    This company wasn’t backed by the usual venture capital suspects in Seattle biotech, and it has an unusual backstory. Adaptive’s scientific co-founders are a pair of Hutch researchers who are first-time entrepreneurs in their 30s: Harlan Robins, a particle physicist who turned to genomics a decade ago to tackle its daunting math, and Chris Carlson, a geneticist and molecular biologist. Chad Robins, Harlan’s brother, has signed on as the founding president and CEO. Chad, who has a Wharton School business degree and experience with investment banking and hedge funds, wrote the original business plan and tapped his Rolodex to raise the company’s seed capital.

    The founding scientific advisory board includes some big names. They include Arnold Levine of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, NJ; Gerald Nepom, the director of the Benaroya Research Institute in Seattle; Edus Houston Warren of the University of Washington and Fred Hutch, as well as two other prominent genetic researchers from the UW who aren’t being named yet.hutchlogo1

    “I’ve been talking to my brother for 20 years, and saying ‘You’re a smart guy, when are we going to do a business together?’” Chad Robins says. “He’s never been interested before. Then he called me last February.”

    That was a little over a year ago. Now the business is taking shape with a founding team of four employees who have subleased some office space in South Lake Union from VLST.

    Adaptive TCR is built on using high-speed gene sequencing instruments that capture data from biological samples, and combining it with some pretty heavy duty math that’s executed by proprietary software.

    The problem is certainly complicated enough to excite a string theorist like Harlan Robins. While scientists know that the 3 billion letters of DNA that make up a genome are consistent in every human cell, that’s not a fixed number that applies to immune system T-cells. The DNA in T-cells gets shuffled as they mature, allowing the cells to recognize a foreign invader like a virus. Humans have evolved an ability to adapt to these invaders, by building up a vast repertoire of T-cells with memory for a certain pathogen. This vast array of T-cell variation is something that scientists haven’t been able …Next Page »







  • Slacker Updates To v3.0.459 Fixing Multiple Bugs

    Slacker also updated their app, and looking in the Slacker Blog in the mobile section, all it says is to point your browser to download the small update that fixes multiple bugs. So stop slacking and download the newest version and don’t forget to share with us any differences you might notice.

    Grab your free copy of Slacker Radio for BlackBerry in v3.0.459 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.

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  • Auto Smiley Application Turns Your Real Life Smile Into 🙂 [Emoticons]

    Some people get all >:o when it comes to emoticons, but I think they’re pretty B-). This =0 program detects your real life smiles with your webcam and turns them into :)s on your comptuer. :-p, haters. More »







  • Microsoft My Phone updated to version 1.6

    Microsoft has just announced an update to their successful My Phone smartphone web back-up service, which was recently a finalist at the GSMA 2010 Best Mobile Internet Service.  As usual change logs are scanty on the ground, and we do not know what’s new in version 1.06.22718.001.

    Microsoft would however like to remind us that the software allows users to:

    1) Quickly update and manage your contacts conveniently from your PC.  You can even add photos to your contacts from your desktop with just a few clicks of your mouse.  Just login to the My Phone website, go to Contacts, and select the contacts that you wish to update.

    2) Easily download, upload and share your photos.  Getting pictures on and off your phone can sometimes be a tricky task, but My Phone makes it simple.  Not only can you download Photos from your phone to your PC, but you can also upload photos from your PC to your phone, as well as quickly share photos from your phone or PC with Windows Live, Facebook, MySpace and Flickr.  When you login to My Phone, your most recent Photos are right there on the home page.  Select the photos that you wish to upload, download or share.

    3) Use Wi-Fi to sync your content.  My Phone will sync over Wi-Fi when available.  If your phone can connect to the Wi-Fi in your home or office, then you won’t have to worry about cellular data usage.

    The next time the software syncs users will be prompted to upgrade.

    Have any of our readers noticed anything new? Let us know below.

  • Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7 CTIA pitch with a closer look at the Office hub

    Microsoft is of course showing of Windows Phone 7 at CTIA, and had a live demo of the OS there.

    The video above appears to show a slightly more advanced build than the one on the emulator at present, and shows us some more of the Windows Phone 7 office hub. Seeing Excel Mobile rendering a spreadsheet pretty well does give me hope that the experience, at least for viewing documents, will be very good.

    As of yet we have not seen much of OneNote, but hopefully at least that applications will be optimised not just for reading but also for data entry on the go.

    Video via Krunkermedia

  • Google Mobile, But Not the Web, Storms the BlackBerry

    Have a BlackBerry Storm or Storm2? Here’s a forecast for you — Google Mobile makes an appearance today and is yours for the taking. The software finally arrives on Research In Motion’s touchscreen phones as a free download from Google’s mobile website: http://m.google.com. With it, Storm owners can search the web, contacts or emails by voice, which is often far quicker than using a software keyboard. I typically use voice search over a typed query on my touchscreen Nexus One for this very reason. Voice search on the Storms support three languages: English, Mandarin Chinese, and Japanese.

    Even with helpful software like Google’s new app, I don’t think BlackBerry will make a dent in the top-used devices as measured by some. Take, for instance, the most recent AdMob report that Om noted today at GigaOm. This quote is telling: “Between iPhone and the Android, I wonder if anyone else has a chance to even become a player on the mobile web.” A bold statement, yes, but it’s backed up by the data.

    One BlackBerry device was in the top ten as measured by web requests on AdMob’s network of 15,000 mobile websites — the 8830 was barely above the Palm Pre. Granted, the data is based the AdMob platform, which likely has a far higher number of data points for iPhone and Android devices, and not BlackBerry units. But for all of the market share gains RIM has shown — see the trend in our recent infographic — the handsets don’t seem to be a driving force for the mobile web; Or at least not as much as other platforms are. Perhaps a new browser will change that?

  • KidZui Caps Significant Progress in Difficult Year with $4M in Fresh Funding

    kidzui-logo
    Bruce V. Bigelow wrote:

    KidZui’s founding chairman and CEO Cliff Boro called me from the airport last night to confirm recent reports saying that the San Diego startup, which has been developing a kid-friendly Internet browser, has raised $4 million in additional venture funding.

    The four-year-old startup launched its KidZui browser (which is a Firefox add-on) in 2008, and Boro says KidZui now has more than 1 million registered users. The browser gives kids an authentic Internet experience by allowing them to surf hundreds of thousands of websites, watch online videos, and play games. It’s just that all of the content has been screened and approved by KidZui’s editorial team. But as the CEO explained to me last summer, it’s a tough market with already-established and well-funded rivals like PBSkids, Webkinz, Nickelodeon, and Club Penguin.

    San Diego’s Mission Ventures led the $4 million round, and Boro tells me that Mission’s managing partner, Leo Spiegel, has joined KidZui’s board. KidZui previously raised almost $12 from Emergence Capital Partners, First Round Capital, Maveron, and other investors—and Boro says the VCs also joined in the latest round.

    “We plan to use the funding for general working capital, and continue to work on making our product better and on expanding our partnerships,” Boro says.

    The company recently arranged some high-profile partnerships. Under a deal with Best Buy, for example, the consumer electronics retailer now offers to load the KidZui browser as part of its software installation service. Through a new partnership with DreamWorks, KidZui is integrating the lead character from the animated movie “How to Train Your Dragon” in its social networking experience as part of an integrated sponsorship.

    Boro says KidZui has increased its audience by 300 percent over the past year, “and spent less than $10,000 on marketing.”

    Still, it hasn’t been an entirely smooth ride since last August. At that time, Boro told me he had reduced KidZui’s headcount to 25 staffers from 30. He’s laid off more workers since then, and KidZui now has 15 employees. “We definitely cut expenses last year and are running pretty lean,” Boro says. “We’ve made significant progress in a difficult year.”







  • iPhone 3GS vulnerable to drive by data-stealing hack

    iphoneworm

    One again an Apple product was the first to fall at the annual CanSecWest Pwn2Own hacking contest.

    Yesterday a fully patched iPhone was hijacked and the entire SMS database, including text messages was stolen after simply visiting a specially crafted web page.

    Using an exploit which only took 2 weeks to write, Vincenzo Lozzo and Ralf Philipp Weinmann lured the target iPhone to a rigged Web site and downloaded the SMS database in about 20 seconds.

    “Basically, every page that the user visits on our [rigged] site will grab the SMS database and upload it to a server we control,” Weinmann explained. 

    Even the iPhone’s code signing protection was not sufficient to mitigate the attack.

    “Apple has pretty good counter-measures but they are clearly not enough.  The way they implement code-signing is too lenient,” said Halvar Flake, a renowned security researcher.

    In addition to hijacking the SMS database, Weinmann said the winning Pwn2Own exploit could have easily downloaded the phone contact list, the email database, photographs and iTunes music files.

    “With this exploit, I can do anything that ‘mobile’ can do.”

    “It was a real world exploit against a popular device.” said Aaron Portnoy, a security researcher at TippingPoint Zero Day Initiative. “They exfiltrated the entire SMS database in about 20 seconds. It was as if a Web page was loading.”

    The iPhone was recently the subject of a widespread worm attack after hackers breached security using a widely known network password present on Jailbroken devices.  On this occasion however all iPhones, not just jailbroken ones are vulnerable, and are awaiting a hopefully urgent patch from Apple.

    Via ZDNet.com

  • User Experience now central to Microsoft product design

    uxwp7According to an interview with Microsoft’s Indian design division, user experience (UX) is now the buzz word that drives all of Microsoft’s product design from smartphones all the way up to Windows Servers.

    Deepak Menon, group design manager of the 20 strong Microsoft India Development Centre (IDC), who have contributed to Windows Phone 7 and Bing search engine, said:

    “It’s no more plain colour or some colourful packaging of apps. The experience is getting embedded into an application right from the stage of conceptualisation,” he said.

    “It’s like a car. Every car in a particular category has a steering, four wheels, comfortable seating and modern dash board. What differentiates is the design and colour. Now, it is becoming equally applicable to technology and software products as well,”

    In fact, the internal strategies of Microsoft are putting the experience factor on par with two other key factors in a product design – business and technology.

    “It used to be the B (business) and T (technology) matrix for designing and selling a product all through. But, things have changed now. It is a BXT matrix now. Right from sourcing to analysis to the entire lifecycle of the development of a product, the design and user experience have become key differentiators,” he said.

    While this focus on user experience has already left some major features on the cutting floor when it comes to Windows Phone 7 (examples include removable storage and cut and paste) it does not mean the halt to technological development, merely a refocusing.

    The company is currently researching natural user interface technologies. “Face recognition, voice, gesturing, etc, are the technologies that are being developed. The user interface will definitely go through a major change once these technologies become available.”

    A focus on user experience over technology has certainly seen Apple do really well in the market.  Is this the right strategy for Microsoft and Windows Phone 7?  Let us know below.

    Read more at this DNAIndia article here.

  • Flying Under the Radar in February: Nine New England Startup Deals Under $1 Million

    Erin Kutz wrote:

    When it came to raking in venture dollars, things slowed down in Massachusetts in the month of February. Maybe it was the shorter calendar month, the typically frigid and dreary weather, or the fact New Englanders are just antsy for spring. In February Bay State startups pulled in $203 million across 26 financings in the $1 million-plus range, down from the sizeable $355.2 million raised in 28 deals in the first month of 2010.

    New England’s under-$1 million deals—which like the larger deals we track with the help of data from our partner, CB Insights, a New York-based private company intelligence platform—chugged along at about the same pace in February as in January. In February, the region saw nine of these “under-the-radar” financings, each worth from $125,0000 to $850,000, with funding based in equity, debt, and other types of securities. January saw 10 sub-$1 million deals (though to confuse matters we included a couple of additional, $1 million financings on the month’s list).

    February’s list shows that equity-based funding is still outweighing debt deals in the under-the-radar transactions. Five of the financings were based in equity, three were debt-related, and one involved a security to be acquired through the exercise of options and warrants. Investors went after a diverse array of companies, too. The February under-the-radar pack included startups working on hybrid technology, medical devices, health IT, industrial products, the semantic Web, audio transcription software, and e-commerce.

    Companies based in Massachusetts took in all but one of the deals on the list; the exception being the $150,000 in equity-based funding that went to Norwalk, CT’s HealthPrize Technologies, another company crafting technology for reminding patients to take their meds. (Ryan wrote about this trend …Next Page »







  • HTC “thrilled” with Windows Phone 7 changes

    ballandchou_500x375 Peter Chou, thrilled with Microsoft

    In an interview Wednesday at the CTIA Wireless conference in Las Vegas, HTC’s CEO Peter Chou pronounced himself  "thrilled" with the many changes Microsoft made to Windows Phone 7 series.

    "They’re putting in tremendous effort to make Windows Phone 7 very appealing and competitive," he said. HTC expects to release a Windows Phone 7 device before the end of the year, Chou added.

    Even as it turns its attention to Windows Phone 7, HTC plans to keep supporting Windows Mobile 6.5.

    "Windows Mobile 6.5 and 7 will coexist," said Chou, explaining that corporate users in particular are likely to keep using the older software.

    HTC is expected to release at least 2 more Windows Mobile 6.5 devices later this year.

    HTC was thought to be one of the companies most likely to suffer from the reduced ability of OEMs to customize the user interface and software of Windows Phone 7, but with their huge advantage in smartphone carrier relationships and Windows Phone 7’s improved user interface they may simply enjoy the reduced need to invest in the software layer.

    Read the full HTC interview at Forbes here.

  • BlackBerry Beta Zone Is Here And Open To New Members

    Inside BlackBerry, the Official BlackBerry Blog, announced that BlackBerry now has the BlackBerry Beta Zone and is currently accepting registration for new members. It is only open to residents of Canada, the U.S., and the U.K. at this time. If you’re interested in beta testing, read on.

    Here’s the description from the BlackBerry Beta Zone site:

    BlackBerry® Beta Zone is the place where Research In Motion (RIM) communicates with and receives feedback from beta participants. As a member of BlackBerry Beta Zone, you’ll have the opportunity to sign up for beta programs and be among the first to try out new BlackBerry software before it’s released to the general public. Your feedback will be an important part of ensuring future BlackBerry products meet the needs of customers like you.

    Benefits are as follows:

    When you join BlackBerry Beta Zone, you’ll preview and evaluate pre-release software before it’s released to market. In your role as beta participant, you’ll have the ability to:

    • Provide input on product designs and upcoming features
    • Help shape future releases of BlackBerry products
    • Voice your input through online discussions, feedback and surveys
    • Validate product features and technical documentation
    • Plan, train and prepare for upcoming release

    You must agree to the terms and conditions, and update your profile so you can let them know your carrier, your BlackBerry device, and other information that will help for evaluations. You have the opportunity to try different software before it’s ready for prime time, you’re able to decide which ones that are available to you that you would like to participate in.

    After registering and signing in, you can view eligible programs and the programs you are participating in. All that’s required after accepting the terms and conditions is your feedback for the apps and program. If you’re interested and would love to test the apps before they’re out in the public, go register while the program is open to new members.

    Read more about the BlackBerry Beta Zone from the Inside BlackBerry site here

    Register for the BlackBerry Beta Zone program here

    [via: Inside Blackberry]

    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.

    BlackBerry Beta Zone Is Here And Open To New Members

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  • Reinventing Progress Software—Boston’s Next Billion-Dollar Company? Part 2

    Progress Software Logo
    Wade Roush wrote:

    Yesterday we published the first part of an extended Xconomy interview with Progress Software CEO Richard Reidy and chief technology officer John Bates. While Bedford, MA-based Progress (NASDAQ: PRGS) is one of the largest software makers in Massachusetts and was founded just a couple of years after EMC, its profile is nowhere near as high in the state, in part because it evolved as a hodgepodge of divisions serving distinct parts of the business software market.

    But under Reidy, who took up the CEO mantle last year, the company is unifying both its product lines and its marketing strategy, in an attempt to explain how it can help companies increase their “operational responsiveness”—meaning their ability to sense and respond to real-time events in their markets. Reidy described, for example, how Progress is working with financial-services firms and regulators to detect insider trading and with logistics firms to improve the efficiency of shipping ports.

    In the second half of the interview, below, Bates talks about his own perspective on Progress Software’s consolidation and growth. Reidy describes what the company has learned over the years about how to integrate newly purchased subsidiaries (and says the company probably isn’t quite through acquiring other companies). And the two talk about the challenges and opportunities raised by ongoing change in areas like cloud and mobile computing.

    Xconomy: John, how do you describe this transition that Progress is going through?

    John BatesJohn Bates: Rick set the vision when he took over as CEO of us becoming “one Progress,” with the goal of delivering solutions to our customers not as disparate organizations but as one sales force, one marketing team. We are well underway in executing that vision. Our aim is to make it so that all of our solutions can be bundled under these three capabilities of gaining visibility, sensing and responding, and business process management. Those are principally orchestrated through our Progress Actional, Progress Apama, and Progress Savvion products.

    You can sum it all up into one phrase: responsive business processes. We don’t believe that any other organization can deliver that. Other organizations have pieces, but they haven’t put them together in the way we’re talking about. We have sponsored a number of research projects on this with market research firms, and 95 percent of respondents say they absolutely have to respond in their business processes to real-time information. It’s gone from a nice-to-have to a must-have. We think there is a real opportunity for Progress to steal the leadership here.

    X: Do businesses need to start from a clean slate and buy all of Progress’s products together, or can they bolt them on one at a time?

    JB: Progress can come in and integrate with whatever they’ve already got. One of the biggest problems we’ve seen in our customer base is …Next Page »







  • Google Has Updated Their Mobile Apps For BlackBerry, Update Now

    Google has their updated mobile apps versions up, so if you use mobile Google Search (v3.6.11), Google Sync, or Google Voice (v0.1.7), you should download and replace the versions you have. There’s no log listed yet, but when there’s an update, there’s always some fixes and improvements.

    Update your Google apps from the Mobile Google site from your BlackBerry 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.

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