Tuesday, April 5, 2011

LivingSocial Raises $400 Million

LivingSocial, the number two player in the burgeoning daily coupon website market, has raised $400 million to help fuel its expansion and keep up with rival Groupon Inc., the Wall Street Journal reports.

The investment round, raised from existing investors Lightspeed Venture Partners and Amazon.com, and new ones such as Institutional Venture Partners, values the three-year old company at around $ 3 billion.

You can argue there is a "bubble" going on for Internet ventures, or you can argue that the next great wave of Internet companies is coming into view. You might argue both propositions are true. Even if there is a valuation bubble, the last great Internet bubble nevertheless produced the current leading companies of the Internet application space. That is likely to be the case for some companies of the current wave, even if current valuations do not hold up, over the longer term.

Monday, April 4, 2011

Tests inaccurate, Sprint says

It's own tests do not confirm recent tests suggesting its 4G network isn't so fast.

http://www.google.com/reader/i/?source=mog&gl=us#stream/user%2F05579064408535224496%2Fstate%2Fcom.google%2Freading-list

Gmail Ads Get "More Targeted"

Google plans changes to the way it inserts ads in Gmail user messages, and should result in fewer ads being shown, use of Gmail’s importance ranking applied to ads and a new emphasis or availability on offers and coupons for Gmail recipients in their local area.

Sprint Plans 2011 Launch of Mobile Payments

Sprint Nextel Corp. plans to launch its own mobile payments system using near field communications in 2011, beating Isis, the consortium of AT&T, Verizon Wireless and T-Mobile USA by possibly six months or more, Bloomberg reports.

Perhaps significantly, Sprint is evaluating a business model that would not take a percentage of each transaction, as Isis plans. Instead, Sprint might decide to focus on marketing services and advertising, perhaps taking a share in revenue from sales of coupons sent to its customers’ handsets or targeted advertising.

It appears Sprint has decided to partner with credit card and debit card issuers for handling the money transfer parts of the service.

Google Bids on Nortel Patent Portfolio

Google is bidding to acquire Nortel's patent portfolio, in a move that tells you quite a lot about the state of patent litigation in the technology space these days.

"One of a company’s best defenses against patent litigation is to have a formidable patent portfolio, Google says.

So Google has decided to bid for Nortel’s patent portfolio in the company’s bankruptcy auction. Nortel further has selected the Google bid as the “stalking-horse bid," which is the starting point against which others will bid prior to the auction.

"If successful, we hope this portfolio will not only create a disincentive for others to sue Google, but also help us, our partners and the open source community—which is integrally involved in projects like Android and Chrome—continue to innovate," Google says on its blog.

Vodafone exits France, takes control in India

Vodafone has announced two major deals, offloading its stake in its French SFR, the second-largest French telecom provider, and taking full control of its Indian operator.

This continues the giant's strategy of streamlining its international holdings, divesting minority stakes and seeking full ownership of ventures where it takes the lead.

That doesn't provide much guidance or clarity about what Vodafone might ultimately want to do about its stake in Verizon Wireless. Some think it might divest, others think it might prefer a full merger with all of Verizon. Either step seems possible, based on what Vodafone already has done.

EMC Cloud Backup Service Arrives On iPad, iPhone

In one sense, the ability to use cloud-based applications as easily on a smartphone or tablet as on a PC is not that big a deal. Most observers would agree that the movement of apps to mobile devices is on-going and likely an irresistible trend.

Mozy, a cloud-based storage service, now allows mobile apps to run as native applications on smart phones and tablets. Consumer subscribers to the storage service are able to access all their files independently in their "MozyHome" storage holders. For example, users can view documents and open them in other applications, such as a browser.

On another level, though, the app might be the precursor of something much more strategic. First, the move to cloud-based apps accessible on any common computing device means that the user interface and the installation process should be dramatically simpler than before. Installation now means "download from app store" and the user interface is a simple web browser app.

That could ultimately have huge implications for the entire value chain and ecosystem that sells and supports business applications, software and services.

Consider just one implication: the smart phone "brings its own broadband." We are used to the idea that apps can be used over any standard broadband connection. With growing use of tablets and smart phones, business users already might be supplying their own broadband. That isn't to say businesses have less need to buy fixed location broadband; simply to note that a large category of "broadband access" services already have been "sold."

As with many other types of business applications, services and appliances, the "pitch" increasingly is a "replace what you already have" decision, not a "buy something new" decision. Also, mobile "broadband" is a secondary feature of the primary product, which is the smart phone and the apps it supports.

Likely more important is a shift of selling and provisioning context. In the future, buying a business app might be nearly as simple as going to a web store and downloading an app. Some way to simplify uploading of enterprise data also will be required in some cases, of course.

Directv-Dish Merger Fails

Directv’’s termination of its deal to merge with EchoStar, apparently because EchoStar bondholders did not approve, means EchoStar continue...