Alas, Skyhook Wireless, we hardly knew ye. Due to a data reporting error (just confirmed by Dow Jones), the Boston maker of geolocation systems is being bumped from the list we published earlier this afternoon of Top 10 second-quarter venture deals. Skyhook had been listed in the No. 9 spot, with $16.8 million raised. However, … Continue reading “Sorry Skyhook, Welcome Carbonite”
Top 10 Second-Quarter Venture Deals in Massachusetts
The second-quarter wasn’t good for Boston area venture investing, at least in overall dollar terms. The area didn’t do so well in big individual deals, either. Whereas in Q1, two area firms ranked among the nation’s 10 largest venture deals—Targanta Therapeutics (tied for fourth with $70 million in funding) and Internet video company Brightcove (10th, … Continue reading “Top 10 Second-Quarter Venture Deals in Massachusetts”
Boston Blows Northeast Lead in VC Investment, New York Takes Over
It’s bad enough with the real Yankees breathing down the Red Sox’s neck. Now, taking advantage of a nearly 50 percent nosedive in Boston-area venture investing from Q1 to Q2, the Yankees of venture capital have surpassed this region’s VCs in both deals made and dollars invested in the second quarter—becoming, at least temporarily, the … Continue reading “Boston Blows Northeast Lead in VC Investment, New York Takes Over”
Patent Reform Will Stifle Innovation
I believe the proposed patent reform act would stifle innovation, which already has many hurdles to overcome, particularly in the earliest stages (when foundational patents are filed). To arbitrarily limit damages and to make it easier to challenge patents shifts the balance further in favor of large companies and lowers the incentive of innovators and … Continue reading “Patent Reform Will Stifle Innovation”
Clean Energy: Can There Be Too Much Capital?
Thursday night I competed for chips and salsa with a standing-room-only crowd of clean-energy enthusiasts at a Kendall Square happy hour put on by the Renewable Energy Business Network. The mood was upbeat—lubricated, of course, by beer and the Red Sox’s (alas, short-lived) lead over the White Sox on the big TVs at Flat Top … Continue reading “Clean Energy: Can There Be Too Much Capital?”
Learning from Esther Dyson’s Genome
If you volunteer for Harvard Medical School professor George Church’s Personal Genome Project, you’d better be ready to have your full medical records along with your full gene sequence (once completed) made public. But why would anyone want that kind of exposure? Famous venture capitalist Esther Dyson explained her reasons for being one of Church’s … Continue reading “Learning from Esther Dyson’s Genome”
Startup Profile: HealthTalker Wants to Harness the Power of Patients to Spread the Word About Prescription Drugs
Next month marks an important anniversary for the pharmaceutical industry, and for HealthTalker founder Andy Levitt: In August 1997 the FDA eased restrictions on direct-to-consumer advertising of prescription drugs so that the ads could actually say what the drugs were for. Remember those Claritin ads that spread like ragweed that summer? Blame Levitt. He was … Continue reading “Startup Profile: HealthTalker Wants to Harness the Power of Patients to Spread the Word About Prescription Drugs”
Adimab, Inc. Receives $6,000,000 Series A Round
Feed Type Link http://www.venturedeal.com/Search/SearchResultTransactionDetail.aspx?TransactionId=ad20375f-027b-442f-8997-ec7e5dfce8f8&Preview=1 Date 7/20/2007 Company Name Adimab, Inc. Mailing Address 16 Cavendish Court Lebanon, NH 03766 Company Description Adimab–which stands for Antibody Discovery Maturation Biomanufacturing–is developing a platform that’s deliberately engineered to minimize and potentially eliminate third party royalties, offering a one-stop-service-shop to a select few Big Pharma partners. Website http://www.adimab.com Transaction Type … Continue reading “Adimab, Inc. Receives $6,000,000 Series A Round”
Can Biogen’s New Incubator Help Fill the Drug Pipeline?
Back in 1981, a firebrand MIT spinoff named Biogen moved into its first building, not far from campus at 241 Binney Street. Fast-forward a quarter-century, and the pioneering biotech company, today’s Biogen-Idec, is still headquartered in Cambridge. The Binney Street building has been sold, but is now being leased back. And today, Biogen is renovating … Continue reading “Can Biogen’s New Incubator Help Fill the Drug Pipeline?”
Spark Capital’s Media-Entertainment-Technology Play, The Sequel
Investors are so eager to get behind Boston-based venture firm Spark Capital—which has focused its $260 million Spark I fund exclusively on early-stage companies at the crossroads of media, entertainment, and technology–that the company has had little trouble raising an even larger amount of money for its second fund, Spark II. After rounding up $360 … Continue reading “Spark Capital’s Media-Entertainment-Technology Play, The Sequel”
Think Big. Collaborate. Media Lab’s Moss Says Boston Area Can Lead the World.
Get this—Silicon Valley is thinking too small. Web 2.0? Small. Social networking? Small potatoes. Google, Yahoo, YouTube, iPhone—all too small, at least in Frank Moss’s view. A little over a year ago, Moss took over as director of MIT’s Media Lab. He had some big shoes to fill. Moss’s charge was to return the lab … Continue reading “Think Big. Collaborate. Media Lab’s Moss Says Boston Area Can Lead the World.”
Gevo Garners $10,000,000 Series B Financing Round
Feed Type Link http://www.venturedeal.com/Search/SearchResultTransactionDetail.aspx?TransactionId=4994923b-6502-4a01-b4d3-f43b6dcc3314&Preview=1 Date 7/19/2007 Company Name Gevo Mailing Address 345 Inverness Drive South Englewood, CO 80112 Company Description Gevo (NASDAQ: GEVO) is focused on a new generation of fuels and related products serving the transportation markets: cars, trucks, and airplanes. This new generation of fuels and products will deliver the performance, cost, and … Continue reading “Gevo Garners $10,000,000 Series B Financing Round”
Netezza, Seeking $100M in IPO, Builds “Superior” Data Warehousing Gadgets
[UPDATE Thursday 7/19/07: Trading of Netezza (NZ) shares opened today at $12 per share, slightly higher than the company’s original target price, and had risen to $16.85 by 2:00 pm EDT. -eds.] It’s a big day for Framingham-based Netezza, which makes uber-data devices used by large enterprises like Amazon and Nieman Marcus to combine storage, … Continue reading “Netezza, Seeking $100M in IPO, Builds “Superior” Data Warehousing Gadgets”
Christopher Wood: Step Up, Then Step Down
Christopher Wood, where are you? We’ve been covering the saga, I think that word can safely be used, of Genzyme’s attempted merger with New York biotech firm Bioenvision. There’s been a lot of back and forth between two of the major players, Genzyme and minority Bioenvision shareholder SCO Capital, which opposed the deal. There’s one … Continue reading “Christopher Wood: Step Up, Then Step Down”
UMass: The Gateway to Asia?
If MIT is the MIT of Massachusetts, then Tsinghua University is the MIT of China—a research and innovation powerhouse likely to drive much of that nation’s economic progress in the coming century. Links to laboratories and projects at Tsinghua could give Boston-area scientists and entrepreneurs access to local collaborators and local markets. And that’s why … Continue reading “UMass: The Gateway to Asia?”
Genzyme Fires Back, Says It Will Block Addition of New Bioenvision Board Members
Genzyme, coming off the defensive after its failed attempt to acquire a majority of New York-based Bioenvision’s stock, rejected SCO Capital’s claim to two Bioenvision board seats—and says it will move to block the addition of any new directors at this time. It was a clear sign that the fight for control of the New … Continue reading “Genzyme Fires Back, Says It Will Block Addition of New Bioenvision Board Members”
Startup Profile: Harvard Patents in Hand, Nano-Terra is Driving Industrial Applications of Nanotech
Nano-Terra, a start-up founded by legendary Harvard chemistry professor George Whitesides, might be dealing on the small scale, working with materials measured in nanometers and microns, but the company is imagining a big future. That’s not surprising, given that Whitesides has founded a number of successful companies, notably Genzyme, the biotech giant now worth more … Continue reading “Startup Profile: Harvard Patents in Hand, Nano-Terra is Driving Industrial Applications of Nanotech”
Shake Up at Bioenvision: Two Board Members Resign
Two Bioenvision board members associated with the Perseus-Soros Biopharmaceutical Fund have resigned, the New York biotech firm announced today. The move could clear the deck for minority shareholder SCO Capital to fill the slots and continue its fight against a Genzyme takeover. Andrew N. Schiff and Steven A. Elms were advisors to the Perseus-Soros fund, … Continue reading “Shake Up at Bioenvision: Two Board Members Resign”
Neoconix Obtains $16,000,000 Series C Round
Feed Type Link http://www.venturedeal.com/Search/SearchResultTransactionDetail.aspx?TransactionId=0ad32928-9db8-432e-a71c-b0773bfaff57&Preview=1 Date 7/16/2007 Company Name Neoconix Mailing Address 639 North Pastoria Ave Sunnyvale, CA 94085 Company Description Neoconix is dedicated to interconnect design, development, integration, manufacturing, and support. We dramatically improve the performance, reliability and cost across a broad range of electronic systems, from consumer products to high performance computing and networking … Continue reading “Neoconix Obtains $16,000,000 Series C Round”
Something’s up at Sermo. Maybe CEO Daniel Palestrant Will Tell Us What it Is…
Something’s up at Sermo. I gather this about 15 minutes into my visit to the Kendall Square startup when CEO Daniel Palestrant excuses himself for an impromptu “three minute” call with his board—as if there is such a thing—leaving me to hang out with Sermo Director of Communications Greg Shenk and several of the staff … Continue reading “Something’s up at Sermo. Maybe CEO Daniel Palestrant Will Tell Us What it Is…”
Intel Joins One Laptop Per Child Initiative
The One Laptop Per Child project has reached an agreement with long-standing skeptic Intel Corp. to work together to explore ways to get computer technology into the hands of children in developing nations. The move, announced yesterday, is a great vindication for the Cambridge-based OLPC and its founder, Nicholas Negroponte, who told me only a … Continue reading “Intel Joins One Laptop Per Child Initiative”
Local Robotics Firms Step Out
The news that iRobot and Taser teamed up to unveil a “Taserbot” at a conference in Chicago this week made me wonder: where is commercial robotics around here really headed? Don’t worry, I’m not about to jump on the “Terminator” and “Robocop” bandwagon. I’m not here to complain about the militarization of machines. I’m just … Continue reading “Local Robotics Firms Step Out”
Who’s Cashing in on Bioenvision Sale to Genzyme: The List
We’ve covered at length the attempted sale of Bioenvision to Genzyme led by its board of directors and management—a move soundly rejected earlier this week by other shareholders. In the end, Genzyme captured 22 percent of the New York-based biotech’s common stock, far short of the 50 percent it needed to force a merger. As … Continue reading “Who’s Cashing in on Bioenvision Sale to Genzyme: The List”
Telecom’s New Epicenters: India and China
The acquisition of BCGI (Nasdaq) by Megasoft (Bombay Stock Exchange) for $65M that was announced yesterday continues the trend of Indian telecom software companies acquiring European and North American companies. Driving the trend is the growth of telecom, particularly wireless telecom services in emerging markets, particularly China and India. China now has 400M+ subscribers and … Continue reading “Telecom’s New Epicenters: India and China”
Ariad Inks Cancer-Drug Deal with Merck, Hopes to Realize $1 Billion
Cambridge-based Ariad Pharmaceuticals announced today that it has formed a major joint development and commercialization collaboration with Merck; the deal focuses on an Ariad cancer-drug candidate, AP23573, that’s now in Phase 1 and 2 trials. In a conference call, Ariad chairman and CEO Harvey Berger called the agreement a “transformation event for the company” and … Continue reading “Ariad Inks Cancer-Drug Deal with Merck, Hopes to Realize $1 Billion”
Akamai Joins the S&P 500—the Inside Story
As the stock market opens today, home-grown Internet-backbone company Akamai will join the S&P 500, taking the slot previously held by joint-replacement manufacturer Biomet. Joining the bellwether index is quite an achievement, especially in Akamai’s case. The company was an original dotcom high-flyer that suffered some staggering blows before making it to this point. We … Continue reading “Akamai Joins the S&P 500—the Inside Story”
IGA Worldwide Receives $25,000,000 Series B Financing Round
Feed Type Link http://www.venturedeal.com/Search/SearchResultTransactionDetail.aspx?TransactionId=fd257c22-9c33-49da-a816-18cb965ff63a&Preview=1 Date 7/12/2007 Company Name IGA Worldwide Mailing Address 111 Broadway New York, NY 10006 Company Description IGA Worldwide is the #1 name in In-Game Advertising, the default choice for game developers/publishers and brand advertisers alike. Website http://www.igaworldwide.com Transaction Type Venture Equity Transaction Amount $25,000,000 Transaction Round Series B Proceeds Purposes Justin … Continue reading “IGA Worldwide Receives $25,000,000 Series B Financing Round”
Public Offerings, Robotic Arm Aids, Automatic Ice Cream, & More
The last few days have seen a flurry of news from local tech companies. Here are a few of the items that piqued our interest—and our appetites: —The board of India’s Megasoft Limited approved a deal to acquire Bedford, MA-based Boston Communications Group for $65 million, potentially ending what has been a rough ride for … Continue reading “Public Offerings, Robotic Arm Aids, Automatic Ice Cream, & More”
Muddy Dirt: General Catalyst Hires Rising MIT Star to Help Move it into Nano, Energy
The Muddy Charles Pub is MIT’s legendary watering hole. Perched in a corner of the Walker Memorial building looking out over Memorial Drive, it’s bare bones to say the least. Think plain wooden tables, industrial carpet, and a spartan bar off to one side. But the place buzzes with campus news and the entrepreneurial spirit, … Continue reading “Muddy Dirt: General Catalyst Hires Rising MIT Star to Help Move it into Nano, Energy”
Bioenvison Shareholder Calls for New Board, Revocation of Genzyme’s License
This morning brings yet another spiral around the drain for Genzyme’s attempted acquisition of Bioenvision: New York investment firm SCO Capital has just filed a letter with the SEC calling for an overhaul of Bioenvision’s leadership—and the revocation of Genzyme’s existing rights to the company’s coveted leukemia drug. “You might expect that you would hear … Continue reading “Bioenvison Shareholder Calls for New Board, Revocation of Genzyme’s License”
Nanotech Pioneer to VCs: You Don’t Get It
When Tim Swager talks about the future of nanomaterials, people listen. And when the respected nanotech leader says venture capitalists don’t get it when it comes to nano startups, you can’t help but sit up and take notice. Swager is the head of MIT’s Department of Chemistry and the winner of this year’s prestigious $500,000 … Continue reading “Nanotech Pioneer to VCs: You Don’t Get It”
No New Shares Tendered in Bioenvision Deal; Genzyme Still Hopes for Merger
Genzyme today confirmed what has been glaringly obvious over the last few days: its extended tender offer for Bioenvision has fallen flat. A Genzyme spokesperson verified that no new shares had been tendered as of the deadline at 12:01 this morning. With Bioenvision’s stock trading at almost $6 a share yesterday, nearly 40 cents per … Continue reading “No New Shares Tendered in Bioenvision Deal; Genzyme Still Hopes for Merger”
How Kendall Square Became Hip: MIT Pioneered University-Linked Business Parks
Today, the Technology Square business park next to MIT is home to Dyax, Novartis, Forrester, the Institute for Soldier Nanotechnology, and many other startups, bigcos, and research labs alike. Soon after World War II, however, Lever Brothers shut down its soap plants at this very location and shifted work to cheaper and more modern sites … Continue reading “How Kendall Square Became Hip: MIT Pioneered University-Linked Business Parks”
EMC Selling VMware Stake to Intel for $218.5 Million
Storage leader EMC Corp. will sell a $218.5 million piece of its virtualization software subsidiary VMware to Intel Capital, the investment arm of the giant chipmaker, the companies announced yesterday. The news came in the midst of EMC’s bigger move to sell about 10 percent of VMware to the public in an offering expected to … Continue reading “EMC Selling VMware Stake to Intel for $218.5 Million”
Genzyme’s Second Try for Bioenvision Will Also Fail, Sources Predict; Institutional Investors Seek Higher Price
Last week wasn’t exactly good times for Genzyme. Two of its clinical trials reported poor results, and on Friday the stock fell some 6 percent on the bad news. At 12:01 a.m. tomorrow morning, when the company’s extended tender offer for New York-based Bioenvision expires, the company’s stockholders aren’t likely to find anything to cheer … Continue reading “Genzyme’s Second Try for Bioenvision Will Also Fail, Sources Predict; Institutional Investors Seek Higher Price”
How Big a Deal is Roche and Alnylam’s Big Deal?
The news wires are buzzing with today’s announcement of a deal between Alnylam and Roche that will give Roche nonexclusive access to Alnylam’s technology for developing RNAi-based therapeutics. The deal involves cash, equity, and royalties that could total over $1billion—a figure that some analysts who talked to us and other media outlets said seemed high. … Continue reading “How Big a Deal is Roche and Alnylam’s Big Deal?”
High-Court “Common Sense” Decision Portends Big Changes for High-Tech Patenting; Many Existing Patents at Risk
High-tech patent holders take note: legal experts are calling the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision in KSR v. Teleflex the most important patent ruling in decades, throwing into question the validity of many existing patents, especially in the e-commerce and biotech fields. Some IP watchers, like Audrey Millemann, a patent attorney at Sacramento-based firm of … Continue reading “High-Court “Common Sense” Decision Portends Big Changes for High-Tech Patenting; Many Existing Patents at Risk”
GaimTheory, Inc. Receives New Round
Feed Type Link http://www.venturedeal.com/Search/SearchResultTransactionDetail.aspx?TransactionId=7b9cd82c-769d-427d-a8d5-acb370edaf39&Preview=1 Date 7/9/2007 Company Name GaimTheory, Inc. Mailing Address 8001 Irvine Center Drive Irvine, CA 92618 Company Description Our metagame technology provides the most robust player management engine available including deep statistics, event driven communications, skill-based matchmaking, dynamic content generation and micro-transactions. GaimTheory provides it’s technology installed, configured and ready to go. … Continue reading “GaimTheory, Inc. Receives New Round”
Constant Contact Files to Go Public
E-mail marketing and online survey firm Constant Contact of Waltham has filed papers for an IPO. The company, which was incorporated in 1995 as Roving Software, plans to be traded on the NASDAQ exchange under the symbol CTCT. With more than 100,000 customers, mainly small businesses and organizations, the company reported 2006 sales of $27.55 … Continue reading “Constant Contact Files to Go Public”
Phase III Trial Yields More Bad News for Genzyme
For the second time this week, Genzyme is announcing disappointing clinical-trial results. In a Phase 3 study, tolevamer liquid—a polymer-based treatment for Clostridium difficile associated diarrhea—failed to perform against the standard antibiotic treatment. Bloomberg has a nice summary of the trial and how it fits into Genzyme’s recent efforts to diversity its pipeline. Genzyme shares … Continue reading “Phase III Trial Yields More Bad News for Genzyme”
Live Earth Concert Could Fuel Ridesharing Startup
Tomorrow marks the debut of Live Earth, a 24-hour-long series of concerts in eight cities around the world that’s bringing together everyone from Al Gore to Kelly Clarkson and 100 other artists to raise awareness of global warming. And for Cambridge startup GoLoco, it’s also a big opportunity to demonstrate that its social-networking ridesharing service … Continue reading “Live Earth Concert Could Fuel Ridesharing Startup”
Google Acquisition Spree Misses Boston Area
It’s hard to overlook the Google acquisition machine. Just last month, the search giant gobbled up its latest company, Fremont, CA-based Grand Central Communications. By one count, anyway, it was Google’s 23rd California purchase, vesus a nearly identical number outside the company’s home state. Where does Boston figure in all this? Just about nowhere, it … Continue reading “Google Acquisition Spree Misses Boston Area”
Genzyme Arthritis Treatment Misses Goal in Pivotal Trial; Company Will Pursue Alternative Strategy
Genzyme announced today that results from a key study of hylastan, a treatment for osteoarthritis of the knee, failed to meet the company’s efficacy target. Happily for the company, it has a more viable alternative already in the works. The hylastan study involved nearly 400 patients being treated at 27 sites in Europe and North … Continue reading “Genzyme Arthritis Treatment Misses Goal in Pivotal Trial; Company Will Pursue Alternative Strategy”
Future Forward
One of the area’s leading annual events for business and technology leaders, Future Forward brings together New England’s leading executives, entrepreneurs, academics, and investors to probe the ways that innovative technologies are effectively developed and commercialized.
Reconfiguring Labor Markets, Pondering the Meaning of Life
Rod Brooks has two small tasks in mind as he leaves the MIT academic bureaucracy he’s known for the last decade and dives back into hands-on science. “One is to restructure the world’s labor markets, the other is to discover the meaning of life.” Last week, when I reported on Brooks stepping down as director … Continue reading “Reconfiguring Labor Markets, Pondering the Meaning of Life”
Biotech Takes on Toxic Drugs
Nothing robs pharma officials of more sleep than unexpected toxicity linked to one of their companies’ medicines. Recently they’ve lost more shuteye than ever as reports on cardiac risks of widely-used diabetes drugs have fanned public anxiety about drug hazards. Now Congress is moving to intensify FDA surveillance of ill effects possibly caused by medicines. … Continue reading “Biotech Takes on Toxic Drugs”
The GreenFuel Letter
Over the weekend, we worked to bring you the first news about a management overhaul at GreenFuel Technologies, in which Bob Metcalfe took over as interim CEO. Our last story cited a letter Metcalfe wrote, apparently to employees and investors, laying out what had happened and where things stood. We quoted several passages and paraphrased … Continue reading “The GreenFuel Letter”
IPOs, CFOs, Clinicals, and More
The last few days have been surprisingly busy, given the nice weather and the impending holiday. Here are a few items you might have missed: —In a tie with San Jose, the Boston area topped the list for most VC-backed IPOs (6) in the second quarter of 2007. —Boston Scientific launched a new neuromodulation device … Continue reading “IPOs, CFOs, Clinicals, and More”
Genzyme Takeover of Bioenvision Falls Short; Company Tries New Tack
As our sources predicted Friday, Genzyme’s tender offer for New York-based Bioenvision has fallen far short of its goal, Genzyme confirmed this morning. However, the Cambridge biotech giant is not giving up in its efforts to acquire Bioenvision stock and has decided to extend its offer until July 10. The failure of many Bioenvision common … Continue reading “Genzyme Takeover of Bioenvision Falls Short; Company Tries New Tack”
Metcalfe Takes Reins at GreenFuel After Key Setbacks; Company Lays Off Half its Staff, Seeks to Raise Cash
Unanticipated setbacks with GreenFuel Technologies’ unique bioreactor system led to the layoff of half the company’s 50-person staff and Bob Metcalfe’s appointment as interim CEO, Xconomy has learned, adding detail to what we reported yesterday. Cambridge-based GreenFuel seeks to use algae to convert carbon dioxide emissions into biofuel. However, in the last few weeks, the … Continue reading “Metcalfe Takes Reins at GreenFuel After Key Setbacks; Company Lays Off Half its Staff, Seeks to Raise Cash”