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News and events about the Texas high tech industry
Updated: 2 weeks 6 days ago

Alereon Gets FCC Cert

Mon, 12/15/2008 - 4:33pm
Austin-based Alereon said Monday that it has certified one of its USB cards with the FCC. According to Alereon, its AL5708 Worldwide Wireless USB Half-MiniCard has received the certification. The device is designed for use with embedded notebook computers. FCC certification is one of the consumer certifications required for consumer devices before they can be sold and marketed to consumers. Alereon said the device is the fifth product that has scored the FCC certification.
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ARCH's Thurk Promoted To Partner

Mon, 12/15/2008 - 3:48pm
Chicago-based venture capital firm ARCH Venture Partners has promoted Paul Thurk, in the firm's Austin offices, the firm said Monday. ARCH, which invests in early-stage companies in the life, physical, and information sciences areas, said that Thurk has recently co-founded a new company in the clean energy sector. Details on the new company were not disclosed. Thurk started at ARCH in 2000 as a Kauffman Fellow in the firm's Austin offices. He was co-founder and CEO of Innovalight, and has been involved with Nitronex, Cambrios and Semprius, as well as ARCH's efforts at Sandia National Laboratories. ARCH also said it has promoted Kristina Burow, in the firm's San Francisco offices.
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LifeSize Adds National Geographic

Mon, 12/15/2008 - 3:28pm
Austin-based video conferencing hardware provider LifeSize has scored a win with National Geographic, the firm said Monday, as part of an effort to reduce inter-office air travel. Financial terms of the sale were not disclosed. According to LifeSize, Nataional Geographic will use more than 15 of the firm's various systems, with a plan to increase the number over coming months.
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Worksoft Gets Funding From Austin Ventures, Crescendo

Mon, 12/15/2008 - 3:26pm
Dallas-based Worksoft, a developer of SAP applications, said late Monday that it has raised a equity round of funding from Crescendo Ventures and Austin Ventures. According to the firm, it will use the new funding to grow its business. Amount of the funding was not disclosed. Worksoft's software is used to automate deployment of SAP applications.
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BioStable Gets $5.5M

Mon, 12/15/2008 - 11:53am
Austin-based BioStable Science & Engineering, which is developing cardiovascular implants, has scored $5.5M in a Series A funding, the firm said today. The round came from Sante Ventures. According to the company, it founded by former executives from CarboMedics, including Charles Griffin, Rusty Phillips, Al Beavan, Doug Frank, and Don James. CarboMedics was also based in Austin until it was acquired in 2003. BioStable said the Series A funding comes on top of $250K in seed financing it received in August, also from Sante Ventures.
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SensorTran Raises $3.5M

Mon, 12/15/2008 - 11:47am
Austin-based SensorTran, a developer of temperature sensing products, said this morning that it has raised $3.5M in a venture capital financing. The round came from Advantage Capital Partners, Expansion Capital Partners, WHEB ventures, and Stonehenge Capital Company--all existing investors in the firm. SensorTran said the funding will go towards working capital, and to accelerate the growth of its products. SensorTran's temperature monitoring products are used to provide sensing along optical fibers, and are being applied to the oil and gas market for monitoring oil wells, pileines, LNG tanks, and power cables.
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The Planet Plans on Plano Data Center

Mon, 12/15/2008 - 10:19am
Houston-based IT hosting firm The Planet reported Monday that it plans to open a seventh data center by May 2009. The Planet said the new facility, which will be located in the Dallas suburb of Plano, will cover 86,000 square feet of elevated floor space. The Planet added that it will immediately begin preleasing the Plano data center's first 12,000 square feet, enough to accommodate some 8,000 servers.
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AT&T Completes Wayport Buy

Fri, 12/12/2008 - 3:19pm
Dallas-based AT&T said Friday that it has completed its acquisition of Wayport, Inc. Wayport, a provider of wireless access points and public Internet access, will boost AT&T's domestic hotspot count to 20,000 locations, and international locations to 80,000. AT&T said November 6th that it would pay $275M in cash for Wayport. Wayport provides wireless connectivity in hotels, public areas, and retailers such as McDonald's. The firm also was behind the conversion access in Starbucks from T-Mobile to AT&T. Wayport was based in Austin.
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Crossroads Gets Win In Switzerland

Fri, 12/12/2008 - 10:21am
Austin-based Crossroads Systems, which develops hardware for verifying data backups, said earlier this week that its products have been selected by the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETC). The firm said that ETH has selected the firm's ReadVerify Appliance for monitoring its tape libraries, drives, and media. Financial impact of the customer win was not disclosed. Crossroads' products are used to verify the integrity of tape backups, as well as monitoring tape libraries and drives.
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Surgient Links To HP

Fri, 12/12/2008 - 10:19am
Austin-based Surgient, a developer of IT management tools used for virtualization and lab automation, said earlier this week that it has linked its product with HP Quality Center 10.0, a product used to manage QA testing environments. Surgient said that HP's product can be used to create, manage, and tear down virtual labs create with Surgient's tools. Both tools are used by quality assurance and testing groups to manage software configurations for testing. Surgient is venture backed by Austin Ventures, BlueStream Ventures, Crosslink Capital, Goldman Sachs, MFI Austin, and Sternhill Partners.
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Phurnace Adds Sales VP

Fri, 12/12/2008 - 6:00am
Austin-based Phurnace Software, which develops Java application deployment tools, said this week that it has added John Balena as Vice President of Sales and Services at the firm. Balena joins the company from Prime Paradigms International, a value added reseller, where he was CEO. Balena has also previously served at Symantec, where he headed the firm's mid-market sales organization, and also has been at ComplyChain and BMC Software. Phurnace is a venture-backed by S3 Ventures and DFJ Mercury.
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Dell Renews EMC Deal

Thu, 12/11/2008 - 12:26pm
Round Rock-based Dell has renewed its major partnership with EMC on storage, the firms said earlier this week, as part of a multi-year deal. According to the firms, they have extended their global alliance until 2013, meaning that Dell will continue to sell EMC's hardware, white-labeled under the Dell brand. Financial details of the renewal were not disclosed. Dell and EMC also said that EMC will also add the firm's Celerra NX4 storage systems to its lineup with Dell. EMC and Dell inked their original storage partnership back in 2001, vaulting Dell into a major supplier of mid-size and enterprise storage. Dell is now EMC's largest reseller.
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Mirage Adds Community College

Thu, 12/11/2008 - 10:55am
Mirage Networks, a publisher of network access control applications, revealed today that a North Carolina community college had adopted Mirage's flagship NAC solution to protect its campus network. The financial impact of the customer win was not disclosed. The Austin-based company identified its new client as Cape Fear Community College, which boasts more than 26,500 students. Mirage said Cape Fear will initially deploy the security software on 2,500 endpoints. The application, Mirage explained, secures network access by identifying and isolating non-compliant or threatening endpoints and then providing them with self-remediation capabilities.
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Interview with Russell Reeder, LibreDigital

Thu, 12/11/2008 - 8:00am

For our company profile today, we spoke with Austin-based LibreDigital (www.libredigital.com) is a local technology firm which develops software used for digital publishing. Russ Reeder is President and CEO of the firm, and told us more about what they do and their customers.

What does LibreDigital do?

Russ Reeder: The company started about 10 years ago, as NewsStand. The whole idea was to help put published material on digital devices. The only problem was--digital devices weren't there yet. What we actually focused on was newspapers, and digitizing newspapers to put them online. About three years ago, we created a division focused on the book publishing space. We would take in books, digitize those book, and distribute them to any device--secured on demand--based on a publisher's rules. We started on the newspaper side and magazines, and now we've grown up. They brought me in about six months ago to take advantage of the two different divisions, NewsStand, and the LibreDigital division. We've brought those two together, and now we're focused on all things digital. All digital content, all things published--whether that is a magazine, a newspaper, or a book--and we provide a warehouse for the publishers to store, and deliver all these to the new e-ink devices out there.

Why do customers need your product--can't they easily convert their books to digital form?

Russ Reeder: It's not like an MP3 player, where you can RIP a WAV, or turn it into an MP3, and it runs on every device. We convert the PDF to XML, so you can free flow to any device, whether that's an iPhone, a Kindle, or the Sony E-book Reader. It's a complex conversion, and we have proprietary technology that helps with that conversion. Harper Collins, for example, which is a customer and investor--their CEO is on our board--uses us specifically so they don't have to go to Amazon, Google, and every device out there and convert to their specific format. Instead, you drop off your content, set the rules on where you want that content to be delivered, and on the fly, we convert it to the specific standards for that device. Otherwise, it's very complicated. Take Amazon, for example. If you look at a book online, you have the "Look Inside" function. We provide that for our publishers--seven of the top ten book publishers use us to provide content to Amazon. However, if you want to buy that book, you may not know it but it might be print-on-demand, which is a whole other division in Amazon. With their print on Demand Division, it's another file type required to send to them to print. Then, there's yet another side, which is the Kindle, where you have to send a whole different set of files to the Kindle. And that's just one company, HarperCollins. Our other customers also have to send all three different file types. So what we do, it we take that file one time, and distribute it based on the rules for any device.

Given your position in the industry, where do you think digital publishing is right now as an industry?

Russ Reeder: It's starting to take off, but I don't think we're at the tipping point yet---at least until you see one hundred dollar devices, which I think is probably about a year away. That will be the tipping point. However, you wouldn't want to start a company at the tipping point, you want to have the leverage, and reputation, and experience before it blows up. However, the growth we are seeing right now is exponential. We have publishers like Harlequin Mills, who are seeing tremendous success with e-books. Maybe it's because people don't want to have their Harlequin book at the office or an airport, but they can have it digitally. Or, they don't want a large font book on their desk, but with a ebook you can raise the font to any size. For all of these reasons, it's a market that people are hitting, and people are paying a premium to have--it's more than just business travelers. It's the users with special interests, special needs who can't just do this with print. In an industry, such as the publishing industry, which is seeing flat growth, plus a recession, there's 35 percent annual growth in the e-book world. That's the piece we're focused on.

Is there much competition in this space?

Russ Reeder: There is Ingram, one of our competitors--and there's a very large competitor called Google. Google will help you convert your books, but just for Google. We also somewhat compete with Amazon, although we're also a partner with them. With Google, they are backing up their truck and scanning the contents of your book, but they're only doing it for Google's benefit. Google is scanning books and converting them, but Google is not distributing those to Amazon, Sony, or others--you can only search within Google. The same with Amazon--you can send in your book, and they will scan it for you, but they're not going to allow you to monetize on any device except the Kindle. Publishers don't see any benefit to their entire marketplace by getting their content to any device, or to their own web site. If I send my content to Google, I can't sell that on my own site. If I send it to Amazon, you can't sell those books unless you use LibreDigital.

We convert the content, allow you to sell it on your marketplace. For example, you can go to Harlequin, and download their e-books, which is DRM-wrapped through Adobe's latest DRM. We deliver it to your customers, based on the marketplace, rules of the publisher, and based on the device you are using. You can also sell it on sites like Barnes and Noble--which is interesting, as many book publishers prefer the Barnes and Noble approach, where content is actually stored on our repository, and that content is coming from our server. That way, the publisher doesn't have to give their entire PDF to Barnes and Noble, and a publisher can maintain control that way.

Speaking of Google, what do you think of their recent settlement with publishers over book scanning?

Russ Reeder: I think it's best for Google, but not for the publisher. It's become a huge PR tool, on how they benefit a publisher--when you think about it, the only benefit is if you want to show your content on Google. People are going to be reading your content on all kinds of devices, and buying your content on all kinds of websites. If you want to sell your content on Google, then it's great. But if you want to sell off your web site, on other devices, it's not so good for you.

What's behind the many recent executive hires?

Russ Reeder: It's because we're growing, and we're closing more deals. I think publishers are really understanding the need to maintain control of their digital file. Even in the recession, our business is booming.

How big is the firm now, and how many people do you have here in Austin?

Russ Reeder: We have 100 employees in Texas, about 7 people in New York City, and a couple in London.

Finally, why should publishers be working with LibreDigital?

Russ Reeder: Most publishers are going with us for two reasons. Number one, is when you go digital and secure with us, we can also help them with things like widgets, marketing tools, and increased print sales--it's not all about e-Books. The work they do preparing for e-books help them monetize, and increase revenue for existing print products. The first step, which has hard ROI, is getting books so that people can find them, can read them, or browse them online, and help to increase the print sales of the book. In the process of doing that, you're getting prepared for an increased e-book landslide.

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Planview Ships SaaS Offering

Wed, 12/10/2008 - 1:11pm
Austin-based Planview, which develops software for IT management and product development management, said Wednesday that it has begun offering a new, software-as-a-service version of the firm's products. According to Planview, its new SaaS version of its Planview Enterprise application suite will be hosted by SunGard through a virtualized hosting infrastructure. The firm's software was previously only available as a traditional software install. Pricing on the new SaaS offering was not disclosed.
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Vignette Gets Win At Healthcare Provider

Wed, 12/10/2008 - 1:03pm
Austin-based software maker Vignette said today that it has signed on Bon Secours, a healthcare provider headquartered in Maryland, as a customer of the firm. According to Vignette, it has recently completed a rollout of a system for the firm of a electronic medical records system. Financial impact of the win was not disclosed. Bon Secours is using the EMS at its facilities throughout Virginia, South Carolina, Kentucky, New York and Maryland.
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Pervasive Links With Xactly

Wed, 12/10/2008 - 10:06am
Data management and integration applications developer Pervasive Software Inc. revealed Wednesday that its technology is part of a combined data management solution currently offered by Xactly Corp, a publisher of automated and on-demand sales compensation management tools. According to Pervasive, the joint offering combines Pervasive's Data Integrator with Xactly's Incent Data Management module. More than 40 customers have successfully implemented the solution, Pervasive said. Pervasive Software is headquartered in Austin, Texas.
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Architel Completes SevenLayer Acquisition

Tue, 12/09/2008 - 3:20pm
Dallas-based Architel said today that it has completed its acquisition of SevenLayer (formerly Atlas Technology Group), an enterprise application support firm based in Seattle, Washington. Architel had originally announced the deal in November, but did not disclose financial details of the deal. SevenLayer provides services for helpign companies support custom developed applications, along with associated monitoring services.
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Google Extends Street View Across Texas

Tue, 12/09/2008 - 3:09pm
Google said today that the firm is extending the firm's "Street View" feature across Texas, including new regions outside major cities in the state. Street View is Google's feature which shows street-level views in its Google Maps mapping service. According to the search engine, it has extended its existing Street View photos beyond existing Austin, Dallas, El Paso, Fort Worth, Houston, Lubbock, and San Antonio coverage to areas outside the cities. The new areas include street level views of Beaumont, Wichita Falls, highway routes, and other areas in the state.
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BMC Rolls Out Resource Planning Tool From ITM Acquisition

Tue, 12/09/2008 - 12:14pm
Houston-based IT management tool vendor BMC has rolled out a new resource planning tool, the result of the firm's acquisition of ITM Software in June. According to BMC, the new tool -- BMC Service Resource Planning (SRP)-- is geared toward helping It professionals better manage their IT resources and spending. BMC purchased ITM Software, which was based in Santa Clara, California, in June of this year, but did not disclose any details on the acquisition price.
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