Archive for the ‘IT’ Category

Stimulating health care IT

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

The Wall Street Journal’s Venture Capital Dispatch talks to Flybridge’s Michael Greeley about the growing, stimulus-fueled health care IT sector:

New efforts to overhaul the health care system is creating opportunity for a new generation of health care-IT hybrids. The federal stimulus law, which allocates $19 billion to health care-IT, combined with Congress’s efforts to provide health insurance to the uninsured, is enticing entrepreneurs and investors alike. “I have seen a marked increase in deal flow to capture the $19 billion in stimulus spending,” said Michael Greeley, general partner of Flybridge Capital Partners.

MHT talked to Greeley about the stimulus, and spotlighted New England health care IT companies in our Inside Stimulus and Recovery section in May.

Ted Kennedy’s IT legacy

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

At TechTarget’s IT Knowledge Exchange, Michael Morisy summarizes the late Sen. Ted Kennedy’s contributions to the IT sector:

May 1994: Senator Kennedy becomes first U.S. senator with an official web site.

Click here for a screenshot, which illustrates nicely how far the Tubes have come. The site was hosted by MIT’s Intelligent Information Infrastructure Project, which was doing research on organizing the web’s info. 

Via Universal Hub.

20% chance Forbes’ Boost Your Business winner will be Massachusetts tech startup

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009
i-Nalysis president Drew Hession-Kunz

i-Nalysis president Drew Hession-Kunz

Four of the 20 semifinalists in the Forbes.com Boost your Business Competition are local tech startups: tour guide podcast-maker Audissey Guides Media, online SAT tutor I Need A Pencil, chemical analyzer-maker  i-Nalysis, and rebootless computer software updater Ksplice  made it to the second round. Charlestown-based yoga apparel-maker Plank Design also made the cut, but you don’t care about that, do you?

At the contest’s website, you can watch video profiles of the contestants and vote for a winner.

MHT covered i-Nalysis and its handheld material analyzer in February. Ksplice won the MIT$100K in May, and was also a favorite of our informal panel of judges who weighed in on the prospects of this year’s $100K crop, which you can check out after the jump.

The Departed: France Telecom shuts down Orange Labs

Friday, August 14th, 2009


View The Departed in a larger map

Scott Kirsner reports France Telecom plans to shut down its Orange Labs in Cambridge.

NewsFlash Roundup: Dataupia, Genzyme, Drew Bledsoe

Monday, August 10th, 2009
New England Tech Stock Index

New England Tech Stock Index

In today’s NewsFlash roundup, Dataupia may not be coming down for breakfast, Genzyme’s Allston problem gets worse, and Drew Bledsoe, VC, makes a cleantech investment. 

Dataupia reportedly seeking asset buyer

Just two months after the company cut its staff levels by more than 50 percent, data-warehousing appliance company Dataupia Inc. is seeking to sell its assets, according to an online report.

Bledsoe’s investment firm backs water tech company

Former New England Patriots quarterback Drew Bledsoe’s investment firm has invested $10 million in a Florida water purification technology company. Bledsoe Capital Group, founded in 2007 by the 14-year NFL veteran and Montana attorney Chad Wold, will receive a 33 percent stake in Ecosphere Energy Services LLC, a subsidiary of Stuart, Fla., water engineering and services firm Ecosphere Technologies Inc.

Allston plant woes drop Genzyme’s profit outlook

As a result of dumping the unfinished batches of Cerezyme, Genzyme will have to take an $8.4 million write-off in addition to the $14.2 million already announced. (more…)

Brown, Mass General research lets disabled control computers with thoughts

Monday, August 10th, 2009


Watch CBS Videos Online

60 Minutes updated a 2008 story about mind-controlled technology last night. The piece spotlights Brown researcher John Donoghue’s Braingate system, which allows a woman paralyzed after a stroke to control a computer cursor with her thoughts via sensors implanted in her brain. Mass General’s Leigh Hochberg is conducting the clinical trial for the technology.

Last month, Singularity Hub posted about Braingate2, which introduces wireless networking to the mix.

Stonebraker’s startups: Trading in the blink of an eye

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009
Michael Stonebraker, MHT All-Star in 2008, is at it again with another startup

Michael Stonebraker, MHT All-Star in 2008, is at it again with another startup

Of the five startups Michael Stonebraker has helped to launch in recent years, three of them — including a new company brought out of stealth mode this week — are involved in an arcane segment of securities trading that has become the focus of keen interest, both by investors eager for reliable returns, and regulators concerned about market impacts.

High-frequency trading — also known as algorithmic, or black-box trading — lets investors beat the market by a hair. Proprietary algorithms crunch market data to predict small, short-term moves in stock price, then execute trades automatically, within milliseconds — before the rest of the market has time to react.

Stonebraker’s new startup, VoltDB, helps high-frequency traders assess and hedge risk during blink-of-an-eye transactions. He compared high-frequency trading’s gains to a nickel unearthed from a field by a fleet of bulldozers: High-frequency trade operations vie to be the fastest to run into the field and grab the nickel, he said.

Sounds dangerous — but the strategy proved a moneymaker in 2008, garnering new attention from investors. The New York Stock Exchange is now building a large New Jersey facility dedicated to the practice. High-frequency trading is the exchange’s future, an NYSE official told the Wall Street Journal last month.

With success has come public criticism and regulatory scrutiny. Both the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and its London counterpart, the U.K. Financial Services Authority, are now investigating how the practice might systemically affect equity markets. On Monday, Nobel prize winner and columnist for the New York Times Paul Krugman wrote that high-frequency trading levies a de facto tax on the average trader, by giving an unfair advantage to those who can afford cutting-edge technology.

Software made by two of Stonebraker’s prior companies, Vertica Systems Inc. and Streambase Systems Inc., is part of that advantage. The new company, VoltDB, is out of stealth mode with another tool high-frequency traders can use to gain an edge. High-frequency trading desks use Streambase to run algorithms and execute trades in real time. Vertica is used to test traders’ theories, back-testing algorithms against historical market data. VoltDB, still in alpha testing mode, may be used by firms to hedge exposure during the millisecond when 100 trading desks all take the same position on a security.

“Instead of getting market tics, you’re simply getting a list of trades that every desk in your company makes — and you just want to assemble the complete position of the entire company and then ask questions about it,” Stonebraker said.

Stonebraker, a 2008 Mass High Tech All-Star who is known as the “father of the relational database,” for his role on the Postgres project at the University of California Berkeley in the 1980s, explained VoltDB’s innovation. It is startlingly simple. The product is an online transaction-processing system that, unlike legacy systems, pays no attention to concurrency control, resource contention locking, recovery logs, queues or disk management. “We just get rid of all that stuff,” Stonebraker said. “That allows us to go wildly faster.”

[For the rest of Stonebraker's comments to Galen, check out "Net Gains" in this Friday's print edition.]

NewsFlash Roundup: Vela Systems, FRX, Happn.In, Venturefizz.com

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009
NE Tech Stock Index

NE Tech Stock Index

Vela Systems and FRX get funding, and two startups try to organize the hub’s info in today’s NewsFlash Roundup.  

Vela Systems adds on $4.5M to first round

The Burlington-based maker of mobile field administration software for the architecture, engineering and construction agencies announced in 2007 that it had closed a $6 million Series A. The second close on that fund brings Vela Systems’ Series A to $10.5 million, and its total funding to at least $11.9 million – including a $1.4 million angel round closed in 2006.

Green plastics startup FRX nets $6M

The two-year old Chelmsford company is developing plastic polymers that are tough and have high melting points that can be used as flame retardant additives. FRX officials said these materials do not include halogens like traditional flame retardants, making them safer for the environment. The materials can also be used as stand-alone plastics.

Pair of web play startups serve up Hub info

Two new sites — Happn.in, and Venturefizz.com, — are offering themselves up as hubs of all things Boston. One is tracking Beantown’s Twitter memes; the other is mapping the Bay State’s high-tech economy by aggregating job postings, company profiles, news feeds and influential tech blogs in one place. (more…)

Currensee: Meet the New Boss – Same as the Old Boss

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Update, 10:08 a.m.: Currensee just called to clarify that Lemont has been interim CEO since roughly December, when he came on as the new company’s first chief executive. He accepted the formal CEO role July 15.

—–

Currensee Inc. announced this morning that the company has appointed Dave Lemont as CEO.

The timing was a little odd, because Lemont has been serving as CEO of the Boston-based company since at least February, when Mass High Tech was the first news outlet to report the company’s existence.

The company, founded in May, 2008 as Tradual Inc., provides an online network for social trading on the foreign exchange markets, allowing forex traders to anonymously share trade data.

Currensee is funded with a $4 million Series A round from Waltham-based North Bridge Venture Partners. Its product is in a closed beta testing phase. The company now reports the beta version of the site is conducting over $100 million in trading volume and more than 10,000 transactions a month.

Lemont was previously CEO at AppIQ Inc. The Burlington-based maker of data storage software was sold to HP in 2005 for undisclosed terms.

In today’s press release, North Bridge general partner Jeffrey Beir cited Lemont’s performance at several North Bridge portfolio companies over the past 15 years.

NewsFlash Roundup: Boston Scientific, Epix, Draper Lab

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009
New England Tech Stock Index

New England Tech Stock Index

Boston Scientific’s way up, VC deals are way down, and Epix is down and out in today’s NewsFlash roundup. Also, News editor Rodney Brown drops by Draper Lab’s Apollo 11 anniversary party. 

• Boston Scientific profits up 60%

The Natick-based manufacturer of medical devices had revenue of $2.07 billion in the second quarter of this year, up slightly from $2.02 billion in the second quarter of 2008. Net income increased to $158 million from $98 million a year earlier.

• Epix to liquidate assets

The Lexington-based company’s officials said that the company was unable to raise enough money or enter into a partnership in time and that it has entered into an Assignment for the Benefit of Creditors. The purpose of the Assignment is to conclude the company’s operations and provide for an orderly liquidation of its assets.

New NVCA data reveals fewer Q2 VC deals, slower recovery

Numbers reported this morning by the NVCA and PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP were considerably less optimistic, showing $3.7 million invested over 612 deals. While Dow Jones analysts predicted a “rebound” in the venture investing sector, the NVCA says figures for the full year will most likely reflect a setback to 1996 and 1997 levels of $11 billion to $14 billion. (more…)

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