Archive for the ‘Massachusetts’ Category

HP to acquire 3Com

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

By Rodney Brown

3Com Corp., the company that gave birth to Ethernet, has agreed to be acquired by Hewlett Packard Co. for a total of approximately $2.7 billion in cash, in a deal that already has approval from the boards of both companies.

Buying Marlborough-based 3Com gives HP a well-developed roster of Ethernet switching products, a much stronger corporate presence in China, and a leap into network security products through 3Com’s subsidiary, TippingPoint, which the company acquired for $400 million in 2005.

HP also gets access to 3Com’s large research and development team in China, which came about from 3Com’s partnership with Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. Officials at Calif.-based HP say that the purchase will allow it to boost its next-generation data center strategy built on the convergence of servers, storage, networking, management, facilities and services.

The agreement calls for 3Com stockholders to receive $7.90 for each share of 3Com common stock that they hold at the closing of the merger, which is expected to happen in the first half of calendar 2010.

3Com, which has 5,800 employees globally, posted revenue of $290.5 million and $7.5 million in net profit in the third quarter, a year-over-year drop of 15 percent and 91 percent respectively. It held $200 million in long-term debt, including $46 million due this fiscal year and another $46 million due in its 2011 fiscal year. The company has a market cap of $2.23 billion.

Click here to watch HP’s webcast announcing the deal.

Clickfil.com narrowly avoids Mooninite-style freakout, lowballs price at which commuters would risk death by at least $200

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

The Herald’s Freeze Frame blog, written by its photographers, reports a marketing snafu near the Somerville/Charlestown line, apparently a site with magical properties that encourage that kind of thing.

The billboard, for Clickfil.com, asks what you’d do for $300. As an example of what you, Expressway driver, might do for 300 bucks, the ad featured a mannequin of a man in a business suit walking tightrope-style on top of the billboard. The Herald reports both Somerville and Boston fire departments got calls about a possible jumper, and the mannequin has since been taken down.

Clickfil appeared in MHT’s Startup Report earlier this month, and in an MHT report last week. The Woburn-based startup has developed a web site that automates home heating-oil ordering and billing.

Including the mannequin may have been a questionable marketing move, but the question is weirder: Wouldn’t it take a lot more than $300 to get you up onto a giant billboard?

Colorado students make Roomba Pac-Man game

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Some students at the University of Colorado-Boulder have taken a bunch of iRobot Roombas and made a live-action Pac-Man game.

The game isn’t just some nutty hack, either. The students made it to demonstrate developing for unmanned aerial vehicles. The Pac-Man Roomba is controlled by a player using a joystick — the ghosts are autonomous. The Pac-Man robot eats tape “pellets” along its path, including the special huge pellet that sends the ghost robots running in the other direction; and even acts out the death spiral Pac-Man does when he gets eaten.

This could open up a whole new cottage industry of robots jazzing up old games: PackBot Minesweeper, Predator-drone Space Invaders, Artaic Pictionary, Precision Urban Hopper Q-Bert, crazy robot baseball, Petman marathons, etc. Competitive BigDog/LittleDog racing at Wonderland could bring together animal activists, racing enthuisasts, the gaming industry, the tech community and maybe even the Nascar crowd. I’d like to see that industry networking event.

Michael Arrington conducts Don Dodge’s exit interview for Microsoft

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

TechCrunch’s Michael Arrington sits down with the recently laid-off Don Dodge and conducts an unofficial exit interview with the former director of business development for Microsoft’s Emerging Business Team.

Dodge, who said he was in Silicon Valley “just visiting friends,” to Arrington’s disbelief, said he might have been “too visible,” as the company’s startup liaison, and that might not have gone over too well with some at the software giant.

In an earlier post, Arrington called the move a “huge mistake,” and others expressed similar sentiments. Dodge himself wrote on his blog the layoff “left me with a cold feeling…but only for a minute or two.”

Google Trike may map Quincy Market

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

Google is conducting a poll to decide which landmark should be next to be mapped by its Street View-recording tricycle. Other candidates include Stanford University, the Bronx Zoo and Alcatraz, among others.

What, no Fenway? No Castle Island? They may as well digitize the art installation that is City Hall Plaza while they’re at it, if they end up mapping Quincy Market across the street. Mapping things like the Somerville bike path also would add more walking routes around the Paris of the 90s, and just more Somerville, which the world clearly needs. It would also be pretty cool, if not particularly useful, if they strapped one of these things to an MBTA train, or just had someone drive the tricycle up and down the Orange Line.

After the jump, watch the innovative power of a company that made $1.6 billion in profit last quarter distilled into a guy riding a tricycle. (more…)

Pranav Mistry taking SixthSense open-source?

Monday, November 9th, 2009

Pranav Mistry, of the MIT Media Lab’s Fluid Interfaces Group, is reportedly planning to release the code for his augmented reality system, SixthSense.

The computer system, which you wear around your neck, projects information on the world around you, which you can then manipulate with your hands. Pretty soon, you may be able to build your own for about $350. Mistry told a TED India panel this week he didn’t want to subject SixthSense to corporate whims.

After the jump, watch Fluid Interface Group director Patti Maes present the technology to the TED conference in March. (more…)

Despite World Series, local algorithm helps jobless New Yorkers

Friday, November 6th, 2009

NPR’s Morning Edition reports on job counseling efforts at the state of New York’s Department of Labor, and finds it’s using an algorithm developed by Burning Glass Technologies, which is based in Quincy Market.

Burning Glass develops algorithms that parse resume information and try to match job seekers with companies that will actually hire them. The job seeker in the story, a publishing industry executive, wasn’t “overly impressed” with the results, but with unemployment hitting 10.2 percent, somebody has to organize all that resume information.

Future Forward 09: Bill Warner wants New Englanders to become angels, share misery

Friday, November 6th, 2009

By Jim ConnollyJim Connolly

Bill Warner wants to see more New Englanders get into angel investing. In fact, the founder of Avid Technology says that if 1,000 new angels came up with $20,000 each, that could create a $20-million fund to provide startup money to new tech companies.

Warner’s suggestion, aired at Future Forward 09 in Weston yesterday, does raise the possibility that $20 million would help a lot of regional startups get off the ground before they show up on venture capital firms’ radar. He said of angel investing, “You’ve made some money, and you now have the chance to do something good, and maybe make some more money.”

Or, maybe Warner just wants more people to share the misery. Several attendees saw the irony. Nice suggestion, and worthwhile idea, they thought. But Warner, an angel himself and backer of the TechStars program, was on a panel loaded with angels talking about how tough it is to get a return on their investments and their risk of getting squashed in later VC-financed rounds.

The panel included Warner, long-time software industry leader John Landry, Jean Hammond of JPH Associates, Joe Caruso of Bantam Group, Bengt Karlsson of First Run Angels and Jeffrey Sohl, director of the Center for Venture Research at the University of New Hampshire.

The panel kicked off with Landry, of Lead Dog Ventures, sharing statistics showing that 39 percent of angels never make money and that 48 percent of angel investments will result in a 100 percent loss within five years. Not cheerful news. The panel went on to air grievances about having their investments typically represented by convertible notes rather than stock, less than friendly terms and VC’s not giving angels a fair shake in later rounds.

Yet, despite the gripes, each angel seemed to take pride in their work and their ability to help startups, not only with money but with what they have learned over their careers. Maybe it’s not just about the money.

Flybridge’s Jeff Bussgang thinks you’re special, Boston tech community

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

It’s not a direct response to Vivek Wadhwa’s Boston = No. 2 post on TechCrunch the other day, but Jeff Bussgang offers up a nice counterpoint on his blog through the magic of slides, embedded above.

Among the pluses, Bussgang cites the usual suspects — apparently we’ve got some good colleges around here? — but also a few bonuses you don’t usually see listed: Boston Beer Co., maker of Sam Adams; plenty of quality companies from which to poach employees; and winter, which he markets as “four seasons of fun.”

MIT spinout Cogito’s software analyzes voice to find depression

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

Technology Review takes a look at Charlestown-based Cogito Health, who has developed software to determine whether people are depressed or not based on an analysis of their voices.

The MIT Media Lab spinout is based on the research of Sandy Pentland.

Affiliate publications: ACBJ.com, Boston Business Journal, Bizjournals.com, Portfolio.com, Wired.com

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