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Archive for July, 2011

Knight Foundation announces arts journalism challenge, wants techies

Arts journalism is the first desk in the newsroom to be cut, a new press release from the Knight Foundation says.

So it is that the foundation is teaming up with the Philadelphia Cultural Alliance to explore new models of coverage for the National Endowment of the Arts, including ones submitted by Philadelphia’s technology community.

In Knight’s eight host cities, like Philadelphia — where its news operations were poised — the organizations are offering five modest $20,000 grants, of which three will be selected nationally to receive an additional $80,000.

It’s not in direct correlation to the Knight Arts Challenge announced earlier this year, says Cultural Alliance representative Karim Olaechea. “It’s about increasing cultural engagement and increasing public awareness of the arts.”

From the release:

“No idea is too unusual,” [said Dennis Scholl, vice president/arts for Knight]. “Embedding a nonprofit reporter in a for-profit news organization? Creating a new collective to share professional work? Asking the community to decide which arts stories are best and put up the money to cover those? Have better ideas that never would have occurred to us on our own? Fill out the application form, and send them in.

“It’s another vote of confidence in Philadelphia. Philly’s cultural sector is an innovative sector. Whether it’s online database manipulation, development, or bloggers, they can be the ones to initiate the process,” Olaechea says.

Folks are encouraged to apply at artsjournalism.org.

Startup Roundup: Philadelphia Media Network, Knight, BFTP, DreamIT with more details on media incubator

startup

Technically Philly’s Startup Roundup parses out the small pieces that make our greater Startup ecosystem thrive. We want to keep you in touch with the innovations that we can’t quite get to covering, but that deserve highlight. Follow along with a weekly email newsletter by clicking here and selecting the Startup Roundup button or follow Startup Roundup’s RSS feed. If you’ve got news to share, get in touch.

MUST READS
Sure, they’re running our headlines this week. Philadelphia Media Network‘s quiet announcement Monday that it would be pursuing a media incubator this fall came full swing with a press release late yesterday. PMN will launch Project Liberty with a handful of key partners: Knight is backing it with a $250,000 grant, Ben Franklin Technology Partners will provide mentorship and strategy, DreamIt is onboard for secondary seed funding exploration. Drexel is there, too, to give students a chance to get in on the action.

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Exit Interview: Former Startup Leaders President Jameson Detweiler says capital, mentorship are gone

This is Exit Interview, an occasional interview series with someone who has left Philadelphia, perhaps for another country or region or even just out of city limits and often taking talent, business and jobs with them. If you or someone you know left Philly for whatever reason, we want to hear from you. Contact us.

It happened in a weekend.

Four days after Jameson Detweiler and his team at LaunchRock opened the doors of its launch campaign and analytics platform for startups, artists and others — created over 48 hours during Startup Weekend this winter — it was getting ink in Silicon Valley.

In case you needed another ‘you know there’s a bubble when …’ tech post, LaunchRock, a startup that builds viral launch pages for other startups, is launching today via its own product,” TechCrunch wrote. Tech sage Robert Scoble brought Detweiler, who at the time, was President of Philly Startup Leaders, in for a long interview on Scobleizer.

It was very quickly clear where the company was headed. Recently, the company has hooked up with 500 Startups, a Valley business incubator — with a $50,000 accelerator investment — and the rest is history. The company is now based full-time in Mountain View.

It’s most notably the story of how the newly elected president of a local organization dedicated to encouraging entrepreneurship in the Philadelphia region now says that Philadelphia “might not be the best thing for your business.”

But at the end of the day, Detweiler says, Startup Leaders is about encouraging smart entrepreneurship. Smart entrepreneurship that means business comes first, not your location.

More with Detweiler after the jump.

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VC Roundup: DreamIt teams with Inquirer, is not moving to Austin

Welcome to the VC Roundup, where we’ll parse through venture capital news related to Philadelphia-based private equity firms and the companies they fund. Subscribe to the roundup as an email newsletter. If you have any VC-related news to pass along to us, please drop us a line.

DEFINITE READS

As we posted yesterday, the Philadelphia Media Network announced a plan to sell discounted tablet computers preloaded with PMN content. Also in the announcement: CEO Greg Osberg making good on his promise to create an incubator at 400 N. Broad. The company will incubate four startups with help from the DreamIt Ventures, The Knight Foundation and Ben Franklin Technology Partners.

In case you missed it, we interviewed Safeguard Scientifics CEO Peter Boni about the winning streak his firm has been on. This, of course, was right before Safeguard announced it was acquiring a 36 percent stake in Penn Mezzanine, another local fund.

Damon Clinkscales speculates that DreamIt Ventures is moving to Austin, home of managing partner Kerry Rupp. In an email to Technically Philly, Rupp stated that DreamIt is routinely asked to move to new cities. “Right now we are totally focused on helping the NYC program and selecting companies for the fall Philadelphia program,” she wrote.


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Where do Philadelphians call and text the most? [INTERACTIVE MAP]

With this nifty map from MIT researchers, using anonymous AT&T data, a user can trace where most outgoing calls from mobile phone in a given county go.

In Philadelphia’s case, depicted above, or available by searching for it on the site, it’s very regional, with New England, Florida and Southern California showing up.

Also check out this regionally based map using cell phone data, showing a big divide between Philly and Pittsburgh.

H/T Patrick Kerkstra

WeWorkinPhilly directory of creative, technology, business community; launches with ‘word-of-mouth’ growth

The publicly-edited guide to the region’s creative, business and technology community dubbed WeWorkinPhilly.com has surpassed 400 people.

Launched last Wednesday by Indy Hall co-founder Alex Hillman and developer Linus Graybill, the project uses the Citizentry framework, led by Reid Beels for a community guide in Portland.

Today Hillman shared some word-of-mouth growth numbers, including 420 people to date, 117 companies and other groups and projects.

Users can sign up using Twitter or LinkedIn accounts and create profiles for their companies, groups and organizations relevant to the community.

Inquirer, Daily News to sell Android tablets with discounted content [VIDEO]

From AdWeek:

Publishers, desperate to prop up their legacy print business, have been scrambling to put their content on tablet devices. Now the Philadelphia Inquirer and its sibling Philadelphia Daily News are making what may be the boldest tablet push yet. On July 11, the two papers plan to announce a pilot program under which they will sell Android tablets with their content already built in at a discount. Icons on the tablets’ home screen will take users to digital replicas of both newspapers as well as a separate Inquirer app and Philly.com, the papers’ online hub.

“No one in the U.S. has bundled the device with content,” said Greg Osberg, the CEO of newspaper parent company Philadelphia Media Network. “We want to gain significant market share in this area, and we want to learn about consumer behavior. Our goal is to be the most innovative media company in the United States.”

At the press conference, announcing a broad Project Liberty digital initiative, Osberg also again said that the incubation program Technically Philly previously reported on will launch in the fall, featuring four startups and a partnership with Ben Franklin Technology Partners and DreamIt Ventures.

Watch a video clip of the press conference below, captured by Liliputing, which features more details.

Event Highlights: July 11 – July 17, 2011

Before we begin, a reminder dear reader. We have lots of email newsletters, including our weekly Event Highlights newsletter that gives you our top events every Monday at lunch time. Sign up for Event Highlights and other newsletters here.

There’s lots going on this week, but we hope you consider Philly Merge. We’re a media sponsor of the conference which combines hackers and business folk. Read more about it here.

In events this week Philly tech gets social. BBQ with gamers, hang with hackers (twice) and brush up on your Scala.


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Friday Q&A: Peter Boni, CEO of Safeguard Scientifics and “Master Entrepreneur of the Year”

Peter J. Boni, president and chief executive officer at Safeguard Scientifics

To say that Safeguard Scientifics is having a good year is an understatement. The company’s stock is at a seven-year high, its CEO was honored as an Ernst and Young “Master Entrepreneur of the Year” and the firm has seen the windfall of four exits in six months.

The Wayne-based venture capital firm invests in life sciences and technology companies but operates differently than a typical firm. First, Safeguard is a publicly traded company. Secondly, the firm refers to its portfolio companies as “partner companies” and invests a great deal of time and resources in mentoring and incubating its investments.

“This is not some case study we wrote in business schools,” says Safeguard CEO Peter Boni. “We have the scars of experience and can give good advice.”

We chatted with Boni shortly before he left for vacation to his house in Cape Cod about his firm’s recent success, whether Safeguard would ever move to Philly from the ‘burbs and if he’s afraid of another bubble.


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Thanks to our weekly sponsors

Technically Philly is made possible by advertisers and sponsors that are important to Philadelphia’s technology community. This week we’d like to thank:

Reed Technology — Reed Technology’s Web Archiving Service is a litigation protection, web compliance and e-discovery solution for all your online assets.

The University City Science Center — The Science Center has officially opened Quorum, a central gathering space to enable the entrepreneurship and innovation communities to meet, share and learn.

Splat Productions — Splat Productions provides smart, brand-centric website design and internet marketing services to privileged clients in the Philadelphia region and beyond.

Caffeine Fish — Caffeine Fish develops iOS apps including Trainboard and PhillySubway and offers consulting in the Philadelphia area.

Newsworks — NewsWorks is the online home of WHYY News and its growing network of journalism partners. This public media service covers the Philadelphia region, Delaware and South Jersey, with a focus on regional issues, neighborhoods, health and science, and arts.

Morgan Lewis — Morgan Lewis provides comprehensive transactional, litigation, labor and employment, regulatory, and intellectual property legal services to clients of all sizes—from global Fortune 100 companies to just-conceived startups—across all major industries.

Alteva — Reduce your total cost of telecom ownership and improve employee efficiency and customer satisfaction with Alteva’s cloud-based Voice over IP phone systems and services.

Interested in joining these organizations and individuals in supporting Technically Philly? Check out our ad packages and contact our Ad Sales Manager. Can’t find something that fits? We’ll customize a package for you.