Is software-as-a-service provider Service-now.com be poised to become San Diego’s next big thing? We’ve got that and the rest of the local tech news, and our roundup starts now.
—San Diego-based Service-now.com co-founder Fred Luddy told me he expects the company’s revenue to double every year for the foreseeable future. So it’s hard to underscore the importance of the company’s decision last week to hire enterprise software veteran Frank Slootman as CEO. Service-now provides Web-based IT management services for the 2000 largest companies in the world, and Slootman has experience as a fast-growth CEO at Santa Clara, CA-based Data Domain. Luddy, who was the founding CEO, is moving to chief product officer.
—San Diego’s Fallbrook Technologies, which filed for an IPO in February, 2010, withdrew its registration to go public on Friday. The company, which has developed a continuously variable transmission that offers greater energy efficiency without gears, last updated its IPO filing last August. I confirmed the news, which was on the Renaissance Capital website, with Fallbrook CEO Bill Klehm, who tells me he’s prohibited by SEC rules from commenting on the move, but adds, “stay tuned.”
—We’re watching for more details on the local impact of Nokia’s decision last week to eliminate 7,000 jobs around the world, which amounts to the largest cuts in the wireless company’s history. Nokia is moving some 3,000 of those jobs to Accenture. In the United States, the Finnish wireless giant plans to reduce 500 positions at its sites in San Diego and White Plains, NY. Nokia CEO Stephen Elop is scheduled to be a keynote speaker in San Diego next month at Qualcomm’s Uplinq conference.
—VoxOx, the San Diego startup that provides free communications service based on voice over Internet (VoIP) technology, launched a