Bio Roundup: Spark v. ICER, A Solid Revelation, T Cell Deals & More

The United States has a new Health and Human Services chief who is expected to weigh in on the country’s drug-pricing debate. But how Alex Azar, a former pharma executive at Eli Lilly (NYSE: [[ticker:LLY]]), plans to throw his weight around remains to be seen. One of the latest exhibits in the debate is an … Continue reading “Bio Roundup: Spark v. ICER, A Solid Revelation, T Cell Deals & More”

With Medical Records Tools, Apple Wades Deeper Into Digital Health

[Updated 1/24/18 4:09 p.m. See below.] Apple said Wednesday it plans to introduce new features that will allow iPhone users to access parts of their medical records through the company’s Health app. The move could impact the interoperability of health records software and spark more competition in the health IT industry. Cupertino, CA-based Apple (NASDAQ: … Continue reading “With Medical Records Tools, Apple Wades Deeper Into Digital Health”

SoftBank Continues Funding Spree, Leads $865M Round for Katerra

Katerra, a building construction startup inspired by the efficient practices of electronics manufacturing, announced today it has raised $865 million in a Series D fundraising round led by the SoftBank Vision Fund. The company was co-founded in 2015 by Michael Marks, the former CEO of contract electronics manufacturer Flextronics. Katerra has large-scale ambitions that match the … Continue reading “SoftBank Continues Funding Spree, Leads $865M Round for Katerra”

NeuroPointDX Turns to Crowdfunding to Get Key Study Past Finish Line

Autism is hard to diagnose—there’s currently no medical test to diagnose the disorder, and teams of experts typically make diagnosis decisions based on their assessments of patients’ behavior. NeuroPointDX aims to change that with a test that could potentially diagnose the condition by analyzing the metabolism of a child from a small blood sample. NeuroPoint, … Continue reading “NeuroPointDX Turns to Crowdfunding to Get Key Study Past Finish Line”

Should Startups Extend the Window to Exercise Options?

Pinterest did it. Square did it. And Coinbase did it, too. These unicorns have all given departing employees more than the standard 90 days to exercise their stock options. They’ve extended the window to exercise options for employees who have at least a minimum period of service. The tech recruiting site Triplebyte urged an even … Continue reading “Should Startups Extend the Window to Exercise Options?”

Facebook Touts Countermeasures to Election Hacking: Are They Enough?

Facebook expanded its mea culpa on Monday for failing to prevent “bad actors” such as Russian entities from using the social media platform to distort democratic processes—notably the U.S. presidential election in 2016. The company unveiled another series of measures it’s taking to prevent malefactors, who hide behind false names, from spreading fake and incendiary … Continue reading “Facebook Touts Countermeasures to Election Hacking: Are They Enough?”

Hey Alexa, What’s in a Name? Actually, Let’s Call You Amazon

With “Hey Google” and “Alexa” echoing from the expo halls of Las Vegas to millions of homes, the hype around voice-controlled computing is reaching a new peak in early 2018. Voice-controlled devices are permeating our world, and this new user interface is the future of computing—or so we are told by the companies purveying it. … Continue reading “Hey Alexa, What’s in a Name? Actually, Let’s Call You Amazon”

Why Spark and Watchdog ICER Don’t See Eye-to-Eye on $850K Gene Therapy

The first gene therapy approved in the U.S. costs $850,000. Announcing the price on Jan. 3, its owner Spark Therapeutics held out the possibility of some relief, such as installment payments, or slim rebates if the drug, a one-time shot into each eye to reduce or reverse inherited vision loss, doesn’t work or wears off. … Continue reading “Why Spark and Watchdog ICER Don’t See Eye-to-Eye on $850K Gene Therapy”

Democratization of Automation: The Next Generation of Industrial Robotics

In the coming years, artificial intelligence will have many transformative impacts, but the one perhaps most resembling science fiction will be the rise of autonomous physical systems: real-world systems that can make decisions for themselves. Of these autonomous systems, self-driving cars have captured the most attention. But the field of manufacturing, which represents one-sixth of … Continue reading “Democratization of Automation: The Next Generation of Industrial Robotics”

Exact, Spectrum, PerBlue, & More: This Week’s Wisconsin Watchlist

It was a newsy week for Wisconsin’s innovation community. Catch up on some of the major happenings with these recent headlines: —Exact Sciences’ (NASDAQ: [[ticker:EXAS]]) stock price finished the trading day on Wednesday down nearly 10 percent after the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) published the results of a study evaluating a liquid biopsy … Continue reading “Exact, Spectrum, PerBlue, & More: This Week’s Wisconsin Watchlist”

Q&A: Dell Med’s DeSalvo Talks Social Health Startups, Data Ownership

Karen DeSalvo has experience working in the public sector, but she’s hardly what you’d call a government bureaucrat. DeSalvo, who is trained as a physician, served as the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology from 2014 to 2016 under President Barack Obama. During some of the time she headed the ONC, as the office is … Continue reading “Q&A: Dell Med’s DeSalvo Talks Social Health Startups, Data Ownership”

Bio Roundup: Spark’s Road Ahead, Juno Rumors, Merck’s Big Day & More

The most overblown health story of the week was President Trump’s health exam. America learned Trump is in perfect health and has “great genes.” He takes Propecia. He doesn’t have heart problems, had a perfect cognitive test score, and is one pound shy of obese. This scintillating information led to a new social media phenomenon, the … Continue reading “Bio Roundup: Spark’s Road Ahead, Juno Rumors, Merck’s Big Day & More”

Tougher “Immigration” Policies On Foreign Tech Crossing U.S. Border

It’s not only people from other countries that are struggling harder to get into the United States these days, it seems. Technology from foreign nations may also be subject to stricter “immigration” rules. The national origins of tech devices and services wasn’t a front-burner question—at least for the general public—until the issue came up at … Continue reading “Tougher “Immigration” Policies On Foreign Tech Crossing U.S. Border”

Absences, Surprises in Amazon’s Final List of 20 Cities for HQ2

And then there were 20. Amazon has winnowed down the field of 238 submissions from communities around North America vying to host a second headquarters (HQ2) of the Seattle-based tech giant. Most large cities with existing or emerging tech hubs appear on the list, from Austin, TX, and Boston, MA, to Washington, DC, and Toronto, … Continue reading “Absences, Surprises in Amazon’s Final List of 20 Cities for HQ2”

Nordic to Move Into Management Consulting After Partial Acquisition

Nordic, a healthcare consulting firm that advises on implementations of computerized patient records software and other projects, said Tuesday that it had acquired part of The Claro Group. Madison, WI-based Nordic said its acquisition of Chicago-based Claro’s revenue cycle transformation practice marks the Wisconsin company’s first foray into “the technology-agnostic management consulting world.” Up to … Continue reading “Nordic to Move Into Management Consulting After Partial Acquisition”

In “Age of Amazon,” All Retailers Are Tech Companies, Even Walmart

Technology took center stage this week as the nation’s retailers made their annual pilgrimage to New York. At the National Retail Federation’s three-day conference, which ended Tuesday, the discussion centered on both the disruptive effects and potential promise of e-commerce technologies. Kate Ancketill, the CEO of GDR Creative Intelligence, a retail trends consultancy, said retailers … Continue reading “In “Age of Amazon,” All Retailers Are Tech Companies, Even Walmart”

Titan Spine, Which Saw Major Sales Growth in 2017, Raises $7.8M

Titan Spine, a Mequon, WI-based company that sells surgical implants designed for spinal surgeons to use when operating on patients, raised more than $7.8 million from investors across two separate funding rounds that closed in late December. Titan’s products include a line of titanium “Endoskeleton” cages that are implanted to stabilize a patient’s spinal cord … Continue reading “Titan Spine, Which Saw Major Sales Growth in 2017, Raises $7.8M”

Three Takes on How Tech Can Rebuild Trust in 2018

Rounding out our series of perspectives and prognostications for the new year, we asked people in Xconomy’s network about trust in the tech industry. Specifically, if you think public perception about the tech industry took a turn for the worse in 2017, what should the industry do to rebuild trust in 2018? Here are responses … Continue reading “Three Takes on How Tech Can Rebuild Trust in 2018”

Google Launches a MOOC to Train Entry-Level IT Support Staffers

Big tech companies like Google are facing heat for developing disruptive technologies that can make traditional jobs obsolete. But at the same time, the tech industry is growing fast, and is eager to recruit workers outside the sector to fill entry-level jobs that often go begging, a Google executive says. Google is betting on online … Continue reading “Google Launches a MOOC to Train Entry-Level IT Support Staffers”

A.I. Could Be Double-Edged Sword for Cybersecurity Industry in 2018

It’s no secret that artificial intelligence is becoming increasingly influential in cybersecurity—on both sides of the battlefield. And while it’s no secret, it should also be no surprise. Although, in many ways, A.I. is still in its infancy, with nearly every industry investing in the space and many companies already benefiting from automation and business … Continue reading “A.I. Could Be Double-Edged Sword for Cybersecurity Industry in 2018”

Why Human Extinction Needs a Marketing Department

Experts at Oxford University and elsewhere have estimated that the risk of a global human extinction event this century—or at least of an event that wipes out 10 percent or more of the world’s population— is around 1 in 10. The most probable culprits sending us the way of the dinosaur are mostly anthropogenic risks, … Continue reading “Why Human Extinction Needs a Marketing Department”

Exact Sciences, Shine, Redox & More: This Week’s Wisconsin Watchlist

Keep up with the latest news from Wisconsin’s innovation community with these recent headlines: —Exact Sciences said it plans to raise up to $600 million through the sale of notes that can be converted into cash or shares of the company’s common stock, starting in 2025. Madison-based Exact (NASDAQ: [[ticker:EXAS]]) is developing several screening tests … Continue reading “Exact Sciences, Shine, Redox & More: This Week’s Wisconsin Watchlist”

SkySpecs Snags $8M to Expand Drone-Powered Turbine Inspection Service

Drone startup SkySpecs announced this week that it has raised an $8 million Series B funding round. The investment in the Ann Arbor, MI-based company was co-led by Germany’s Statkraft Ventures, the Capital Midwest Fund, and UL Ventures, and also included contributions from returning investors such as Huron River Ventures and Venture Investors. A lot … Continue reading “SkySpecs Snags $8M to Expand Drone-Powered Turbine Inspection Service”

Spark CEO Marrazzo on Gene Therapy Pricing & Paving the Way for the Field

[Updated, 1/13/17, 11:15 a.m. ET]  After decades of research and scientific ups and downs, the first U.S. gene therapy, a single, long-lasting treatment called voretigene neparvovec (Luxturna) for rare, inherited blindness, is now on the market. But the commercial challenge facing its developer, Spark Therapeutics, is daunting. Can Spark lead the way in showing that … Continue reading “Spark CEO Marrazzo on Gene Therapy Pricing & Paving the Way for the Field”

Bio Roundup: #JPM18, Axovant’s Fall, CRISPR Caveat, Impact M&A & More

Have you gotten your flu shot yet this year? This winter’s flu season is shaping up to be a particularly nasty one and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention this week upped its tally of states reporting widespread flu activity to 46. Flu awareness was top of mind at the J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference … Continue reading “Bio Roundup: #JPM18, Axovant’s Fall, CRISPR Caveat, Impact M&A & More”

TAI Diagnostics Raises $10M, Inks Deal With United Therapeutics

TAI Diagnostics said earlier this week that it had closed a $10 million round of funding and forged a new partnership with United Therapeutics (NASDAQ: [[ticker:UTHR]]). Wauwatosa, WI-based TAI, whose name stands for “Transplant and Immunology” and is pronounced “tie,” is seeking to commercialize a non-invasive test to monitor the health of transplant recipients. Three-year-old … Continue reading “TAI Diagnostics Raises $10M, Inks Deal With United Therapeutics”

E-Commerce Firm Black Rifle Coffee Has Expansion in Its Sights

There wasn’t a lot that Evan Hafer could control on his half-dozen deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan as a Green Beret and CIA contractor. But the one thing he could do something about was the terrible coffee. “I started roasting my own coffee and taking it with me overseas,” he says. “I set up a … Continue reading “E-Commerce Firm Black Rifle Coffee Has Expansion in Its Sights”

Notes From the JPM ’18 Vortex: Gene Therapy’s Reckoning and Lonely Cabs

The annual J.P. Morgan Healthcare conference in San Francisco winds down today, meaning the remaining stragglers are either presenting to half-empty rooms or headed back to colder climes. Compared to a 2017 full of scientific milestones—FDA approvals of gene and cell therapies, a clinical victory for RNA interference, and more—the meeting itself was rather dull. … Continue reading “Notes From the JPM ’18 Vortex: Gene Therapy’s Reckoning and Lonely Cabs”

Loving LTE or Tossing the Smartphone: Tech Leaders Share New Habits

We asked people around the Xconomy network whether their personal patterns of technology usage changed much in response to something that happened in 2017, as part of our series of perspectives and predictions marking the start of a new year. Here are answers from Ben Gilbert, co-founder of Pioneer Square Labs in Seattle and interim … Continue reading “Loving LTE or Tossing the Smartphone: Tech Leaders Share New Habits”

Wisconsin VC Total Down in 2017, But New Funds Seek to Reverse Trend

Startups in Wisconsin raised about $116 million in funding last year, a total that represents a steep drop compared to recent years. The figures come from PitchBook and the National Venture Capital Association, two groups that monitor investment activity nationwide. According to their data, the state’s funding totals in 2016 and 2015 were $223 million … Continue reading “Wisconsin VC Total Down in 2017, But New Funds Seek to Reverse Trend”

Blockchain and Cryptocurrencies: ScaleVP Comments From the Sidelines

Just because an investor isn’t putting money into blockchain technologies or cryptocurrencies yet, it doesn’t mean they’re not watching these emerging phenomena with interest. Andy Vitus, a partner at Silicon Valley venture capital firm Scale Venture Partners, has been keeping his eye on the potential uses of the blockchain, which is best known as the … Continue reading “Blockchain and Cryptocurrencies: ScaleVP Comments From the Sidelines”

Beyond the Demo: 2018 Could Be Year for Longer, Profitable VR Content

René Pinnell says he and his wife Selena Pinnell were “blown away” by the virtual reality projects their friends were creating in 2014, so they looked for an entrepreneurial niche that would allow them to support such artists. That year the couple, both trained in design, founded a startup in San Francisco, then called KaleidoscopeVR. … Continue reading “Beyond the Demo: 2018 Could Be Year for Longer, Profitable VR Content”

Venture Activity Comes to (Unicorn) Point in 2017, and Top 10 Deals

[Updated 1/10/18 1:30 pm. See below.] In China, 2017 was the year of the rooster. But in the United States, it was the year of the unicorn—at least according to the Venture Monitor report released today by Seattle-based PitchBook and the National Venture Capital Association. A record number of unicorn financings—venture-backed companies valued at $1 … Continue reading “Venture Activity Comes to (Unicorn) Point in 2017, and Top 10 Deals”

Cellectar Biosciences Shutting Down Manufacturing Operations

Cellectar Biosciences has begun shutting down manufacturing operations at its headquarters and its plan going forward will be to have one of the company’s existing partners handle finished product manufacturing, Cellectar CEO Jim Caruso said Monday. Madison, WI-based Cellectar (NASDAQ: [[ticker:CLRB]]) is developing drugs with the potential to treat malignant tumors and certain forms of … Continue reading “Cellectar Biosciences Shutting Down Manufacturing Operations”

Exact Looks to Sales Force, Ads to Boost Cancer Test Sales in 2018

Exact Sciences plans to expand its sales force by 200 employees, ramp up its digital and social media marketing campaigns, and introduce a new “national celebrity spokesperson” this year, as the company seeks to increase sales of its flagship product, a stool-based DNA test for colorectal cancer. Madison, WI-based Exact (NASDAQ: [[ticker:EXAS]]) detailed some of … Continue reading “Exact Looks to Sales Force, Ads to Boost Cancer Test Sales in 2018”

E-Commerce Innovations in the Mix at Consumer Tech Conference

Alexa is now mobile. Seattle-based e-commerce giant Amazon (NASDAQ: [[ticker:AMZN]]) is expected to unveil its first augmented-reality glasses to pair with Alexa, its digital assistant, at the Consumer Electronics Show, or CES, in Las Vegas this week. The glasses were developed for Amazon by Vuzix, a Rochester, NY -based wearable tech company, and can communicate … Continue reading “E-Commerce Innovations in the Mix at Consumer Tech Conference”

Connecture, Spectrum, CDI, & More: This Week’s Wisconsin Watchlist

Stay current on news from Wisconsin’s innovation community with these recent headlines: —Francisco Partners, a San Francisco-based private equity firm, agreed to terms to acquire Connecture (OTCMKTS: [[ticker:CNXR]]) and take the Brookfield-based company private. Connecture develops Web-based software designed to aid consumers shopping for health insurance. Francisco Partners and Louisville, KY-based Chrysalis Ventures—both of which … Continue reading “Connecture, Spectrum, CDI, & More: This Week’s Wisconsin Watchlist”

Xconomy Bookclub: “Troublemakers” Charts the Birth of Silicon Valley

In 1968, a little-read article in a soon-to-fail magazine prophesied an age of networked machines that could be more than passive, oversized calculators to become digital partners in solving problems alongside humans. “In a few years, men will be able to communicate more effectively through a machine than face to face,” wrote JCR “Lick” Licklider … Continue reading “Xconomy Bookclub: “Troublemakers” Charts the Birth of Silicon Valley”

VIP Crowd Takes Online Dating Approach to Enterprise Software Buying

[Updated 1/5/18 2:06 p.m. See below.] Three years after Mark Wilson sold the first startup he founded to a French business with hundreds of employees and annual revenues of more than $50 million, he’s back at it, once again working to develop a new software product that targets people in the corporate world. Wilson’s latest … Continue reading “VIP Crowd Takes Online Dating Approach to Enterprise Software Buying”

Bio Roundup: Trump, Gottlieb, Gene Therapy Prices, IPO Hopes & More

Welcome to the new year. What will it bring? Hopefully a lot less hatred, greed, stupidity, and angst than 2017. But we’re not holding our breath. We emerged from the winter break pondering several of the year’s burning biopharma questions, including the volatility of the U.S. president and what it means for the biopharmaceutical business, … Continue reading “Bio Roundup: Trump, Gottlieb, Gene Therapy Prices, IPO Hopes & More”

What Can Seattle Learn from Amazon’s HQ2 Search? 3 Takes

Perhaps the biggest story in Seattle last year was Amazon’s decision to seek a second headquarters elsewhere in North America. The tech and retail juggernaut has transformed this city and its economy over the last decade, for good and for ill. So, what lesson should Seattle take from Amazon’s move? We put that question to … Continue reading “What Can Seattle Learn from Amazon’s HQ2 Search? 3 Takes”

Barracuda Buys PhishLine, Maker of Cybersecurity Education Software

The proverb “a stitch in time saves nine” would seem especially apt in the cybersecurity world. Employers can in theory save time and money by training their workers to identify suspicious links and avoid clicking on them, rather than having to deal with the potentially costly fallout from a phishing attack. That’s the idea behind … Continue reading “Barracuda Buys PhishLine, Maker of Cybersecurity Education Software”

Six West Coast Tech Leaders Share Top Developments of 2017

Xconomy asked technology and innovation leaders around our network to reflect on the most important developments in their industries during 2017, and the answers were appropriately wide-ranging. Responses from individuals in Seattle and San Diego touch on the rapid advance of machine learning, tech’s full-scale invasion of digital health, dramatic growth in blockchain and cryptocurrency, … Continue reading “Six West Coast Tech Leaders Share Top Developments of 2017”

Clean Energy Entrepreneur Desai on Tech’s Pitfalls & Promise in 2017

A series of events this year—from the Equifax data breach to the foreign use of social media to influence the U.S. presidential election—has prompted some to question the utopian promise of innovation, especially when it comes to Web companies and cybersecurity. To help put things in perspective at year’s end, Xconomy reached out to Nisha … Continue reading “Clean Energy Entrepreneur Desai on Tech’s Pitfalls & Promise in 2017”

First U.S. Gene Therapy, Approved for Vision Loss, to Cost $850,000

The first gene therapy approved in the United States will cost $850,000, its developer Spark Therapeutics (NASDAQ: [[ticker:ONCE]]) announced today. Spark hopes to reduce the sticker shock by offering refunds and other creative pricing ideas, but those carve-outs, at best, are limited, and some are unlikely to come to fruition, according to healthcare economists. The … Continue reading “First U.S. Gene Therapy, Approved for Vision Loss, to Cost $850,000”

Cybersecurity Firm Illumio’s Alan Cohen on the Tech Backlash of 2017

One of the largest and most consequential data breaches in 2017 afflicted credit reporting agency Equifax, and it was hardly the only victim. Any year-end review of technology news must also include reports on Russian hacking of the 2016 election campaign, and the manipulation of social media channels to spread false and divisive political messages. These … Continue reading “Cybersecurity Firm Illumio’s Alan Cohen on the Tech Backlash of 2017”

Imbed Bio Snags $1.6M to Commercialize Infection-Preventing Dressing

[Updated 1/3/18 1:13 p.m. See below.] Imbed Biosciences has raised a funding round of nearly $1.6 million, which the Fitchburg, WI-based startup plans to use to begin selling an ultra-thin wound dressing material later this year, CEO Ankit Agarwal says. Imbed has spent years working on its product platform, which was used to develop the dressing, Microlyte … Continue reading “Imbed Bio Snags $1.6M to Commercialize Infection-Preventing Dressing”

Trump v. Drug Makers? And 6 More Burning Biopharma Questions for 2018

Next week, a big slice of the biomedical industry is gathering in San Francisco for the annual J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference and other life sciences events that have emerged like sprouts around the base of an old redwood tree. One year ago, the pharmaceutical folks—by far the largest delegation to this annual mosh pit of … Continue reading “Trump v. Drug Makers? And 6 More Burning Biopharma Questions for 2018”

Six Useful Things You Can Do With Your New Smart Speaker

TL;DR: It’s time to buy a smart speaker. They’re ridiculously cheap—$30 for the Amazon Echo Dot, and $29 for the Google Home Mini—and increasingly powerful. It will be a long time before they’re as empathetic as Samantha in Her or as industrious as Rosie in The Jetsons. But they can already make your life easier, … Continue reading “Six Useful Things You Can Do With Your New Smart Speaker”