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To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (3266)6/15/2009 1:13:01 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 6763
 
SEC charges founder of Chicago Sports Webio in fraud

chicagotribune.com



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (3266)6/15/2009 7:23:51 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 6763
 
Facebook Members Nab 5.75 Million User Names in First Two Days

By Brian Womack and Dan Hart

June 15 (Bloomberg) -- Facebook Inc., the most-popular social-networking site, said 5.75 million people registered user names in the two days after the company let members claim a personalized Internet address.

Facebook, which has more than 200 million users worldwide, began accepting registrations at midnight New York time on June 13, on a first-come, first-served basis. Within 15 minutes, more than 500,000 user names had been assigned, said Larry Yu, a spokesman for the Palo Alto, California-based company. More than 3 million registered in the first 12 hours, he said.

“It’s rewarding to see so many people are interested in getting a user name,” Yu said yesterday in a telephone interview. While traffic to the site was higher than usual, the feature’s introduction went smoothly, he said.

Facebook said personalized addresses will make it easier to find people. Users can direct friends to a simplified Web address, such as facebook.com. Previously, those addresses had strings of letters and numbers. The change also makes it easier to find Facebook members through search engines such as Google Inc.

Separately, Facebook hired Greg Badros from Google to head engineering, Yu said today in an e-mailed statement. Badros, Google’s senior director of engineering, was responsible from 2004 to 2007 for the technology behind the company’s AdSense platform, which lets third-party sites show ads sold by Google, according to Badros’s Web site.

“Greg is one of the most accomplished engineering talents at Google, and it’s wonderful that he has decided to bring these talents to Facebook,” Yu said.

“We wish Greg well,” said Matt Furman, a Google spokesman, said in an e-mailed statement.

‘Personal Destination’

Facebook, founded in 2004 by Mark Zuckerberg, is looking for ways to attract users and encourage them to spend more time on the site. The company generates sales by selling advertising. Revenue may climb 70 percent this year, Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg said in April.

“Your new Facebook URL is like your personal destination, or home, on the Web,” the company said in a blog posting last week. “We expect to offer even more ways to use your Facebook user name in the future.”

Users concerned about privacy can specify who can see their profile and what material they can view, Facebook said. They can also specify whether profiles are viewable to people searching outside Facebook.

Facebook attracted 67.5 million visitors in the U.S. in April, with people spending an average of about 169 minutes at the site, according to ComScore Inc., a research firm in Reston, Virginia. That compares with 172 minutes at Google, 290 minutes at Yahoo! Inc. and 233 minutes at News Corp.’s MySpace, ComScore said.

Facebook, whose backers include Microsoft Corp. and venture-capital firm Accel Partners, received a $200 million investment last month from Russian firm Digital Sky Technologies, valuing the company at $10 billion.

To contact the reporters on this story: Brian Womack in San Francisco at bwomack1@bloomberg.net; Dan Hart in Washington at dahart@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: June 15, 2009 13:19 EDT



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (3266)6/15/2009 8:10:59 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 6763
 
SEC Halts Ponzi Scheme Run by Convicted Felon Siphoning Investor Funds for Sports Talk Venture

online.wsj.com



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (3266)6/16/2009 1:52:49 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 6763
 
How Disruption Can Work in Your Favor

blog.meteorsolutions.com



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (3266)6/16/2009 1:57:23 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 6763
 
Steve Rubel and Stowe Boyd on the Share Economy

blog.meteorsolutions.com



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (3266)6/16/2009 5:23:50 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 6763
 
What's Going on at Chicago Sports Webio?

chicagoist.com



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (3266)6/17/2009 5:17:55 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 6763
 
This presentation contains summaries of enterprise environmental and technology related trends that will be important in 2009

slideshare.net



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (3266)6/17/2009 6:39:13 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 6763
 
VCs to Obama: Leave us alone, we're not the bad guys

techflash.com



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (3266)6/20/2009 1:14:27 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 6763
 
Kickstart Seeds Zerista
______________________________________________________________

June 18th, 2009 -- Zerista, a Denver-based provider of software for conferences and trade shows, has raised an undisclosed amount of seed funding led by Kickstart Seed Fund.

PRESS RELEASE
Zerista, a provider of next generation software for conferences and trade shows, today announced the completion of its seed funding. The round was led by Kickstart Seed Fund and included previous investors and management. Zerista will use the financing to expand its product development, sales and marketing efforts.

Zerista’s funding caps a highly productive year of product development and charter customer deployments. Within the last year, the company released the initial version of its next generation event software product. The product has been deployed successfully at a number of leading conferences and trade shows. Customers include associations, enterprises and event management companies.

Zerista provides integrated communication, networking, personalized scheduling, event mapping, as well as attendee and exhibitor management modules. Zerista’s software tools enable attendees, exhibitors, speakers and event organizers to interact online before, during and after the event. This enables the key event stakeholders to get more value from the event, leading to increased event satisfaction, attendance, and loyalty. The software enables event organizers to strengthen relationships between their core stakeholders - attendees, exhibitors and speakers - in a unique and compelling way.

“When we launched the Zerista solution, we realized that there was an opportunity to provide a comprehensive solution that uniquely meets the networking, communication, scheduling and mapping needs of all the conference stakeholders: attendees, exhibitors, speakers and event organizers,” said Charlie Savage, CEO of Zerista. “The financing from the Kickstart Seed Fund demonstrates Zerista’s success to date as well as our potential to become the leading provider in our market.”

“Kickstart Seed Fund is very excited to be an investor in Zerista,” said Gavin Christensen, Managing Director, Kickstart Seed Fund. “John and Charlie are true entrepreneurs that know how to build a solid company. They have created an innovative product that is solving an important problem for events and their attendees in this challenging environment. Some of the world’s largest and most important events already trust Zerista to make their event more rich and interactive.”

About Zerista:

Zerista, a leader in social event software for conferences and trade shows, is significantly improving the way events use social software to improve attendee and exhibitor productivity before, during and after the event. The privately-held company is based in Denver, Colorado. For more information, visit zerista.com .




To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (3266)6/22/2009 5:15:08 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 6763
 
Fifty Best Tech Startups

businessweek.com

BusinessWeek and YouNoodle's list of 50 tech startups includes young companies like Cloudera, Project Better Place, and Scribd that are poised for growth

By Aaron Ricadela

June 17, 2009

When Christophe Bisciglia worked at Google, the 28-year-old computer scientist quickly became the company's top evangelist for cloud computing, teaching academia and industry how to churn through mountains of data to discover new insights by shifting heavy digital workloads from islands of PCs and data centers to the globally interconnected Web. As a founder of startup Cloudera, he's aiming to capitalize on those lessons.

Bisciglia's eight-month-old Cloudera teaches companies how to "compete at Google scale." Cloudera sells technical support for open-source software called Hadoop, which analyzes huge amounts of data much faster than traditional computers by distributing the work across hundreds of machines. For companies in fields that routinely require heavy number-crunching like biotech, online advertising, and finance, Cloudera's service could help find opportunities that might not be apparent using traditional computing methods.

With a management team made up of Google (GOOG) and Facebook veterans and $11 million from venture capital firms Accel Partners and Greylock Partners, and high-profile angel investors including VMware (VMW) co-founder Diane Greene and former MySQL CEO Marten Mickos, Cloudera is emerging as a player in the nascent field of cloud computing and a resource that companies dealing with quantities of data should be aware of.

fledglings attracting buzz
There are plenty of young companies just like Cloudera. That's why BusinessWeek and market researcher YouNoodle have teamed up to identify 50 promising startup companies flying below the radar in 2009. You won't find Twitter or Facebook on this list. Instead, you'll discover new tech companies from the U.S., China, India, Israel, and Russia that are attracting some early buzz. Most of these fledgling companies started in 2005 and later, and all are poised to grow beyond their regional or niche-market origins.

The companies on our list may be well-known among the digerati, but they haven't achieved wider fame that would make them household names. Others on this list may never achieve that level of celebrity status but are worth watching because their top-tier investors and experienced management teams could make them significant players in their industries.

The entrepreneurs behind these startups all have lofty goals. Former SAP (SAP) executive Shai Agassi's Project Better Place is building a network of electric car charging stations around the world to try to usher in a new era in transportation, garnering tax incentives in Israel, Denmark, and Hawaii. Document and e-book-sharing Web site Scribd has seen rapid growth in traffic and on June 12 signed a deal with Simon & Schuster (CBS) to sell nearly 5,000 e-books on Scribd. On the consumer Web, Max Levchin, CEO of widget software maker Slide, has a different goal: He wants to either sell Slide or take it public for a value that exceeds the $1.5 billion eBay (EBAY) paid for his last company, PayPal.

memory and e-mail help
Several companies on our list hope to capitalize on the new frugality by offering corporate customers technologies that can cut costs or help augment sales. Fusion-io sells a device that lets computers store information on flash memory chips like the kind used in iPods or digital cameras. Flash memory is faster, lighter, and draws less power than traditional disk drives. Dell (DELL) (also an investor), Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), and IBM (IBM) have included Fusion-io's technology with some of their products. In April, the startup received $47.5 million from LightSpeed Venture Partners and other investors. The company got a brainpower boost in February when Apple (AAPL) co-founder (and recent Dancing with the Stars contestant) Steve Wozniak joined as chief scientist.

Xobni—the name is "inbox" spelled backwards—wants to remake corporate e-mail. Its software, which has been downloaded more than 2 million times, works with Microsoft's (MSFT) Outlook program to help users find messages and attachments faster, and organize conversations by the people they're held with. The company has raised over $14 million in venture capital, including $7 million from Cisco Systems (CSCO) and $3.2 million from BlackBerry maker Research In Motion's (RIMM) investment arm.

In the clean technology arena, VCs are getting choosier. Venture investments in cleantech companies soared 54% in 2008, to $4.1 billion, providing a bright spot in the chilly venture market. The sector is also benefiting from provisions of the government's stimulus package aimed at promoting construction of energy-efficient buildings and electrical grids, development of batteries for electric cars, and other green technologies.

Investors are realizing that startups cultivating alternative energy sources like solar, wind, and biofuel power consume lots of cash, face powerful competitors, and need to deal with government regulations. "There's so much that they can't control," says Paul Deninger, vice-chairman at investment bank Jefferies (JEF). Now VCs are turning to startups with more modest goals, including reducing the energy used by lights, buildings, and computer networks, he says.

two cleantech plays
Companies on the BusinessWeek-YouNoodle list illustrate both types of cleantech plays. Bloom Energy, founded by a former NASA scientist, is developing fuel cells for homes and businesses that produce clean, efficient electricity through chemical reactions. Its main product is a cell that can convert natural gas and plant products into hydrogen fuel. Bloom has raised an undisclosed amount of funding from investors including Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers.

Los Angeles-based Nila, on the other hand, makes energy-sipping LED movie and TV lights that are lighter and easier to carry around sets than traditional movie lights. Nila's lights have been used in the 2008 James Bond film Quantum of Solace and by CNN (TWX) for coverage of last summer's political conventions.

The ground is shifting for investors in consumer Internet companies as well. A couple of years ago, entrepreneurs flocked to build social networks or add-on applications for them. The field has become so saturated that smart startups are carving out niches alongside the established players.

Zynga's Texas Hold Em poker is one of the most popular applications on Facebook, and the maker of casino, word, and party games on the Web is generating annual sales of about $100 million, at a profit. Zynga's success reflects a trend toward social media companies selling premium games and virtual goods (like poker chips), vs. trying to build a business based solely on assembling a big audience for ads.

Meanwhile, Ning, co-founded by Marc Andreesen of Netscape fame, has raised $104 million to offer free software that lets users build their own social networks. So far, Ning says its software has been used to create 1 million social networks.

No one can predict the next Google, Twitter, or Facebook, but this list includes 50 startup companies worth watching.



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (3266)6/24/2009 4:17:52 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 6763
 
Interop: Early Signs of a Modest Recovery in IT Spending?

edmaguire.wordpress.com



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (3266)6/26/2009 11:17:37 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 6763
 
Housing outlook by metro area:

matrix.millersamuel.com



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (3266)6/30/2009 2:42:37 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 6763
 
Q&A with Benchmark Capital’s Bill Gurley, including the deals he shouldn’t have passed on...

ansanelli.com



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (3266)6/30/2009 2:49:23 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 6763
 
What VCs Look For and How to Pitch

dpakman.wordpress.com



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (3266)6/30/2009 3:06:36 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 6763
 
Apparently 52.9% of Venture Capitalists are Deluded

jasonmendelson.com



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (3266)7/1/2009 8:19:59 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 6763
 
Former UBS Global Asset Management Executive Launches Global Opportunity Fund
____________________________________________________________________

Singer Partners Forms Under the Leadership of a Seasoned Investment Management Team

DARIEN, CT -- (Marketwire) -- 07/01/09 -- Brian Singer, who previously managed a $200 billion Global Asset Management multi-asset practice at UBS, today announced the launch of Singer Partners, LLC, a new investment management firm. At the firm, Singer will lead a team of experienced, highly respected industry thought leaders. Singer is the current chair of the CFA Institute Board of Governors, serves on the Exeter College at Oxford University Endowment Investment Committee and is Chairman of the Milton Friedman-inspired organization "Free to Choose." The formation of Singer Partners is Mr. Singer's reemergence into the financial services industry after leaving UBS in 2007.

Singer Partners believes that we are at a point in time where institutions and individual investors are looking for investments that are transparent, liquid and consistent, and for asset managers whose interests are appropriately aligned with their own. That is the motivation for forming Singer Partners, LLC with an investment team that has worked together for a decade to provide a fundamental, long-horizon approach to global asset allocation and risk management.

Singer Partners' strategy, known as Global Opportunity, is built upon the fundamental heritage of global asset allocation and risk management begun at Brinson Partners, Inc., and time-tested over 27 years. The strategy relieves investors of the burden of having to choose between market risk and active risk. Singer Partners will dynamically navigate between the two, employing a process where total portfolio risk is managed in accordance with the investment return opportunities the firm identifies.

"Our goal with this firm is to ensure that all risk is understood, intended and compensated," said Mr. Singer. "We have assembled a team with integrity and skill, and these factors will contribute to an exceptional investment firm. The strategy is fit to endure bull and bear markets by strictly adhering to a time-tested fundamental investment discipline that seeks to deliver superior risk-adjusted results over time."

The leadership at Singer Partners will be rounded out as follows:

-- Edwin Denson and Thomas Clarke will lead the investment team. Edwin is former Head of Asset Allocation and Managing Director of UBS Global Asset Management. Thomas is former Head of Currency Analysis & Strategy and Managing Director of UBS Global Asset Management.

-- Edouard Senechal will be risk manager and Renato Staub will serve as a consultant to the firm on risk management. Edouard is former Senior Risk Manager and Executive Director of UBS Global Asset Management. Renato Staub is former Senior Asset Allocation and Risk Analyst and Executive Director of UBS Global Asset Management.

-- Sebastian Cassetta will be Chief Operating Officer. Sam is former Senior Managing Director and COO of Barington Capital Group, L.P. and former Vice President and Director of Brinks, Inc.

-- Michael Jacobs will be Chief Compliance Officer and General Counsel. Mike is a former partner and general counsel for Adams Street Partners.

With its formation, the firm announced the launch of an offshore and a domestic fund for its Global Opportunity capability. Singer Partners will begin investment operations in August and will manage assets for public and private institutions and high-net-worth individuals around the world. The firm will operate with offices in Darien, Connecticut; Winnetka, Illinois; and London.

Brian Singer has been a longtime devotee of the investment strategies of Gary Brinson, formerly of Brinson Partners. Brinson, Singer and Gilbert Beebower co-authored the landmark update to the pioneering study on asset allocation, "Determinants of Portfolio Performance II: An Update."

Denis Karnosky, former Head of Asset Allocation at Brinson Partners, stated, "If I were starting an asset management firm today, I would be using the exact strategy that Singer Partners will be implementing for its investors." Karnosky continued, "Brian has a solid track record and an excellent understanding of how markets perform over time, which sets the right tone for this investment strategy right now."

In addition, as part of Singer Partners' support for high integrity in the industry, the firm will become a Registered Investment Advisor (RIA) and adopt the CFA Institute Asset Manager Code of Professional Conduct, the highest professional integrity and ethical standards in the industry and the only industry code with required adherence to each of the ethical and professional principles set forth. The firm believes that ethical asset management -- including a strong compliance process, leadership by example from firm management, and competence throughout the organization -- has never been more important. The CFA code is designed for asset managers who aspire to the highest level of integrity.

FOR MORE INFORMATION: singerllc.com

This press release shall not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy, nor shall there be any sale of securities in any state or jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the securities laws of any such state or jurisdiction.