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Business & Financial News
| Aug 15, 2008 |
Zume puts care in the patient’s hands
Zume Life Inc. offers a small, handheld device
(“Zuri”) and a Web portal that help people with chronic diseases
manage their self-care. Individuals use Zuri to remember and
record various health-related activities. They and their caregivers
use the Web portal to review ongoing health patterns and to
respond quickly to changes in health. The Zuri can be either a
unique device or an application on a smartphone.
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| Aug 14, 2008 |
Getting Personal: Tech Cos Develop ‘Self -Care’ Health Tools
The Zuri, an iPod-sized device, sends patients reminders to take their medications and records their compliance, which users and, if they choose, their doctors can track through a companion Web page. The Zuri's maker, ZumeLife, Inc., is a San Jose start-up company.
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| Aug 12, 2008 |
America’s Unhealthiest Grocery Shoppers
While we all indulge every now and then, new data show that shoppers in certain portions of the country are more prone to regularly buying unhealthy items at the grocery store than others, due in part to a mix of regional, community and familial influences. To determine the country's unhealthiest grocery shoppers, Forbes.com used data compiled by St. Petersburg, Fla.-based Catalina Marketing, a company that specializes in developing behavior-based marketing strategies.
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| June 1, 2008 |
Richard Arnold, chief operating officer and CFO at Phoenix Technologies, says the portable-computer market, which is the company's largest customer segment, is growing at a compound annual rate of 30 percent. "We don't see any weakness at all in our market," he says. Still, Phoenix was recently able to buy a portfolio company from a venture-capital firm even as the target was in the middle of raising a new round of financing from its backer.
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| May 28, 2008 |
'Majority of our sales are from outside America'
Now, US-based NComputing claims that with its technology, the cost per seat for a computer could be below Rs 4,000. NComputing uses a model which helps share computing resources to offer the low-cost option.
Negroponte says the kids will learn how to fix the machines themselves.
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| May 23, 2008 |
Microsoft to make Windows, Linux available on OLPC: but will it work?
Nicholas Negroponte made much of his idea that every child should have a computer costing $100. In truth, it has not worked out like that and there was very little possibility that it ever would. Stephen Dukker is CEO of NComputing, which provides virtual desktop solutions for education in the U.S. and in developing countries. He said, 'We don’t particularly think laptops are a terrible idea; they’re a very good idea for people who can afford them. 'The real objection to OLPC is that they're trying to be a PC company without being a PC company. They are pushing back support, integration, deployment onto governments without extensive experience.' Every OLPC deployment has failed because of post-trial support issues.
Negroponte says the kids will learn how to fix the machines themselves.
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| May 1, 2008 |
More computer brands chase the '$100 laptop'
Meanwhile Ncomputing in Redwood City, Calif., may be the current price leader for student sales, although its product isn't a laptop. The company's device connects "dumb" terminals to a central computer. That core machine then shares its processing power with each of the networked computers. |
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| Apr 11, 2008 |
Phoenix Technologies to buy TouchStone Software for $18M
Phoenix Technologies Ltd. has agreed to acquire TouchStone Software Corp. in a deal worth about $18 million. Milpitas-based Phoenix (NASDAQ:PTEC) will pay TouchStone stockholders $1.48 for each share, representing a 29 percent premium over the closing price on April 9. North Andover, Mass.-based TouchStone (OTCBB:TSSW) provides software designed to diagnose personal computer problems and specializes in system update technology. |
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| Apr 11, 2008 |
Phoenix Technologies to buy TouchStone Software for $18M
Phoenix Technologies Ltd. has agreed to acquire TouchStone Software Corp. in a deal worth about $18 million. Milpitas-based Phoenix (NASDAQ:PTEC) will pay TouchStone stockholders $1.48 for each share, representing a 29 percent premium over the closing price on April 9.
North Andover, Mass.-based TouchStone (OTCBB:TSSW) provides software designed to diagnose personal computer problems and specializes in system update technology.
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| Apr 10, 2008 |
Phoenix Technologies to Acquire TouchStone Software
Phoenix Technologies (NASDAQ:PTEC) Ltd. Thursday said it agreed to acquire Touchstone Software (OTCBB:TSSW) Corp., a provider of computer problem-solving utility software and supporting products and engineering services. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.
Phoenix Technologies said the acquisition will enable the company to develop a 'strong' online presence and infrastructure for Web-based service delivery. Phoenix Technologies also said it plans to offer services based on Touchstone technology.
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| Apr 10, 2008 |
Phoenix Technologies to Acquire TouchStone Software
Phoenix Technologies (nasdaq: PTEC - news - people ) said the acquisition will enable the company to develop a 'strong' online presence and infrastructure for Web-based service delivery. Phoenix Technologies also said it plans to offer services based on Touchstone technology. |
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| Apr 8, 2008 |
Phoenix, Alcatel-Lucent to Offer Enhanced Laptop Security
Phoenix Technologies (NASDAQ:PTEC) has joined forces with Alcatel-Lucent (NYSE:ALU) to ensure that the Phoenix FailSafe theft deterrence service is interoperable with Alcatel-Lucent's OmniAccess 3500 Nonstop Laptop Guardian (NLG). |
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| Apr 7, 2008 |
Micron and Phoenix, Stocks for the Stout-Hearted
Last week, Phoenix announced a deal to acquire BeInSync, which provides seamless backup of crucial files to servers operated by Phoenix. The idea is to make data backup a core part of the computing experience -- and to create a steady revenue stream. Like FailSafe, use of the software would entail a modest monthly fee. A third new initiative, called HyperCore, would allow your laptop to provide key functionality outside of Windows. |
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| Apr 3, 2008 |
Virtualization In A Box: NComputing's PC Virtualization
NComputing has caught onto the trend of barebones machines, but it has taken an approach that circumvents the data center. Instead, it sells a system that allows companies to run several virtualized PCs on a single desktop machine. As many as 10 employees can split the power of a typical PC and work on individual computing terminals. Each terminal has just enough power to surf the Web, edit word documents or perform other low-bandwidth tasks.
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| Mar 6, 2008 |
NComputing expects LatAm to represent 30% of 2008 sales – Regional
US desktop virtualization solutions provider NComputing expects to triple sales in Latin America in 2008, representing 30% of global revenues, the company's founder Stephen Dukker told BNamericas. |
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| Feb 26, 2008 |
NComputing Opens LatAm Headquarters
US desktop virtualization solution provider NComputing has a new office in Mexico City, which will serve a headquarters for operations in Central and South America, the company said in a statement.
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| Feb 22, 2008 |
Phoenix Technologies 2008 Sales May Top Forecast, Chief Says
Phoenix Technologies Ltd.'s revenue this year may beat the software maker's forecast of $70 million by several million dollars, helped by a record number of new contracts in the fiscal first quarter, company officials said. The $70 million projection, made in a Jan. 7 press release, "is a conservative number," Chief Executive Woodson "Woody" Hobbs said yesterday in a telephone interview. Sales might be a "few million" higher, he said.
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| Jan 2008 |
Touch and Go
One of life's little annoyances is typing in your Windows password when you boot up. Instead, touch the fingerprint reader built into the U.are.U Fingerprint Keyboard Ditto for logging into websites and programs. The ergonomic design includes a palm rest and all the usual qwerty keys, as well as five programmable keys to speed up application launch. The keyboard's audit trail provides individual accountability for company desktops, and lets managers enforce access policies.
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| Sept 14, 2007 |
BlueRoads CEO Heads Upstream
The co-founder and former CEO of e-mail security startup Postini Inc., which Google Inc. bought this summer for $625 million, is a pioneer in on-demand computing, or "software as a service," an important shift in how companies and consumers use technology. He is now in charge of BlueRoads Inc., a provider of on-demand "partner relationship management" software that on Monday, Sept. 17, is set to announce a $9 million Series C round of funding. Participating in the round are previous investors ArrowPath Venture Capital of Redwood Shores, Calif., and Cardinal Venture Capital and El Dorado Ventures, both of Menlo Park, Calif., bringing the total amount BlueRoads has raised since launching in 2001 to $25 million. |
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| Jul 11, 2007 |
A Breed Apart
Mark N. Clemente has seen these forces at play in the business performance management (BPM) space in the past 12 months. He's the director of strategy and programming at the BPM Forum, an organization that helps to advance the understanding of business performance management techniques, technologies, and processes in global enterprises. Corporate decision-makers are thinking, "I need to have available systems that I can use for day-to-day, near-term decision-making as well as for slightly longer-term strategic planning to help me run my business better, but also to ready my organization for shifts in the marketplace, which come from all sources -- including government regulators," he reports. |
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Jul 9, 2007 |
Intel Inside The Third World
For a California company called NComputing Inc., the solution to the world’s Digital Divide lies in “collective computing.” NComputing CEO Stephen A. Dukker boasts that, for as little as $11 per user, schools or governments can deploy a network of “thin clients” – desktop machines that have no central processing units but are connected to a server, solving the problem of servicing laptops when they break down. “You require a complete, well-thought-out ecosystem to avoid winding up with stacks of these machines with broken screens, just collecting dust,” Dukker says. |
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Jun 14 , 2007 |
We Keep Sharing Passwords
Most of us, I think, aren’t dumb enough to advertise our passwords on post-it notes around the computer (though it’s tempting). But how many of you have actually shared passwords with a colleague? Quite a few, it turns out. A new “Password Pain Poll” byDigitalPersona and theBusiness Performance Management (BPM) Forum found that 68 percent of C-level executives say network passwords have been exchanged with colleagues in their organization. About half of them listed ease of use and increased productivity as their top security priority this year. And what could be easier than just spreading your password around? |
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Jun 11 , 2007 |
Schools Learn a Lesson in Desktop Alternatives
Schools are always looking for innovative ways to do more with less. One way value-added resellers are helping to address that need is by providing alternative desktop PC options. NComputing, a company started by eMachines founder Stephen Dukker, provides a solution that enables three to four users to work off one host PC. For schools, the system can help cut costs and simplify support
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| May 23, 2007 |
Internet & Technology - Spam Is Still Rising, But So Are Abilities To Cope With Issue
Americans get more spam than ever, but it's not annoying them as much. E-mail users are coping with junk messages better than they once did, according to a new study that finds wide use of filters and other tactics to dodge the unwanted missives. The amount of spam traversing cyberspace has risen by about 2.65 times over the past 12 months, according to privately held Postini, which runs a spam-filtering service for businesses that process billions of messages a day.
"The historical trend is about a 10% increase per quarter in the amount of spam," said Dan Druker, an executive vice president at the company. "Starting in September it was a very vertical rise. It was a hockey stick." |
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| May 21, 2007 |
Business Insurance: Industry Focus
In the first six months since sweeping changes altered the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure for federal court cases, some large insurers are making progress in revising their operations so they can preserve and produce electronically stored information—if and when needed. The new federal rules are especially important to insurers, because "the insurance industry is significantly more litigious than any other industry," said Marie-Charlotte Patterson, vp of market strategy for AXS-One Inc. in Rutherford, N.J. About 40% of the software company’s clientele is in the insurance or financial services industries. |
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| May 21, 2007 |
The Most Dangerous Job in Business
The chief marketing officer, or its org-chart equivalent, may be the riskiest job in the American C-suite. But the new reality is that CMO jobs are incredibly perilous. Today's marketing chiefs are shape-shifting beasts who grasp not only advertising and promotions but also public relations, IT, finance, manufacturing, customer service, and branding across global markets. That challenge helps explain why "we're seeing CMOs getting ambushed," says Donovan Neale-May, executive director of the CMO Council, an international peer-support network whose 3,000-plus members control more than $70 billion in annual marketing spending. |
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| May 8, 2007 |
Million-Dollar Starter Homes
The National Association of Realtors estimates that 80% or more of home buyers start their search on the Internet, a far cry from, say, 10 years ago when a consultation with a real estate agent was the norm. Today, it’s easier to log on to Web sites like Zillow.com and Reply.com, which provide comprehensive neighborhood information from median age and income levels to public and private school information. |
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| May 7, 2007 |
CMOs under pressure to develop new skills
Increasing influence in corporate strategy brings new expectations, responsibilities
While expectations are high for CMOs, there is often a gap between what CEOs expect from their top marketing leaders and actual performance, according to a study released last month by the CMO Council.
The study found that nearly three-quarters of CEOs and board members consider the marketing organization "highly influential and strategic" in the enterprise, but nearly two-thirds say that their top marketers don't provide adequate ROI with which to gauge marketing's true performance. The study also found that only about 40% of CMOs received an "A" grade from CEOs on their performance. |
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| May 1, 2007 |
Beyond Passwords: 3 Alternate Security Devices
Computer security is one of the highest priorities for IT departments, and every major corporation has staff devoted to maintaining a secure computing environment. The standard toolkits include firewalls, intrusion detection and prevention, anti-malware and any number of software systems that protect the contents of computers against would-be intruders. While each offers robust security, each takes a different approach to the identity verification criteria. AccessSmart's Power LogOn uses a smartcard, Digital Persona uses a fingerprint scanner, and SensibleVision's FastAccess uses facial recognition via an attached webcam. I found each to work as advertised, denying or allowing access appropriately. |
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| Apr 27, 2007 |
Study Says CMOs Misunderstood
A survey, done by the Chief Marketing Officer Council and sponsored by MarketBridge, a sales and marketing consultant for Fortune 500 companies, polled nearly 1,500 CEOs, CMOs and other executives. The study found that a big gripe among C-level execs is that many CMOs don't have the financial acumen and global and strategic mind-set to be top management players. Nearly two-thirds also say their top marketers don't give enough evidence of return on investment on which to gauge their work. In a sign of the key role played by CMOs, nearly 70% of the CMOs in the study report directly to their CEOs. However, only 40% of them get an "A" for performance from their bosses. |
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| Apr 23, 2007 |
CMO Council Study Finds Gap Between Expectations and Performance of CMOs
A gap exists between the expectations that CEOs have of CMOs and senior marketers’ actual performance, according to a new study by the CMO Council. “Typically, you have senior marketers who are hired who are not ultimately synching up with the objectives and expectations that the CEO and board members expect the CMO to have,” said Brian Regan, senior VP at the CMO Council. “We have been advocating defining the role and putting the right person in there—not just marketers that have marketing and brand-building skills, but those with cross-functional expertise. They have to be partners in strategic decision-making.” |
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| Apr 19, 2007 |
Mobile Campus Announces Rollout of Free Emergency Alerts System
With US universities seeking an immediate solution to emergency campus alerts in the wake of the Virginia Tech University tragedy, Mobile Campus has announced the availability of its free service capable of immediately and simultaneously alerting students, university employees and others via text message. While the system can be used for a variety of important communications and notifications, including promotional offers, Mobile Campus has decided, in the wake of the Virginia Tech tragedy, to make the service available to students and others who want to opt into the system only for emergency alerts. |
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| Apr 13, 2007 |
Neat Ways Round a Portability Problem
MojoPac, is a downloadable software package that can be installed on any USB 2.0 storage device including iPod, USB hard drive, USB flash drive or mobile phone (www.mojopac.com). I found a mini USB hard drive is ideal. Once installed, MojoPac allows applications and files to be carried on a device that fits in a pocket. |
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| Apr 12, 2007 |
Bearable Lightness of Laptops
MojoPac, is a downloadable software package that can be installed on any USB 2.0 storage device including iPod, USB hard drive, USB flash drive or mobile phone (www.mojopac.com). I found a mini USB hard drive is ideal. Once installed, MojoPac allows applications and files to be carried on a device that fits in a pocket. So, for example, with sufficient capacity on the storage device you can load up personal versions of Microsoft Office and most other programs and access them simply by plugging the USB device into any PC anywhere in the world. Language settings are stored on the MojoPac enabled device, so you can connect to a Japanese PC and still have everything in English. MojoPac costs $50 but comes with a 30-day free trial. |
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| Apr 10, 2007 |
ALL BUSINESS: CEO homes as stock gauge?
Liu and Crocker culled data on 488 principal residences from CEOs of companies in the Standard & Poor's 500 stock index at the end of 2004 for their study, entitled "Where Are the Shareholders' Mansions?" The 12 CEOs not included may be renters who own no property or live outside the United States. The researchers' sources of information included property deeds, tax records, online databases such as Zillow.com and Reply.com, Google searches, employment contracts and voter registration data. |
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| Apr 3, 2007 |
E-file precautions: One typo can get you into trouble; heed these tips to stay safe online
If you're using a wireless home network, make sure your firewall is on and that your transmissions are encrypted. Otherwise hackers "can pluck information right out of the air and they can do that from over 100 miles away," said Stu Elefant, a Sunnyvale, Calif.-based senior product manager with McAfee Inc., a security technology company based in Plano, Texas. "They can see all the data that's flying through the air." |
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| Mar 22, 2007 |
SMBs Eye Managed Services
Doug Turpin, information and technology director for Atlantic Bay Mortgage Group, in Virginia Beach, Va., heads a four-person IT staff. For several years, Atlantic Bay has contracted with Web-hosting company The Planet, of Houston, to handle the mortgage company's e-mail and other critical servers. "Typically what I look for, for places to outsource, are spots where our core competency is not x," Turpin said. |
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Mar 13, 2007 |

RingCube Technologies Scores $12 Million Investment
Mountain View, California-based RingCube announced that they have raised a $12 million Series B round of funding. "MojoPac is experiencing phenomenal growth month to month across multiple channels," said Shan Appajodu, CEO and Founder of RingCube. "This round of funding will enable us to accelerate our consumer and enterprise market growth and to service our customers across the globe." |
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| Mar 12, 2007 |
From .Ru with Love
Everyone knows Russia isn’t exactly crime free, but here’s a tip: Even if you’re going to visit Russia online, you’d best travel with security. That’s just one tidbit from a report released today by McAfee (MFE), “Mapping the Mal Web,” which notes that “the two riskiest large country domains to visit are Romania (.ro) and Russia (.ru), while the two safest are Finland (.fi) and Ireland (.ie).” Nice to see Ireland in the headlines for being peaceful. |
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| Mar 12, 2007 |
Surf At Your Own Risk
Enjoy the beaches of Tokelau. But beware the South Pacific island nation's Web sites.
That's the message from security software company McAfee, which released a survey Monday ranking the world's most dangerous Web addresses. McAfee says more than 10% of all Web sites registered out of Tokelau, identifiable by the ".tk" at the end of their Web address, will expose users to spam, viruses and spyware.
McAfee's survey was based on data from SiteAdvisor, a Boston-based company that the security company bought last April. SiteAdvisor's free online tool assigns Web sites a safety score based on whether they send spam, infect surfers with malicious programs or deliver excessive pop-up ads. |
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| Mar 9, 2007 |
RingCube - Changing The Way We Compute On The Go
RingCube received $12 million in expansion funding from NEA and MDV. The company intends to use the funding to expand its services worldwide.
What's interesting about the company is it's MojoPac technology. It allows a user to take all of his/her files, applications and settings onto a portable USB storage device (stick) and simply plug it into any Windows XP computer anywhere and immediately have access to their customized and private computing environment.
While I haven't personally tried the system, it sounds like a great tool for business travel. If you don't need your laptop for a presentation and you have access to a company or other computer at your destination, you don't have to lug your laptop through the airport security check anymore. |
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| Mar 9, 2007 |
RingCube to use $12M round to take product global
The Mountain View software company, which lets users suck their PC's contents onto USB storage devices for transport and use on iPods, cell phones and other gadgets; started last year and now employs 45 full-time employees and consultants. Fifteen or so more employees will be added by year's end. |
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| Mar 9, 2007 |
Mobile Computing Software Developer RingCube Draws $12M
Mobile computing software developer RingCube Technologies Inc. has connected with venture investors for a $12 million second round. Its first product is an application called MojoPac, which allows users to transfer programs and files from a desktop computer to any device with a USB port. |
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| Mar 8, 2007 |
Mobile Computing Software Developer RingCube Draws $12M
Mobile computing software developer RingCube Technologies Inc. has connected with venture investors for a $12 million second round, with Mohr Davidow Ventures joining as the lone new investor. The deal follows widespread interest in the Mountain View, Calif.-based company from venture firms following its first product launch, according to RingCube founding chief executive Shan Appajodu. RingCube introduced its first product in September, a software application called MojoPac that received significant attention at the time. |
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| Mar 7, 2007 |
MDV backs RingCube in $12M round
Mobile computing software developer RingCube Technologies Inc. has connected with venture investors for a $12 million second round, with Mohr Davidow Ventures joining as the lone new investor. The deal follows widespread interest in the Mountain View, Calif.-based company from venture firms following its first product launch, according to RingCube founding chief executive Shan Appajodu. RingCube introduced its first product in September, a software application called MojoPac that received significant attention at the time.
MojoPac allows users to transfer programs and files from a desktop computer to any device with a USB port, then simulate one’s own home computing experience on any other machine by re-connecting the mobile device. |
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| Mar 7, 2007 |
RingCube raises $12M for virtual PC service
RingCube Technologies, the Mountain View company that sells the “MojoPac,” which is a software to store a virtual PC in your pocket via a USB device or iPod, has raised $12 million in a second round of financing. RingCube will use the capital to expand into other regions, including South America, Europe, Asia, and the BRIC nations. It will also seek to serve corporate users, allowing employees to carry a virtual private network product on their MojoPac device, so that they can access their corporate networks from other machines. In places like Brazil, China and India, for example, many people use Internet cafes or kiosks, and the MojoPac is a good way to store their data, said chief executive Shan Appajodu. |
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| Mar 7, 2007 |

RingCube Raises $12M For App Mobility Tech
Mountain View, Calif. -- RingCube Technologies Inc. has raised $12 million to ramp up sales of its technology allowing users to untether themselves from their personal computers.
The Mountain View, Calif.-based company, founded in 2004, has developed software that virtualizes users' Microsoft Windows operating systems, allowing it to be carried on any USB 2.0-compliant storage device.
Its technology drew new investor MDV-Mohr Davidow Ventures and previous investor New Enterprise Associates to the company's Series B round. As a result of the investment, Jim Smith, a general partner with MDV, will take a seat on the RingCube board. |
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| Mar 6, 2007 |
RingCube Technologies Receives $12 million
Mountain View based RingCube Technologies – recipient of a $12 Million Series B financing - offers a solution to the memorable problem lamented by Ann Cole and Muddy Waters: "Got my mojo working, but it just won't work on you." Transferring "mojo" – defined by RingCube as an individual's digital lifestyle – to various computing devices is a problem plaguing a number of groups including gamers, college students, parents, and developing world citizens without abundant computer access. With assistance from new investors Mohr Davidow Ventures and existing New Enterprise Associates, RingCube hopes to eliminate mojo compatibility issues and fuel the worldwide trend toward a ubiquitous computing environment. |
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| Mar 6, 2007 |
RingCube raises $12M in second round
Software company RingCube Technologies Inc. said Tuesday it raised $12 million in its second round of venture funding.
|The Mountain View company has raised a total of $16 million in venture funds.
MDV-Mohr Davidow Ventures and New Enterprise Associates gave the money. Jim Smith of MDV took a seat on RingCube's board of directors as part of the investment. Krishna Kolluri and Forest Baskett of New Enterprise Associates already sit on the company's board following NEA's first round investment in RingCube. Kolluri is the company's chairman. |
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| Mar 6, 2007 |
USB computing company RingCube closes $12M round
RingCube Technologies Inc. said Tuesday it secured $12 million in second-round funding.
Mountain View-based RingCube said funders were Menlo Park-based Mohr Davidow Ventures and first-round investor New Enterprise Associates, which has an office in Menlo Park.
The company's total financing is now at $16 million.
RingCube said that in connection with the round, Jim Smith of Mohr Davidow Ventures will join the board of directors.
Founded in 2004, RingCube has a software platform that lets users plug into any USB-compliant storage device, including iPods, flash or hard drives, to securely access personal programs, data and settings. |
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| Mar 5, 2007 |
RingCube to Announce Series B
RingCube CEO Shan Appajodu, is expected to announce that his nearly 3-year-old company has raised $15 million in a Series B funding from returning investor New Enterprise Associates and new backer Mohr Davidow Ventures. The deal brings the company’s financing to $16 million. The Mountain View, Calif.-based company sells MojoPac, a travel storage software platform that transforms users’ iPods or other mobile devices into portable and customized PCs. Just install MojoPac on any USB 2.0 device, upload your applications and files, and you’re good to go. |
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| Mar, 2007 |
The Human Factor of Financial Security
Solutions like fingerprint authentication have been around for a while now, though only recently has the buzz truly begun to build. United Bankers’ Bank of Bloomington, Minn., a correspondent bank in the Ninth Federal Reserve District, was one of the first to roll out a truly extensive biometric deployment starting in 2001 with its initial solution from DigitalPersona, based in Redwood City, Calif. |
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| Feb 27, 2007 |
Junk the ''Junk Email'' Law?
John Mello asserts that to combat unwanted electronic messages, the United States could do much better than the CAN-SPAM Act. Though three years have passed since Can-SPAM, electronic spam has an even longer shelf life than the luncheon meat.
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| Feb 27, 2007 |
IN THE PIPELINE: Vendors Plans Consumer Identity Protections
Several top software companies are aiming at one of the Internet's most pressing online problems: identity theft. For the first time they are targeting identity-protection software at consumers instead of the companies that run web sites and manage consumer records. However, these vendors, including Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), Symantec Corp. (SYMC) and McAfee Inc. (MFE), could find themselves entangled in a new round of competition, just as rivalries over anti-virus and other security programs heat up. |
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| Feb 27, 2007 |
The Bottom Line on Bots
Sometimes my computer seems to have a mind of its own. It inexplicably changes from a dutiful servant to a willful spirit capable of cruelly holding a document hostage. To rid my computer of any offending malware, I ran a scan using security software. But I wanted to get to know more about what may have possessed the machine, so I spoke to Stu Elefant, senior product manager at McAfee, one of the leading security-software firms. He says the behavior could be a sign the machine was affected by a "bot," a malicious program that lets an outsider take control of another person's computer and use it for illicit purposes, such as sending spam and other viruses or committing click fraud. |
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| Feb 22, 2007 |
Don't Call It Spam
Everyone hates spam. But like the canned meat product it's named after, it's hard to say exactly what it is. Andy Greenberg debates the legal meaning of spam and recounts some notable court battles that resulted from the openness of the term.
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| Feb 20, 2007 |
The Battle for Mobile Search In fact, slow service was one of the most frequently cited causes of customer frustration, according to the CMO Council's Global Mobile Mindset Audit, a study of 15,000 consumers in 37 countries unveiled on Feb. 12. (The study was supported by Palm.) |
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| Feb 16, 2007 |
Managing For Success: Overwhelming IT Overload Problems
Middle managers, for example,spend more than a fourth of their time just hunting for information to do their jobs. When they find what they're looking for, it's often wrong, according to an Accenture (ACN) survey of 1,009 managers in the U.S. and Britain.
The new Web survey shows that managers often spend up to two hours a day searching for data. Yet they say more than half of what they find has no value.
Worse, 59% of those surveyed miss information that might be valuable to their jobs on an almost daily basis. They know the information exists somewhere in the company, but they can't find it. And 42% of respondents say they accidentally use the wrong data at least once weekly.
Moreover, just 26% of executives say their companies have formal, well-defined processes and practices for decision-making. That's based on a poll of 300 managers in the U.S. that was done by the Business Performance Management Forum on behalf of Cognos. (COGN) |
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| Feb 14, 2007 |
Low-Cost Not Full Story in Developing Regions
People in Latin America, Eastern Europe and Asia express much more interest in and willingness to pay for advanced features and services than users in North America and Western Europe, says the study commissioned by the CMO Council, a marketing trade group. These consumers' needs can be as sophisticated as their tastes. Most respondents said they would like to use cell phones to make financial transactions online rather than to watch videos or play games. "Cell phone makers and service providers need to recognize there's a huge opportunity for advanced services and multifunctional devices in those (developing) markets," said Dave Murray of the CMO. Brian Regan, CMO vice president, presented the study findings at this week's 3GSM wireless conference in Barcelona, Spain. |
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| Feb 14, 2007 |
Toons Hijack the Cell Phones
The Cartoon Network on Wednesday introduced CallToons, a mobile application that will enlist the network’s stable of characters to help cell phone users navigate the overabundance of functions on their phones. CallToons comes on the heels of a report from the CMO Council’s Forum to Advance the Mobile Experience that found “function fatigue” tops the list of consumer issues impacting the adoption of new wireless devices. The CMO Council surveyed 15,000 consumers in 37 countries and found that “too many functions I did not use” is the No. 1 device problem in all regions of the world. |
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| Feb 13, 2007 |
Web Hosting: This Host Has the Most
For a small e-commerce business – or a big one for that matter – the company that provides your Web hosting services is your most important supplier, bar none. You look for reliability, connection speed, scalability (the ability to increase capacity seamlessly as Web operations grow) and responsiveness. The Planet also offers self-managed servers that sit in one of its data centers but are managed remotely by the client. Dodds wasn’t tempted. “You have to have real IT gurus on staff to do that,” he says. “If you’re not doing all the patching, and doing it the same day [the patches are released], you can get in trouble.” He’s more than willing to pay extra for the management services. |
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| Feb 13, 2007 |
Mobile Device Users in Developing Countries Surpass Those in the Most Developed Countries
Mobile device users in developing areas, such as Eastern Europe, Asia and Latin America, surpassed users in the most developed countries and regions in every mobile use category, according to preliminary results from The CMO Council's Global Mobile Mindset Audit, which was presented at the 3GSM show on Monday. Seventy-three percent of users in Latin America, 69% of users in Eastern Europe and 63% in Asia considered themselves to be very technology savvy with mobile devices, compared with 50% of U.S. respondents and 58% of users in Western Europe. The CMO Council surveyed more than 14,000 mobile users in 37 countries. An executive summary is available at www.insightcafe.com. A full report and accompanying data will be available in early March |
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| Feb 12, 2007 |
Developing regions take lead on mobile devices
Mobile phone users in developing regions such as eastern Europe, Asia and
Latin America are far more advanced in their use of mobile technology than their
counterparts in the most developed countries and regions, a study published
Monday revealed. |
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| Feb 8, 2007 |
Mischief-Proofing Your PC
The bigger players—Symantec (SYMC), McAfee, and a newcomer to this field, Microsoft—offer users a much better experience. I tried Symantec's Norton Internet Security 2007 ($70), McAfee Internet Security Suite 2007 ($50), and Microsoft OneCare ($50). All run on Vista or XP, include a year of updates, and can be used on up to three computers. |
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| Feb 8, 2007 |
Reverse the Brain Drain of Aging
It is true that as we age, our brains age, too. The memory loss and slower cognitive thinking that begin to affect people in their 40s are a natural part of the aging process. But just as we can alter our diets and include exercise in our daily routines to reduce our risk of heart disease, diabetes and stroke, new research shows that there are things we can do to slow, and perhaps even reverse, the aging process in our brains. According to Dr. Eric Braverman, author of "Younger You: Unlock the Hidden Power of Your Brain to Look and Feel 15 Years Younger," the key is understanding the role of the neurotransmitter, acetylcholine, which acts as a preservative for brain function. |
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| Feb 7, 2007 |
Samsung Phones to Get Device Management Offering
Users of Samsung mobile handsets may not have to worry about these common problems as InnoPath Software announced Feb. 7 that it has signed an agreement with Samsung to deliver its iMDM (integrated Mobile Device Management) offering to Samsung mobile handsets. InnoPath's iMDM consists of client software used and a server suite deployed by mobile operators and carriers to manage subscribers' handsets. iMDM allows Samsung operators to deploy device management functionalities to remotely troubleshoot and fix problems, and manage software on its mobile products. |
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| Feb 7, 2007 |
Phoenix Tech CEO Buys Shares of Firm Mr. Hobbs bought $456,000 of his company's shares even as the Milpitas, Calif., software maker prepares for a contested board election. Ramius Capital Group LLC, which owns about 13.7% of the company's stock, is seeking to place two representatives on the company's board in a vote scheduled for the annual meeting Feb. 14. |
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| Feb 12, 2007 |
Developing Regions Take Lead on Mobile Devices
Mobile phone users in developing regions such as eastern Europe, Asia and Latin America are far more advanced in their use of mobile technology than their counterparts in the most developed countries and regions, a study published Monday revealed. The study, prepared to coincide with the opening of the 3GSM telecommunications conference in Barcelona, Spain, provides some of the most definitive evidence yet that the US in particular lags behind other regions in the adoption and use of mobile technologies. |
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| Jan 22, 2007 |
Biometrics Firms Scan for Growth Opportunities
Biometrics is big and getting bigger thanks to a troika of Bay Area diehards. Retinal, fingerprint and facial identification technologies (and the supporting software and integrators) raked in an estimated $2.1 billion last year. That's up $800 million from 1999 and on track to hit $7.4 billion by 2012, according to the International Biometric Group. |
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| Jan 22, 2007 |
As 'Crimeware' Flourishes, Usual Safeguards Aren't Safe Enough
Phishing and spyware are two things to watch out for. They both aim to grab personal data for monetary gain. Phishing does it by fooling a person into thinking an attacker’s e-mail is from a legitimate company. It typically sends the recipient to a fake Web site to enter an account number and password, which the attacker can then see, copy and use – even sell. Spyware is software that worms its way onto a person’s computer, often copying what the user types and sending it off to an attacker. Anti-phishing and anti-spyware protections are still evolving. Increasingly they are being built into consumer security software products, such as Symantec’s Norton Internet Security and McAfee’s Internet Security Suite. Microsoft’s Windows Defender, meanwhile, is an anti-spyware program that can be downloaded free. |
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| Jan 17, 2007 |
Phoenix rejects increased buyout bid
Soon after opening its new facility in Burbank, Elektrofilm started using the DigitalPersona Pro Workstation biometric authentication system from DigitalPersona, Inc. Now employees only have to place a thumb or finger on the DigitalPersona fingerprint reader, wait for it to glow red, and their identity is automatically verified over the local network and logged in to Windows and vital company databases. |
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| Jan 17, 2007 |
Market Report -- In Play (PTEC) Phoenix Tech Board of Directors Rejects Offer by Ramius Capital Co announces its board of directors has rejected the offer of its largest shareholder, Ramius Capital Group, to acquire all of co's outstanding shares in an all-cash transaction for $5.25 per share. Co says "... As you know, our Board of Directors met in December 2006 and specifically rejected your Dec proposal that indicated a purchase price range of $5.25 to $5.35 per share. |
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| Jan 9, 2007 |
Put Your Finger On Security
Soon after opening its new facility in Burbank, Elektrofilm started using the DigitalPersona Pro Workstation biometric authentication system from DigitalPersona, Inc. Now employees only have to place a thumb or finger on the DigitalPersona fingerprint reader, wait for it to glow red, and their identity is automatically verified over the local network and logged in to Windows and vital company databases. |
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| Jan 8, 2007 |
Decoding Alzheimer’s
Francesco Bellini hasn't been sleeping lately. The charged-up chairman of Neurochem Inc. (NRMX) is just months away from finding out if a drug developed by his Quebec-based company can actually slow the course of Alzheimer's disease. A clinical trial of the drug, Alzhemed, will wrap up in January, with results expected in the spring. "The summation of all our work and research for the last 12 years will happen in the next six months," he says. Those 12 years have been focused on overcoming one of the toughest challenges in medicine: keeping Alzheimer's disease from slowly, relentlessly destroying the brain, something no drug has yet done. The data on Alzhemed have been promising but scant. |
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| Jan 8, 2007 |
Decoding Alzheimer's
Those 12 years have been focused on overcoming one of the toughest challenges in medicine: keeping Alzheimer's disease from slowly, relentlessly destroying the brain, something no drug has yet done. The data on Alzhemed have been promising but scant. In a 2002 study it stabilized the disease in nine patients over six months, but the small sample left plenty of specialists skeptical. Not Bellini, a scientist-entrepreneur who discovered one of the first effective treatments for aids. He bought a third of Neurochem and took the helm the same year the earlier Alzhemed trial was completed. "I started to feel very good about the drug as soon as I saw what it did for humans," he says. |
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| Dec 1, 2006 |
The Complete Layman's Guide to Cyber Safety …
Get a router and lock it down. Almost any $30 Wi-Fi router beefs up your security by acting as another firewall between your computer and everybody else on the Internet. But that doesn't do you much good if you then leave your wireless connection open to your neighbor or anyone driving down your street. If you have unencrypted Wi-Fi, anybody can hop on to your network and use your bandwidth--or watch what you do or even break into your computer. To foil them, set your router to encrypt your data, advises Stu Elefant of McAfee. You usually have two choices: WEP or WPA. Choose WPA. It's tougher to break. |
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| Dec 1, 2006 |
New E-Discovery Rules Benefit Some Firms
Many large companies "don't know what they have" and are therefore unprepared if they are sued, said Marie-Charlotte Patterson, vice president of market strategy for AXS-One Inc., a Rutherford, N.J.-based records compliance management firm. Without a better sense of what data they have and where, some companies settle lawsuits in order to avoid the costs of electronic discovery, she said. Better organization of the data can lower that cost and enable companies to avoid settling. "The need from the get-go to better manage that electronic data has become paramount," she said. |
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| Nov 16, 2006 |
How to Stay Safe When Shopping Online This Holiday Season
… Upgrade to the latest versions of the leading Windows web browsers, Microsoft's Internet Explorer 7 and Mozilla's Firefox 2.0, both of which warn you when a web page you're visiting appears to be phony. (The new Internet Explorer also has under-the-hood security improvements that close some of the holes plaguing older versions.) You might also consider add-on software, like McAfee's SiteAdvisor or the new Norton Confidential, which warn about fraudulent sites and, in the case of Norton, also about malicious software on your PC. On a Mac, consider using Firefox 2.0 instead of Apple's Safari, which, while very good and generally secure, lacks a fake-web-site detector. |
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| Nov 14, 2006 |
Safety Dance
… Upgrade to the latest versions of the leading Windows web browsers, Microsoft's Internet Explorer 7 and Mozilla's Firefox 2.0, both of which warn you when a web page you're visiting appears to be phony. (The new Internet Explorer also has under-the-hood security improvements that close some of the holes plaguing older versions.) You might also consider add-on software, like McAfee's SiteAdvisor or the new Norton Confidential, which warn about fraudulent sites and, in the case of Norton, also about malicious software on your PC. On a Mac, consider using Firefox 2.0 instead of Apple's Safari, which, while very good and generally secure, lacks a fake-web-site detector. … |
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| Oct 27, 2006 |
The Latest Online Scams, and How to Protect Yourself
Remember when hackers were young computer geeks gone bad, in search of infamy through viruses that wreak havoc on computers worldwide? Soon, you may wish that's all you had to worry about online. These days, hackers are going ever more covert in their effort to get their hands on a new goal: Money. "It's gone from ego to economics," said Marc Solomon, director of product management at McAfee Inc., the Santa Clara, Calif.-based security software provider. That desire for money rather than notoriety makes it harder to see the danger. Now, instead of a blanket attack trying to rope in as many victims as possible, fraudsters increasingly target small groups. … |
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| Oct 27, 2006 |
Business Journal
Tech Veteran Tries Out a New Racket When Mr. Rodgers took the helm of Square Hit Tennis last year, the company immediately started winning endorsements from tennis pros the likes of Brad Gilbert, who guided Andre Agassi and Andy Roddick to No. 1 world rankings. |
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| Oct 12, 2006 |
Illinois Court Cans Spamhaus Gus Maldonado, a product manager at anti-virus and security software provider McAfee (MFE), says that his company sees increasing demand for anti-spam technology. "The threat and the demand, they are both increasing," says Maldonado. "Spam is a very insistent problem that doesn't seem to go away." (See BusinessWeek.com, 6/15/06, "Yahoo Mail Sees Spam Everywhere".) McAfee now provides roughly 22 million users worldwide with spam filtering technology. To Maldonado, spam and most bulk e-mail are the same things—unsolicited, unwanted junk. McAfee's e-mail filters block messages based on whether consumers identify it as spam, if it includes hidden text or HTML errors, or it if it has a certain image-to-text ratio present in most spam e-mails, among other things. The company also has a free SiteAdvisor that warns computer users when a visited URL is known to send unsolicited bulk e-mail. … |
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| Oct 12, 2006 |
New Court Rules Push Better Data Retention … Over 40% of those polled said it can take their company more than a week to dig up certain e-mails. And 36% of respondents said their firms have no firm policies for electronic records management. Business Performance Management Forum conducted the survey for compliance software maker AXS-One. (AXO) It came out in September. The survey findings collide with the new federal rules, says Thomas Bookwalter of FMDS, a compliance consulting firm based in Santa Fe, N.M. … |
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| Oct 11, 2006 |
Putting IM Chats on the Record … “The archiving process doesn't’t help you do your business day to day,” says AXS-One Chief Executive Bill Lyons, “But there’s an upside.” In short, every dollar spent on compliance saves companies money by avoiding legal liabilities, harm to a company’s reputation and lost productivity. Plus, archiving and retrieval software can save the CIO a lot of anguish when, one morning, he or she receives a dreaded phone call from his or her company’s general counsel, says Lyons. “It’s just the worst thing, when you hear ‘I need to get all those records immediately.’”… |
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| Oct 6, 2006 |
Companies’ IT Systems Not Compliance Ready … Although lawsuits are a threat, 36.4% say their companies have no technologies or policies whatsoever in place to manage a legal discovery order involving electronic records. The full report -- "CEE the Future: Building the Compliance-Enabled Enterprise" -- is available by visiting www.bpmforum.org or www.axsone.com. |
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| Sept 18, 2006 |
Survey: IT Falls Behind on Compliance But, fifty-eight percent of the survey respondents said their IT spending will increase … Another solution is increasing communication between the IT department and the managers dealing with compliance, such as a company's general counsel or compliance officer, says Bill Lyons, CEO of AXS-One. The CIO needs to realize the entire scope of a company's priorities or else the IT department will likely concentrate on just one aspect of compliance, he adds. According to Lyons, when companies re-examine their policies and technologies relating to e-mail retrieval, they also need to consider all the other documents that could be asked for by a regulatory body, including instant messages, spreadsheets, PowerPoint presentations, and other company documents. Corporations need to be able to be quickly grab any document related to an investigation in a matter of hours or days, not weeks or months. … |
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| Sept 2006 |
Study Finds Companies Lacking in Compliance Readiness … The study, titled “CEE the Future: The Compliance-Enabled Enterprise,” was conducted by the Business Performance Management (BPM) Forum and sponsored by AXS-One Inc., a provider of records compliance management software solutions, along with the IT Compliance Institute and Chief Executive magazine. The project was designed to audit corporate America’s level of compliance readiness and offer a series of recommendations for improvement. … |
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| Aug 22, 2006 |

The wall Street Journal
Make Me an Offer: Buying Unlisted Homes Web Sites Add Tools to Help Clients Make Unsolicited Bids;
No More Notes in the Mailbox
Despite a glut of houses on the market, some buyers still can’t find the home of their dreams. Now, some Web sites are expanding people’s choices by letting them make offers for homes that aren’t listed for sale. Reply Inc., a Walnut Creek, Calif., company, is updating its reply.com Web site today to add new features, including help in making “unsolicited offers” for any house in the country. Redfin Corp., an online real-estate broker based in Seattle, aims to begin offering a similar service around year end... |
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| Aug 22, 2006 |

Forbes
A Click Away From Home
Research virtually any house and make an offer online, says Reply CEO Payam Zamani. |
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| Aug 2, 2006 |

New PC-Security Software Combats Latest Scams --- Tools by Symantec, McAfee And Others Vet Web Sites, Stop 'Spyware' Programs
Other new tools are being offered by companies including McAfee Inc., Microsoft Corp., and Check Point Software Technologies Ltd. Once installed, many of these tools will send messages or alerts pointing out that a site listed in Google's search results is known for sending out massive amounts of junk mail, for instance, or telling customers when their credit-card number is floating around on the Internet black market. Some will automatically block people from visiting sites aimed at tricking visitors into giving up sensitive information. |
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| Aug 2, 2006 |

Help for finding the help you need.
Making a big change? If you're moving, buying a home or thinking about other big purchases, a new Web site brings you the resources you need.
We all know someone who's been there. You get the call for your dream gig, and you're so excited. Except for one small detail. It's in Omaha, or Tallahassee, or Albuquerque - a city you can barely find on a map. Time was when this happened, you pulled out the old Yellow Pages and made the best of it. But one Web site , Reply!... |
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| Jun 07, 2006 |

Forbes
The Threat of Avian Flu
...One prime candidate for this task already exists. It's a substance called Alferon LDO (low-dose oral), the Hemispherx Biopharma version of the body's systemic alpha interferons, prepared from blood cells obtained at transfusion centers. An injected form of Alferon, already approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, is currently being used in the treatment of a certain viral infection and has the potential to act on native avian virus as well as on its humanized form.... |
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| Apr 12, 2006 |

There's a Bright Side to Tough New Laws
Compliance is an Issue
Sarbanes-Oxley, other new regulations a chore to follow, but also a help
...At their best, complaince systems create a kind of "corporate instant replay," sail Bill Lyons, CEO of AXS-One, a compliance software maker. One key piece of compliance software involves a central data repository to manage relevant records, says Lyons. Without that companies risk being caught off guard... |
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| Apr 10, 2006 |

IBM unveiling new encryption chip
... IBM researchers said SecureBlue already has made its way into one customer's devices. But they said that company had demanded anonymity. Considering that software vendors such as PGP Corp. already offer software-based encryption for portable devices such as BlackBerrys, IBM might have to convince skeptics that SecureBlue significantly raises the bar for security... |
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| Apr 05, 2006 |

McAfee (MFE) bought consumer software company SiteAdvisor for an undisclosed amount. SiteAdvisor rates the threat level of spam, viruses and online scams linked to Internet sites, then displays th ratings next to search engine results. Shares rose 2.5% to 25.18. |
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| Apr 05, 2006 |

McAfee's Anti-Spyware Play
If the goal of law enforcement is to stop crimes before they happen, then a new acquisition by PC-security firm McAfee positions the company as the most prescient of Internet cops... |
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| Apr 05, 2006 |

McAfee buys Web site rater SiteAdvisor
Antivirus software maker McAfee Inc. said Wednesday is has acquired SiteAdvisor Inc., a consumer software company that rates the threat level of internet sites, picking up on nuisances such as spam and viruses to online scams... |
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| Apr 05, 2006 |

McAfee acquires SiteAdvisor
After just over a year in business, SiteAdvisor Inc. is being acquired by security-software giant McAfee Inc. The companies did not initially disclose transaction terms. SiteAdvisor maintains a database of Web sites that proliferate spyware, spam and online scams, posting ratings next to online search results. The firm was launched last year as Infini Corp. by founders of Vividon, a video-streaming company which merged with StarBak Communications Inc. of Waltham, Mass., in 2003. SiteAdvisor is based in Boston and has a New York City office. ... |
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| Apr 05, 2006 |

McAfee Gobbles Up Web Ratings Security Startup
Anti-virus security specialist McAfee has wasted no time gobbling up SiteAdvisor, a 1-year-old startup that rates the Web to determine if a site's content includes spyware, spam, viruses, browser-based exploits or online scams. McAfee announced April 5 it is acquiring the tiny Boston-based company that counts respected anti-spyware activist Ben Edelman among its roster of backers.... |
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| Apr 03, 2006 |

Measurement calls for more resources
...One company that has invested in MPM people, processes and systems is Postini Inc., which provides electronic messaging management for corporations. "For a company the size of Postini, which is relatively small, it is kind of unusual to have a dedicated marketing measurement function," said Drew Paik, director of marketing operations for the company. His department has four people who are dedicated to measuring marketing performance. "In a small company, marketing measurement is even more important," Paik said. "You are not generating 30,000 leads a month, you are generating a few thousand; and each lead is very valuable." ... |
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| Mar 17, 2006 |

Federal Funds Lure Wide Mix Of Firms Into Avian Flu Battle
...One of the firms on Luskin's index is Philadelphia-based Hemispherx Biopharma. (HEB) It focuses on drugs to treat immune-based chronic disorders and viral disease, like the sexually transmitted human papilloma virus (HPV). Hemispherx's Alferon drug is widely used to treat HPV, while its Ampligen drug is in development to treat Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and HIV. How did Hemispherx make the leap into the avian flu race? Serendipity, says Dr. William Carter, the firm's chief executive. Independent researchers in Utah and Japan, working on avian flu, found that Ampligen could boost the effectiveness of Tamiflu and Relenza. Also, tests at the Cleveland Clinic show Alferon may stimulate genes that control production of the virus-fighting protein interferon. Carter says Ampligen could help the nearly 20% of children reported by the New England Journal of Medicine to be resistant to Tamiflu. He sees both drugs as add-ons to other treatments. "One drug alone will not be sufficient," he said. "The opportunity here is to build components that would go into the cocktail." Avian flu isn't the only target for Hemispherx. The drug might work against seasonal flu as well, Carter says. That's a big market opportunity. Seasonal flu kills about 36,000 Americans a year. ... |
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| Feb 21, 2006 |

Alnylam shares gain on Novartis deal Avian-flu stocks move broadly higher
...Hemispherx, which recently announced promising data for its drugs Ampligen
and Alferon in the treatment of avian flu, rocketed 15% to $3.62, as BioCryst
added 3% to $19.70. |
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| Feb 16, 2006 |

Hemispherx Biopharma's Ampligen Boosts Tamiflu Potency
Hemispherx Biopharma announced today its experimental immune system booster
Ampligen can enhance the effects of the avian influenza drug Tamiflu by a factor
of up to 100. Preclinical studies indicated that Tamiflu, when combined with
Ampligen, achieved full inhibition of the H5N1 virus using just 1% to 2% of the
Tamiflu needed to combat the virus on its own. The tiny Philadelphia-based
biotech presented the findings on Thursday in Washington, D.C., at a biodefense
conference hosted by the American Society for Microbiology... |
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| Feb 13, 2006 |

The Valentine's Effect?
Ah, Valentine's Day. Some say it's the most romantic day of the year. Others dismiss it as merely a commercial boondoggle. Still others find themselves dateless and depressed. For those of you in the last category, it could always be worse. You could be retaining a divorce lawyer. While many people have been shopping online for Valentine's Day gifts to delight their other half at places like Tiffany, Limited Brands' Victoria's Secret, 1-800-Flowers.com and even eBay, others hit the Internet for somthing less romantic--a divorce lawyer. San Francisco-based LegalMatch, which bills itself as the largest Internet legal-matching service in the U.S., claims that the number of people seeking divorce attorneys, as well as attorneys to help with annulments and prenuptial agreements, increases significantly around Valentine's Day. |
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| Jan 12, 2006 |

Bye-Bye BlackBerrys?
Competitors Are Launching New Wireless Email Devices As Patent Concerns Linger
...While Blackberry's handsets run on its own operating system, the new devices are capable of offering features from a variety of providers. "People are going to be surprised about their choices for hardware and software, which opens up options people didn't think were possible when they were just implementing BlackBerrys," says Clyde Foster, chief operating officer of Intellisync Corp., the second-largest provider of mobile email after BlackBerry... |
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