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Ready To Launch? Lack Of Scalability A Killer


By Charles Babcock | 09:39 PM ET, Dec 4, 2009

Yahoo Pipes is a way to mash up RSS feeds and Web pages into combined information, apply rules and filters, and publish it. When it launched Feb. 7, 2007, the Pipes API worked fine in principle. But as "Daniel" said from the audience at a San Francisco panel this week, Pipes wasn't ready to scale.

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VC Funding Is Dead? Tell That To Eight Newly Wealthy SaaS Startups


By Mary Hayes Weier | 10:49 AM ET, Sep 18, 2009

Venture capital funding is at a historic low, yet at least eight software startups announced VC funding in the past two weeks for a total of more than $60 million. Their products are all very different, but they have one thing in common: they're delivered in a software-as-a-service model.

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VMware Feels Growing Pains Of Being A $1 Billion Firm


By Charles Babcock | 09:53 PM ET, Sep 9, 2009

In a relatively brief period, VMware has gone from a small company to 2008 revenues of $1.9 billion. At VMworld in San Francisco, I got a sense of how that rapid growth leads to growing pains. For one thing, some of your best customers prefer your little competitors to you.

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Startup Helps IT Bill For VM Use


By Andrew Conry-Murray | 11:03 AM ET, Jul 30, 2009

Apptio's newest service tackles chargebacks for server virtualization.

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Hybrid Cloud Storage Startup Lands $6 Million


By Andrew Conry-Murray | 04:54 PM ET, Jul 27, 2009

Egnyte, which blends local and online storage for SMBs, pulled in millions in VC investment today.

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Venture Capitalists Putting More Money Into Startups


By Andrew Conry-Murray | 11:47 AM ET, Jul 22, 2009

Investments rose 15 percent in the second quarter of 2009, with IT earning the most VC dollars. But funding remains significantly low compared to previous years.

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Firewall for Virtual Machines Adds Speed and an IDS


By Andrew Conry-Murray | 12:33 PM ET, Jul 20, 2009

Startup Altor Networks launches a new version of its VM firewall that's built for speed and includes an intrusion detection engine from Sourcefire.

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Startup Puts Logs In the Cloud for Search and Storage


By Andrew Conry-Murray | 02:54 PM ET, Jul 1, 2009

Paglo announced a new service that lets IT send and store logs in the cloud. Logs can be searched and analyzed on demand.

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Paglo Monitors Amazon EC2


By Andrew Conry-Murray | 11:55 AM ET, Jun 10, 2009

SaaS startup Paglo has added monitoring for Amazon's cloud to its IT search and management service.

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Eli Lilly, NASA Build Eucalyptus Clouds


By John Foley | 09:39 AM ET, Jun 5, 2009

Eucalyptus Systems, the startup behind the open source cloud computing software, has identified its first two customers: NASA and Eli Lilly. That's an impressive start for a company that's barely three months old.

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Can Startups Survive Recession Without VC Money?


By Michael Singer | 04:05 PM ET, May 7, 2009

Little known fact: Apple and Microsoft were both started without venture capital and both started in a recession. So what's your fledgling company need to do to navigate the current economic climate?

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The Many Costs Of Cloud Computing


By John Foley | 10:20 AM ET, May 5, 2009

McKinsey & Co. has come under fire for suggesting that cloud computing may be more expensive than running servers inside your own data center. I have more bad news for would-be cloud users--the costs may be even higher than McKinsey suggests.

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Cloud Vendor Cassatt Faces The End


By John Foley | 04:50 PM ET, Apr 27, 2009

Cassatt, a six-year-old enterprise software company, is "close to the end" of operations, according to Forbes. Cassatt had positioned its data center management software as a platform for private clouds, but the startup's steep licensing fees are apparently more than IT departments are willing to spend in this economy.

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Wireless, Life Sciences Winners In VC Deals


By Michael Singer | 07:54 PM ET, Apr 22, 2009

Venture capital funding may have dropped overall in the first quarter of this year, but not all sectors suffered as seen by the multimillion dollar deals granted to the likes of Meru, Beceem, Stokes, Lavante, iScience, and Ausra.

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How To Vet Technology Startups


By John Foley | 03:40 PM ET, Apr 22, 2009

The release of InformationWeek's Startup 50 raises the old question: Should IT departments do business with startups at all? The unequivocal answer is yes, and here's my advice on how to pick the right ones.

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Symantec Acquires Startup 50 Company


By Andrew Conry-Murray | 10:59 AM ET, Apr 22, 2009

Mi5 Networks, which makes a Web security appliance, will be integrated into Symantec's product line later this year.

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Introducing InformationWeek's Startup 50


By Andrew Conry-Murray | 04:41 PM ET, Apr 20, 2009

Innovation is alive and well, as demonstrated by the companies on our first-ever list of 50 compelling young technology companies

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Additional Funding Vital In VC Deals


By Michael Singer | 02:41 PM ET, Apr 15, 2009

Second and third rounds of financing for startups often come at critical times, as three different IT software firms found out this week.

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Want VC Funding? Throw Out Your Business Plan


By Michael Singer | 05:09 PM ET, Apr 10, 2009

It sounds counterintuitive, but you're better off investing in your idea, building your social network, and attracting potential customers than spending hours refining how a plan looks on paper.

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VC Deals: Google's Singh Cassidy, JiWire


By Michael Singer | 07:16 PM ET, Apr 8, 2009

Google's loss is Accel Partners' gain as Sukhinder Singh Cassidy has joined the venture capital firm as its new CEO-in-Residence. Does the position include access to a world-class cafeteria?

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VC Deals: Fusion-io, DoubleTwist, Socialcast


By Michael Singer | 08:30 PM ET, Apr 7, 2009

Several Silicon Valley startups are celebrating fresh infusions of cash this week as the venture capital economy may be showing signs of a comeback.

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Kosmix Aggregation Tool Is Beautiful Branding


By Jonathan Salem Baskin | 02:27 PM ET, Mar 18, 2009

Three cheers to the PR firm or freelancer behind the publicity for Kosmix, which is a startup company offering an alternative approach to aggregating Internet search results. One recent story asked that it not get compared to Google, and then compared it.

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Ambitious Startup Wants To Manage All Your Unstructured Data


By Andrew Conry-Murray | 03:40 PM ET, Mar 2, 2009

Digital Reef swings for the data management fences by indexing and classifying all unstructured data in the enterprise. Top applications include e-discovery and storage management.

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Vote For Your Favorite Startup


By Andrew Conry-Murray | 12:27 PM ET, Mar 2, 2009

This April, InformationWeek will unveil the Startup 50, the top tech companies shaking up IT. You can help decide which startups make the cut by voting for the most innovative, disruptive companies.

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IT Search Engine Adds Netflow


By Andrew Conry-Murray | 10:45 AM ET, Feb 27, 2009

Startup Paglo, which offers SaaS-based IT management based on search, now collects Netflow data to help customers monitor bandwidth usage by users, applications and protocols.

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How To Get Started With Storage-As-A-Service


By John Foley | 04:04 PM ET, Feb 23, 2009

Pay-as-you-go online storage services are a flexible way to deal with exploding data volume. For 25 cents per month, you can rent a gigabyte of storage from Nirvanix. But is that any way to buy enterprise storage?

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Lessons From The Demise Of A Cloud Startup


By John Foley | 11:03 AM ET, Feb 20, 2009

Amid the growing interest in cloud computing, Coghead's collapse provides a reality check. SAP is providing a safety net for Coghead's intellectual property and its employees, but Coghead's customers are left to fend for themselves.

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Hybrid Storage Service Targets Cloud Doubters


By Andrew Conry-Murray | 05:50 PM ET, Feb 17, 2009

Don't quite trust online storage providers with your company's files? A new service wants to lure the doubtful with a hybrid model that combines local and cloud-based storage. Startup Egnyte links your premises file server to an online service for belt-and-suspenders storage and backups.

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Startup May Just Digitize Your Wallet


By George Hulme | 07:29 PM ET, Feb 8, 2009

I despise having to carry paper. You also can add credit and ATM cards, driver's licenses, insurance cards -- all of this stuff we need to carry every day to that list, too. While we worry about hackers cracking retailers' Web sites and getting our credit card or financial information -- a lost wallet or purse can easily end up being a much bigger nightmare.

A startup from Bend, Ore., believes it may have a solution.

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The Economics Of Private Storage Clouds


By John Foley | 08:35 PM ET, Feb 3, 2009

ParaScale is about to release new software that lets customers create "storage clouds" using commodity Linux servers. The economics are such that the cost of a petabyte of storage, once the domain of only the largest organizations, is coming within reach of more companies.

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Lost In Austin (Startup City TV)


By Fritz Nelson | 12:12 AM ET, Jan 27, 2009

I arrived in Austin, Texas, today to go talk to IBM, again, about how it's helping make the planet smarter, this time focusing on how Web 2.0 technologies can help companies become more green. I am well prepared for Austin because I was just here in November (editor's note: It was October, Fritz), and I have a photogenic memory (editor's note: uh, photographic, and no).

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Truevert's Semantic Search


By Fritz Nelson | 01:05 AM ET, Jan 21, 2009

Semantic search is like porn: I'm pretty sure I'll know it when I see it. So when semantic search upstart Truevert came by for a visit, I got all googly (I think I might have even screamed "yahoo"). The Truevert system, powered by OrcaTec's discovery toolkit, is narrowly defined around green, but it's definitely an eye-opening, fresh approach to an elusive problem.

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Do The Monster Mashery


By Fritz Nelson | 02:30 AM ET, Jan 20, 2009

I'm sure just about everything can happen in the cloud these days -- maybe even things I don't want to know about. But when we're starting to help companies perform API management in the cloud, which is what Mashery is doing, it's probably a pretty good sign.

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Million-Dollar Private Clouds


By John Foley | 10:58 AM ET, Jan 16, 2009

Private clouds that emulate the characteristics of public cloud services sound promising, but they won't necessarily be fast, easy, or cheap to create. A recent meeting with Cassatt CEO Bill Coleman reinforced that impression, especially when I heard about the price tag associated with them.

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Launching InformationWeek’s Startup 50


By John Foley | 11:50 AM ET, Jan 13, 2009

What are the most innovative and compelling tech startups with products and services for business? InformationWeek is setting out to identify those up-and-coming companies, and we're asking your help in finding them.

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CES: Startup Ctera's CloudPlug (Literally)


By Fritz Nelson | 04:28 PM ET, Jan 11, 2009

Sometimes it's the tiniest things that thrill me. In the middle of the gigantic TVs and the booming sound systems and the magic acts and the private suites and the thrumming parties was Ctera, an 18-employee company headquartered in Israel. When they showed me their device, I literally did a double-take (luckily off camera; very awkward). The CloudPlug is a tiny plug with a processor inside, an Ethernet jack, and a USB port, with which you can turn any USB device into a NAS and back up your data to Ctera's cloud-based service. And it's so damned cute.

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Amid Belt-Tightening, Engine Yard Expands The Cloud


By John Foley | 03:53 PM ET, Jan 9, 2009

In the past few weeks, Engine Yard has brought in a new CEO, laid off 15% of its workforce, and merged two of its key development efforts. With that out of the way, the Ruby on Rails hosting company appears ready to announce a cloud platform and a new hosting option.

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There's No Such Thing As A Private Cloud


By Andrew Conry-Murray | 03:32 PM ET, Jan 9, 2009

I talked to two cloud startups today, but to my mind only one of them should get to use the term "cloud" in how it positions itself.

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Managing Amazon Web Services From An iPhone


By John Foley | 12:37 PM ET, Jan 8, 2009

The day has arrived when Average Joe can manage data center resources from a soccer field or the beach using the world's most popular gadget. Ylastic, an Atlanta-based startup founded last year, has introduced an iPhone version of its management interface for Amazon Web Services.

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At CES, A Super Screen Goes Commercial


By John Foley | 06:17 PM ET, Jan 7, 2009

If you like wide-screen TVs and computer monitors, check out Hiperwall's video wall technology. The startup has demonstrated its system running on 40 LCD monitors combined into a display that's 10-feet-high and 27-feet-across. Now, Samsung Electronics has agreed to distribute and support the super-sized, high-resolution displays.

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Fighting Click Fraud And Bots From The Heart Of Texas


By John Foley | 10:10 AM ET, Dec 24, 2008

It’s been a big year for Click Forensics, a company that helps advertisers, agencies, and ad networks recognize and reduce low-quality Web traffic. In addition to naming a new CEO and securing second-round funding, the fraud-fighting startup struck a deal with Google.

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RightScale's Cloud Outlook Is Upbeat Despite The Recession


By J. Nicholas Hoover | 03:21 PM ET, Dec 8, 2008

It's unclear exactly how cloud computing will fare during the recession, but RightScale CEO Michael Crandell has a rosy outlook. That prognostication appears deserved for now: the cloud management startup just raised an additional $13 million.

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DotNetNuke Announces New Funding, Readies Version 5.0


By Peter Hagopian | 11:41 PM ET, Dec 2, 2008

The DotNetNuke team has a few things to celebrate. It recently closed on a round of financing, won a pair of awards in Packt Publishing's Open Source CMS Awards, and is getting ready for the release of DotNetNuke 5.0.

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Startups Use SaaS To Take On SharePoint


By Andrew Conry-Murray | 09:17 AM ET, Nov 26, 2008

Microsoft's SharePoint is the T. rex of collaboration products: big, fiercely competitive, and standing atop the social computing food chain. But smaller, nimbler players are using SaaS to compete against the thundering giant.

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Yieldex Wins Amazon Startup Contest


By John Foley | 11:13 AM ET, Nov 21, 2008

Yieldex, a one-year-old company with a product for forecasting online ad inventory, is the winner of Amazon Web Services' startup challenge. The prize: $50,000 in cash, $50,000 in AWS credits, and a potential investment from Amazon.

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Will IT Management Go SaaS?


By Andrew Conry-Murray | 02:32 PM ET, Nov 19, 2008

Forrester Research forecasts SaaS will take a modest bite out of the IT management market. The big surprise is the high level of interest from medium-sized and large enterprises.

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FastTCP Appliance Gains Traction


By John Foley | 04:39 PM ET, Nov 17, 2008

FastSoft, the two-year-old startup with an Internet accelerator appliance that employs souped-up TCP/IP, has two new customers. Limelight Networks is using the device to speed content uploads to its storage servers, and Getty Images has deployed it to hasten video distribution across long distances.

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G.ho.st Twitters From Amazon Web Services


By John Foley | 07:35 AM ET, Nov 11, 2008

G.ho.st, a startup that has developed a "virtual computer," is integrating Twitter with its browser-based user environment. More than a dozen applications are available from G.ho.st, a unique company where Israelis and Palestinians work together writing Web 2.0 software.

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Microsoft Offers Free Software, Cloud Platform To Startups


By John Foley | 09:37 AM ET, Nov 5, 2008

Microsoft today introduces a new program that gives startups no-cost access to its software, technical support, and marketing machine for three years. The initiative, called Microsoft BizSpark, makes it much easier for entrepreneurs to build new businesses using Microsoft software and services. It comes at a time when cash-strapped startups may be looking for help.

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VC Drought? 70 Million Exceptions To The Rule


By John Foley | 05:17 PM ET, Oct 31, 2008

Anxiety is high in Silicon Valley over an anticipated decline in VC funding, but investment money hasn't dried up yet. In the past few days, a handful of startups have pulled in $70 million.

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