Category Archives: Tech Startups

Tech startups information

Matt Mickiewicz of SitePoint.com and 99Designs.com, and Steve Bell interviewed by CBS

Matt’s first startup, Sitepoint.com, launched ten years ago when he was 15.  While living in Vancouver Island, Canada, and his staff working in New Zealand, Matt has just opened an office for his spinoff  called 99Designs.com in San Francisco.  Sitepoint is the 799th busiest site on the internet, and Matt has run it magnificently.  He’s a very impressive and accomplished young entrepreneur.

At 99Designs, graphic artists from around the world compete with each other to develop logos, web pages, and other graphics for corporations, small businesses, individuals, and others.

Steve Bell, consistently being one of the highest-rated contest holders at 99Designs.com since 2004, was invited into to this interview when he was in San Luis Obispo, taking photographs at Cal Poly.  He spoke to CBS for 30 minutes, but only got 30 seconds of video in the edited version.

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Sprint + Google deal update

Will the $3.2B Sprint + Google+(et al…) mega-deal bring WiMax coast-to-coast in the USA?

Back on June 8 2008 we wrote about a deal announced by Sprint and Clearwire, that was the best news for WiMax imaginable:  http://tinyurl.com/cjo59d

Money flow... the Sprint - Clearwire deal!

Money flow... the Sprint - Clearwire deal!

This is a Mega-deal between Sprint, Google, Clearwire, Comcast, Time Warner, and Intel, which was intended to create “the NEW Clearwire”, facilitating a nationwide rollout of 4G WiMax wireless broadband.  At the time we pointed out that the equity and bond markets would need to remain healthy in order for this deal to happen.  And that it would need to be cleared by regulators, not to mention lawsuits and appeals from NexTel dealers claiming breach of contract.  There were some checks written, but Clearwire currently has only a minimal WiMax “footprint” in Portland, Baltimore, Boise, and Las Vegas. At least $3 to $5B more would be required to build out WiMax nationwide.  Analysts don’t expect Clearwire to become profitable for six years. They will report a $688M loss for 2008.

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Nortel Ends Joint Agreement with Alvarion for Mobile WiMAX

Nortel will discontinue its mobile WiMAX business and end its joint agreement with Alvarion. The agreement, announced in June 2008, outlined the integration of Alvarion’s advanced radio access network technology with Nortel’s core network solutions, backhaul solutions, and global services. It also covered the resale by Nortel of the Alvarion platform of WiMAX access products.

nortel-alvarionjpg

Nortel said its decision will allow it to narrow its focus, better manage its investments and strengthen its broader carrier business to better position itself for long-term competitiveness.

“We are taking rapid action to narrow our strategic focus to areas where we can drive maximum return on investment. We will work closely with Alvarion to transition our mobile WiMAX customers to them and assure customers that they will continue to benefit from leading-edge technology and high-quality service,” said Richard Lowe, president of carrier networks, Nortel.

For its part, Alvarion is said it is analyzing Nortel’s decision and will take action to mitigate the impact on its business, and expects to provide more information about these actions during its fourth quarter 2008 financial results conference call on Wednesday, February 4, 2009. Under the terms of the agreement, Nortel is obligated to pay Alvarion for certain research and development services beyond Q4; however, collection of these payments is uncertain and subject to Nortel’s creditor protection proceedings.

As a result of the foregoing, Alvarion will not be able to recognize approximately $2.4 million of revenues from the sale of products to Nortel during the fourth quarter of 2008. Accordingly, total revenues for the fourth quarter ended December 31, 2008, are expected to be approximately $70 million, at the low end of the Company’s revenue guidance of $70 to $78 million.

Tzvika Friedman, President and CEO of Alvarion, said, “We are obviously disappointed in the direction this has taken; however, Alvarion’s industry position has never been stronger. In Q4, our WiMAX shipments, excluding Nortel, reached a record $54.4 million and WiMAX revenues were $42.3 million. Our book-to-bill remained well above 1, and we ended the year with over $140 million in cash on our balance sheet.” http://www.nortel.com/ http://www.alvarion.com 30-Jan-09

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Seismic shift in the social landscape: How did Twitter pass LinkedIn? Is Facebook next?

In Startup Trek’s view, Twitter is likely the most “disruptive” startup to emerge since Google’s emergence ten years ago; and perhaps since the arrival of the personal computer era back in 1982. According to just released primary research, Twitter is about to pass LinkedIn in daily uniques @~11.5M uniques/mo in April, 2009. LinkedIn has 35M registered users, but only 11.5M use the site at least once monthly.  LinkedIn’s traffic profile has been sideways for some time.  Unlike Facebook, only a small percentage of LinkedIn access is via RSS/XML, or mobile devices, which are a bit more difficult to track.

Here comes Twitter!

Here comes Twitter!

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The best Genealogy web 2.0 application: Ancestry.com

Ancestry.com

Ancestry.com

Once in a while you discover an amazing web application, a brew of ever-updating SaaS code resident with a unique, compelling set of content.  One of the best state-of-the-art web applications I’ve found recently is located at:  http://Ancestry.com.   With over 250,000 Genealogy sites on the internet (last time i checked, which was about three years ago) you would think it would be hard to do something new, better, or different in the online genealogy space – software for researching family trees.

But then again… they said the same thing about Google, “search engines have already been done”.  Not always the case.

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GigaOM Mobilize Conference

img_5534jpg1I’m at GigaOM’s Mobilize conference today in San Francisco. I just attended a session on “Angel and Seed financing”, the art of structuring deals. The conference hosts are ably live-blogging every session at GigaOM .

I have much respect for Mr. Om Malik, founder of http://GigaOm.com; and formerly the top technology business writer for Fortune Magazine.

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SVASE panel on which tech startups get funded, and why

The Tech Startup Gets Funded

The Tech Startup Gets Funded

This SVASE panel discussion held Thu Aug 7 2008 at Wilson-Sonsini in Palo Alto

Delved into the question of what types of startups are attracting funding, and why.

What types of startups are getting funded? Consumer? Technology? Social? Wireless? or what?

What are the most attractive markets; 5 million free members to the next Flickr, or the Fortune 500?

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Will SaaS disappear in the Cloud?

SaaS lost in the Cloud Computing

SaaS lost in the Cloud Computing

Michael Barker, Managing Director of Revolution Partners, headed up this panel at AlwaysOn examining the distinctions between SaaS, cloud computing, on-demand, and grid computing in order to clarify the differences and review their relative merits.  The panelists were:

Vance Checkett, COO, Mozy, EMC Russ Daniels, VP & CTO Cloud Services, HP Drew Clark, Director of Strategy, IBM Venture Capital Group Polly Sumner, President, Platforms & Alliances, Salesforce.com Rich Zippel, VP Technology, Chief Technologist Office, Sun Microsystems

Zippel: some IT services are best delivered off some form of homogeneous infrastructure… every few years we see a different name for it and it takes a different form…

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Will the Next Salesforce.com please stand?

This panel was moderated by Paul Kwan of Morgan Stanley with the purpose of examiing the health and vitality of the ‘software as a service’ (SAAS) application trend as a business model.

The panelists were:

  • Lyle Fong, CEO, Lithium
  • Lisa Lambert, Managing Director, Software & Solutions Group, Intel Capital
  • Steve Papermaster, CEO, nGenera
  • Tien Tzuo, CEO, Zuora
  • Maynard Webb, CEO, LiveOps (formerly eBay)

Lambert: “Security is still a big issue with SaaS.  We needed a SalesForce.com to show the way but we’re not there yet.”

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Entrepreneurial summit extraordinaire: The Summit at Stanford, put on by Always On

Tony Perkins of Red Herring Magazine fame, is putting on a conference for startups and vc’s like no other next week.

It’s called “Summit at Stanford “.  Google, Salesforce.com, Skype, YouTube, Blue Lithium and Quigo all presented in past years while they were still privately held startups.

We’ll be there door-to-door next week, attending every session and always lurking in the hallways.  We’ll be reporting here on The Bell Letter Blog about particularly interesting startups, sectors, and trends from the conference.

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