Posts Tagged ‘Wall Street Journal’

Hugh Herr talks iWalk

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

The Wall Street Journal talks to Hugh Herr, founder of Cambridge-based iWalk, which makes the PowerFoot One, a robotic, prosthetic ankle and foot device. Herr is also director of the MIT Media Lab’s Biomechatronics Group.

In the video above, Herr presents his research at the World Economic Forum in Davos in January.

Last week, iWalk received $20 million of a $21 million Series B round to fund development of the prosthetic from General Catalyst and New York-based WFD Ventures.

Herr, who MHT first interviewed in 2005, was trapped in a snowstorm while climbing New Hampshire’s Mount Washington in 1982 at age 17. He was rescued, but suffered frostbite, and subsequently had both legs amputated just below the knee. The ordeal led him to take up engineering to develop better prosthetics.

Harvard study advises VCs to keep their distance from portfolio companies

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

The Wall Street Journal’s Venture Capital Dispatch takes a look at a study by Harvard and the Federal Reserve that says startups often do better outside the usual VC hubs of Boston, New York and Silicon Valley. But it’s not just the sweet, sweet freedom from micromanagement:

That flies in the face of the conventional wisdom, which is that start-ups benefit from having VCs nearby to monitor them, coach the management team and provide key introductions to other entrepreneurs or investors. So does that mean start-ups are better off when VCs leave them alone – in effect serving as absentee VCs that just provide the cash and don’t meddle?

Not exactly. The study speculates that the reason for the better performance of companies that are off the beaten path may be more due to what the researchers call a “higher hurdle rate,” or the requirement by VCs of a higher expected rate of return. In other words, when investing outside of their local area, VCs will tend to use a higher threshold and invest in companies that they believe have a greater-than-usual chance of going public, to make up for the travel costs and inconvenience of monitoring a far-flung company.

Health 2.0: WSJ talks to Atlas Ventures

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

The Wall Street Journal’s Venture Capital Dispatch blog talks to Atlas Ventures partner Jeff Fagnan about the firm’s health care IT strategy. The post notes the term “Health 2.0″ is being used to describe the space.

Betting on the over/under for the first “Health 3.0″ or “Health 2.0 is dead” stories begins now.

WSJ Q&A with Philip Kaplan of F—–Company.com

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

Philip Kaplan, the founder of ad network AdBrite Inc. and dot-com obit site F—–Company.com, joined Waltham- and Menlo Park-based Charles River Ventures recently.  

The Wall Street Journal’s Venture Capital Dispatch has a Q&A with the entrepreneur-turned-VC. Kaplan, who recently developed a Twitter dating application, explains why F—–Company itself remains dead. 

With (for example) General Motors, that’s not funny. I don’t think anyone thinks that’s funny. Back in 2000, people thought it was funny when these companies like a furniture site would spend more on shipping furniture than buying the original furniture. People thought that was funny. People have asked me to bring (F—edCompany) back, but I’ve moved on. Somebody put it best to me and said, ‘You know, at F—edCompany your job was evaluating companies and if you thought they were f—ed you wrote about it on the Internet.’ But now I’m doing that as a venture capitalist, I’m doing it more professionally.

After the jump, Kaplan stars in the YouTube video, “Death Metal Office Drumming.”

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