Posts Tagged ‘Durham’
Thursday, March 31st, 2011
DURHAM, NC – Appia, which operates the world’s largest open smartphone app store, has received a new $10 million C round invesment from Silicon-Valley-based Venrock. The company, which was listed at number 15 on the Wall Street Journal’s recent list of the top U.S. venture-backed companies, raised $15 million last fall.
According to some reports, Appia’s C round may still be open.
Venrock Vice President Dev Khare, vice president has joined the company’s board of directors.
Appia also has partnered with Opera Software, the top Web browser for smartphones, and will power the Opera Mobile Store for more than 100 million users. It also partners with Telcel, Mexico’s largest operator, on the Ideas Appstore for Telcel’s 64 million subscribers.
“We are extremely impressed with this team’s vision and experience within the Web and mobile ecosystems, as well as Appia’s success powering app stores for mobile operators, device OEMs and mobile software partners around the world,” said Khare. “For established Web and mobile publishers as well as emerging application developers, Appia is fast becoming a key distribution channel to consumers globally.”
“Independent app stores will continue to be a major driver for the global premium mobile content and applications opportunity,” said Vikrant Gandhi of Frost & Sullivan. “An open strategy is important to help support the growth of the smartphone applications industry by providing better choices for consumers, and by giving multiple options to content owners for their distribution strategy.”
Frost & Sullivan predicts that total downloads from smartphone app stores are expected to increase globally from 9.6 billion in 2010 to more than 120 billion by 2015.
TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:
SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org
Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com
Digital East: www.digitaleast.com
Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com
Tags: Appia, Dev Khare, Durham, financing, Frost & Sullivan, NC, smartphone stores, Venrock, venture capital, Vikrant Gandhi Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off
Tuesday, March 29th, 2011
By Allan Maurer
RALEIGH, NC – The North Carolina state House has approved a bill that would restrict the efforts of municipalities to create their own broadband Internet services.
The bill, which supporters say levels the playing field for commercial and municipal providers, passed 81-37 and now goes to the state Senate.
It restricts municipalities from borrowing money for capital costs without voter approval and bars offering Internet service below cost and prevents cities from using funds from other city utilities.
The bill will not affect cities that have already established their own broadband networks, such as Wilson and Salisbury.
Commercial providers argue that municipal broadband services are unfair because governments have inherent advantages.
Cities have argued that they cannot get commercial providers to deliver economically priced high speed service.
Seven of the ten worst cities in NC
Bandwidth.com, which does broadband mapping, shows that seven of the ten U.S. cities with the worst broadband connections at price per Mbps are in North Carolina. They include Greensboro, Winston-Salem, Raleigh, Cary, Durham, Wilmington, and Charlotte. Columbia, SC, is also on the list. South Carolina is also considering a bill to restrict municipal broadband.
Nationally, 130 communities own wireless broadband networks.
We have reported previously that the fastest and cheapest broadband networks are city run in the south.
A group called the Institute for Local Self-Reliance says that restricting municipal broadband would hurt job creation in NC.
Tags: Charlotte, Durham, Greensboro, Municipal broadband networks, NC State unveils new entrepreneurship facility for students, Raleigh, Salisbury, Wilmington, Wilson, Winston Salem Posted in Carolinas, Economic Development, Internet/New Media, North Carolina | Comments Off
Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011
 Artist's rendering of the American Underground space
DURHAM, NC – The American Underground, which occupies the lower levels of American Tobacco’s historic Strickland and Crowe Buildings and is designed to foster collaboration among startups and small businesses, has added six new tenants.
The newcomers include Themis Media, Smashing Boxes, NC IDEA & IDEA Fund Partners, Sustainable Industrial Solutions (SIS) and Zetta Worldwide Tech.
“Locating to the Underground and being amidst Durham’s emerging startup scene will allow us to be even more accessible and collaborative with entrepreneurs,” says David Rizzo, president and CEO of NC IDEA, which provides early financing through grants.
“The ‘natural’ and organic networking opportunities that will present themselves just by being right there at the center of activity will immediately prove invaluable.”
Adds Jason Massy of the energy efficiency-focused Sustainable Industrial Solutions (SIS), “Since moving back to North Carolina, this is the first place that I’ve experienced in the region that has the organic startup culture of a place like Silicon Valley.”
Wide ranging new roster
The Underground’s new roster is wide ranging. Themis Media, for example, describes itself as “like Rolling Stone but for video games.” Just down the hall, IDEA Fund Partners provides seed and early stage equity funding and expertise to niche companies throughout the region.
“The scene in downtown Durham, especially at the Underground, is electric and filled with optimism and creativity,” says Nick Jordan of the Web development firm Smashing Boxes. “The collective energy gives us entrepreneurs confidence that the things we are working on matter and will make a difference. Entrepreneurs face an uphill battle when starting a business, and being around fellow entrepreneurs is great therapy to help you persevere.”
Sharita Lawson of Zetta Worldwide Tech agrees, “We wanted to be in an environment where we could pull from the creative energy of those around us and also receive support, both moral and professional, from individuals who have similar visions.”
Here’s a look at the new tenants in their own words:
IDEA Fund Partners, John Cambier: “Since 2006, IDEA Fund Partners has provided seed and early stage equity funding, along with company building expertise, to IT, materials technologies and medical device companies throughout North Carolina, as well as the Southeast and Mid-Atlantic regions.
NC IDEA, David Rizzo: “NC IDEA is committed to supporting North Carolina’s economic development by helping young, innovative companies grow, create jobs and become major contributors to the business community mainly by providing early financing in the form of grants. By the end of 2011, we will have awarded over $2 million to 60+ companies.”
Sustainable Industrial Solutions, Jason Massy: “Sustainable Industrial Solutions (SIS) is making American manufacturing more competitive and reducing greenhouse gases one factory at a time. We leverage energy efficiency, paid-from-savings implementations to embed sustainability best practices in a facility.”
Smashing Boxes, Nick Jordan: “We are a user-centric design and development firm that helps organizations build their brand, their audience, and their customer base through Web and mobile technology. We work with everyone from prefunded startups to Fortune 500s to nonprofits.
Themis Media, Alexader Macris: “Themis founds, incubates, and operates businesses in new media and interactive entertainment. Founded in 2001, Themis created one of the first online social communities for games (WarCry), pioneered the first interactive gaming company to focus on community building, player retention and MMO support services (TAP Interactive), and founded the prestigious video game destination The Escapist. Themis’ media properties reach more than 4.5 million unique visitors every month.”
The new crew joins ‘veteran’ Underground-ers Acorn Innovestments, Adzerk, CED. Jaargon Ltd., Joystick Labs, LaunchBox Digital Preation and Two Toasters.
The American Underground is not the only place providing a collegial atmosphere and offices aimed at giving startups a boost. TechStarts Plus in Cary, which recently changed its name from TechSuites Plus, is also creating a startup friendly ecosystem. For more information see our previous story about TechStarts: www.techjournalsouth.com/2011/02/techsuites-offers-tech-startups-bargain-space-incubator-like-ecosystem/
TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:
SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org
Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com
Digital East: www.digitaleast.com
Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com
Tags: Alexander Macris, American Tobacco Campus, Cary, Dave Rizzo, Durham, IDEA Fudn Partenrs, Jason Massy, NC, NC IDEA, Nick Jordan, Sharita Lawson, Sustainable Industrial Solutions, TechStarts Plus, Themis Media, Zetta Worldwide Tech Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off
Tuesday, March 22nd, 2011
DURHAM, NC – The Bull City Startrup Stampede has selected 11 companies from 78 applications for 60 days of free furnished space in downtown Durham April 1 thorugh May 31. The companies will also receive expert help and opportunities to network with founders of successful Durham startups.
“We were overwhelmed and thrilled by the response to the Stampede,” said Adam Klein, the Chamber’s Director of Strategic Initiatives. “The applications were wide-ranging and inspiring. It made the selection process difficult, but we are thrilled to bring these 11 startup companies and 30 employees downtown.”
The companies that were not selected for the Stampede have already been connected to the many business resources available in Durham such as Bull City Forward, NC Institute for Minority Economic Development, Durham Technical Community College Small Business Center, CED, LaunchBox Digital, Joystick Labs and the Small Business and Technical Development Center.
“We want to make sure all the companies that showed interest in the Stampede are engaged in Durham and the business opportunities here,” Klein said. “We have a wealth of resources and partners who can help these companies start and grow in Durham.”
For background on the event see our previous story: Startup Stampede, launch a company in 60 days
The Bull City Startup Stampede participants:
AcuMedSoft – revolutionizing healthcare delivery with secure cloud based web applications.
Appuware – provides a cloud-based suite of tools and services that enable mobile publishers to offer trial and subscription based pricing within various app marketplaces.
Blink Coupons - customer loyalty cards for small businesses. Blink aims to become the Google of the collegiate market and their ultimate goal is to make the collegiate experience more enjoyable for college students, professors and advertisers, alike.
Bound Custom Journals - delivers uniquely customizable journals for travel, sketching, writing, planning, anything–because only you can create the perfect journal.
Clinical Ambassador – a cultural attaché that connects science and minority communities to advanced medical discovery and reduces disparities through cultural competence, research literacy, outreach strategy, community-driven, creative marketing and patient recruitment in clinical trials.
Finger Puppet Games, Inc. - develops 3D games with cutting-edge technology that are social, tactile, and collectible; built for mobile devices and monetized through microtransactions.
Fitsistant - a service of on-call physical training coaches & scheduling assistants combined with personally tailored fitness software.
Haiti Hub - a for-profit social enterprise dedicated to providing the highest quality Haitian Creole e-language learning solutions to native English speakers invested in Haiti’s future.
LearnVC – VCHub.com (operated by LearnVC) simplifies raising capital by modeling investment scenarios to educate entrepreneurs and collaborate with potential investors.
Little Green Software - develops apps for smart devices including smartphones, tablets, game systems, and the web.
Rippple – an online platform that empowers communities to support entrepreneurs in building successful businesses.
TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:
SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org
Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com
Digital East: www.digitaleast.com
Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com
Tags: Adam Klein, Blink Coupons, Bound Custom Journals, Bull City Forward, Bull City Startup Stampede, CED, Clinical Ambassador, companies picked, Durham, Durham Technical Community College Small Business Center, Finger Puppet Games, Fitsistant, Joystick Labs, LaunchBox Digital, LearnVC, LIttle Green Software, NC, NC Institute for Minority Economic Development, Ripple Posted in Carolinas, Events, Internet/New Media, mobile games, North Carolina | Comments Off
Thursday, March 10th, 2011
ATLANTA, GA & DURHAM, NC – Only two Southeast firms landed on the Wall Street Journal’s “The Next Big Thing 2011″ list of the “The top 50 venture-funded companies. Durham, NC-based appia Inc., the mobile app store company headed by Jud Bowman, is number 15 on the list. Georga-based Suniva, which makes solar cells with improved peformance over conventional types, is number 38.
Thirty-five of the companies are based in California. At TechMedia’s recent Southeast Venture Conference in Atlanta March 2-3, Mark Heesen, president of the National Venture Capital Association, said during a panel discussion that California may become even more dominant than it is already in the venture ecosystem.
Introducing the list, the WSJ wrote, “Venture capitalists are betting that the next Google Inc. or Facebook Inc. will have a name like Xactly, Chegg or Zoosk. In what may be a sign of a re-inflating Web bubble, The Wall Street Journal’s second annual ranking of 50 venture-capital-backed companies shows investors are chasing after Internet firms, many with a consumer focus.”
It notes that even firms without particular tech focus, healthcare and business services companies, for instance, are incorporating social networking or mobile technology into their businesses. Mobile communications, health care and business software firms make up the bulk of the list.
To qualify for the list, which was compiled by VentureSource, a unit of WSJ’s parent company, News Corp., a company had to have nabbed venture funding in the last three years and have a valuation of less than $1 billion. Those criteria place a focus on less well known companies and eliminate firms such as Facebook, Groupon and Twitter.
While we have no argument with including appia and Suniva on the list, we can think of a number of Southeast firms we would include instead of some the WSJ chose. What do you think?
–Allan Maurer
See: Durham’s PocketGear reboots as Appia
Suniva to invest $15M, may raise $75M
TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:
SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org
Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com
Digital East: www.digitaleast.com
Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com
Tags: Appia, Durham, Energy, Georgia, Internet bubble, Jud Bowman, mobile app store, NC, solar cells, Suniva, top 50 venture funded companies, Wall Street Journal Next Big Thing 2011 Posted in Carolinas, Energy, Internet/New Media, Mobile, North Carolina | Comments Off
Wednesday, March 2nd, 2011
RESEARCH TRIANGLE, NC – ChannelAdvisor, a software and services solution provider that enables online retailers to sell more across e-commerce channels, is bringing a stellar lineup of ecommerce speakers and participants from Google, eBay, Yahoo!, and PayPal, among others, to its annual Catalyst conference networking event April 4-6.
Accelerate Your E-Commerce is thetheme of the conference, which is being held at the Washington Duke Inn & Golf Club in Durham, NC.
We have attended these intimate events and they make it easy for those who attend to connect with top executives from major companies.
“This year’s Catalyst agenda includes our most exciting line-up of keynote speakers and presenters yet,” said Scot Wingo, CEO of ChannelAdvisor.
“We’re thrilled to have Google, eBay, Yahoo!, PayPal, Sears Marketplace and dozens of others on board to anchor this year’s event. Catalyst is an invaluable experience for attendees, bringing together the most contemporary e-commerce visionaries to address the latest technologies and trends. If you’re in online retail today, this event is a must attend.”
Leaders from the following companies are currently slated to participate:
- Google
- Forrester Research
- eBay
- eBags
- Sears Marketplace
- Crocs
- Lucky Brand Jeans
- Plow & Hearth
- PayPal
- Yahoo!
- Buy.com
- Shipworks
- Ingram Micro Logistics
- Cloud Conversion
- Listrak
- eAccountable
For more information see: www.channeladvisor.com/catalyst/us/.
Tags: Catalyst Conference, ChannelAdvisor, Durham, ebay, ecommerce, Google, NC, PayPal, Research Triangle, Scot Wingo, Washington Duke Inn, Yahoo Posted in Carolinas, Events, Internet/New Media, IT, North Carolina | Comments Off
Tuesday, February 22nd, 2011
DURHAM, NC – In another move emphasing Durham, North Carolina’s growing reputation as a startup hub, the first Startup America: Reducing Barriers roundtable will be held in Durham, N.C., on March 3.
A second roundtable will be at the annual South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas, on March 12. The annual festival includes a focus on emerging technologies, which has made it an important destination each year for entrepreneurs and startup firms. More information on both of these events will be available in the coming days at www.sba.gov/startupamerica.
As part of the White House’s Startup America initiative, senior Obama Administration officials will visit eight cities to meet with entrepreneurs and hear directly from them on ideas and suggestions for reducing barriers and regulations to build a more supportive environment for entrepreneurship and innovation.
In January, President Obama issued an Executive Order instructing federal agencies to identify and take steps to reduce regulations that are outdated or overly burdensome to entrepreneurs. This roundtable series builds on that directive and is part of the Administration’s overall Startup America efforts to support for startups and entrepreneurs with tools and resources to grow America’s economy and win the future.
Using the input from the roundtables and broader public participation, the Administration will produce a report highlighting ideas to streamline and simplify unnecessary barriers to America’s economy and win the future.
The remaining roundtables are being planned in the following cities, with dates and locations still being determined: Boston, MA; Silicon Valley, CA; Atlanta, GA; Pittsburgh, PA; Minneapolis, MN; Boulder, CO. For small business owners and entrepreneurs who are not able to attend one of the roundtables, Startup America will provide the opportunity to submit ideas, comments and suggestions online to also be considered for inclusion in the final report.
Entrepreneurs and small business owners interested in attending any of the events can learn more by emailing reducingbarriers@sba.gov or by visiting http://www.sba.gov/startupamerica.
TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:
SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org
Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com
Digital East: www.digitaleast.com
Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com
Tags: Atlanta, Austin, Boston, Boulder, Durham, Minneapolis, NC, Pittsburgh, President Obama, Silicon Valley, Southwest festival, Startup America Roundtable, TX Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off
Tuesday, February 22nd, 2011
Durham is becoming a hotbed for startup companies, with more than 50 in downtown alone. The success of the American Tobacco Campus and its startup friendly American Underground, the proximity to Duke University and the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, Research Triangle Park located 10 minutes away, and the city’s modest-cost-of-living are all contributing factors.
In a guest post on Jason Caplain’s Southeast VC blog, Adam Klein, director of Strategic Initiatives, Durham Chamber, wrote, “The idea for the Bull City Startup Stampede came during a conversation with Preation founder and iContact co-founder, Aaron Houghton. We were talking about how the startup scene in downtown Durham is thriving and that we’d love to expose more entrepreneurs to this environment. That’s when Aaron started talking about a wacky sort of spectacle eared at giving Triangle-based startups a first-hand experience of Durham…from there we launched the Startup Stampede.”
Houghton tells us, “It doesn’t cost the entrepreneurs a thing and they don’t give up any equity. The space is right in the middle of the startup scene in downtown Durham, 50 startups are within talking distance from this office. The 50mb Internet connection in the space is not currently offered to businesses in NC via cable providers but Stampede companies will get it first (for free) which is really cool.”
Klein added, “The programming for the event will be light but we are planning to bring in some very successful Durham entrepreneurs each week to talk with the Stampede participants about the ups and downs of launching a company.”
Durham startups already employ about 500 people and it’s well known that small businesses account for the bulk of new jobs created. With the RTP’s large tech companies shrinking workforces, we think this emphasis on creating and nurturing startups bodes well for the Bull City’s future.
Applications are due March 11 and selected participants will be notified by March 18. There is no specific industry focus but Kleins says, “We are mostly interested in the background of the founder/team, the market opportunity and the scalability of the concept.”
–Allan Maurer
Email TJS Editor Allan Maurer: Allan at TechJournalSouth dot com.
TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:
SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org
Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com
Digital East: www.digitaleast.com
Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com
Tags: Aaron Houghton, Adam Klein, American Tobacco Campus, Duke University, Durham, Durham Chamber, evemts, Jason Caplain, NC, Research Triangle Park, Southeast VC blog, startup hub, Startup Stampede, UNC Posted in Carolinas, Economic Development, Events, Internet/New Media, North Carolina | 1 Comment »
Tuesday, February 22nd, 2011
MORRISVILLE, NC- Viamet Pharmaceuticals Inc. has raised $25 million in equity financing, according to a regulatory filing. The company focuses on enzymes that contain a metal, typically zinc or iron. About ten percent of current drugs target these “metalloenzymes.” Viamet’s technology makes those drugs more effective and safer, the company has said.
The company, founded in 2005, raised a $4 million round in 2007 and an $18 million B round in 2009 from Novartis Option Fund and Lilly Ventures. Existing investors who participated included Durham-based Intersouth Partners and Hatteras Venture Partners, also of Durham.
The filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission disclosing the current raise lists Intersouth, Haatteras, and Novartis Option Fund in Cambridge, Mass.; Lurie Investment Fund in Chicago; and Indianapolis’ Lilly Ventures, a venture capital subsidiary of Eli Lilly and Co.
Other investors in the company include Headlands Ventures and Astellas Venture Management.
According to the company’s website, Viamet develops traditional small molecule compounds that exploit validated metalloenzyme targets in the fields of infectious disease and oncology. All of Viamet’s therapeutic programs target indications with blockbuster potential and where current therapies have significant clinical deficiencies that can be addressed by the company’s technology.
TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:
SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org
Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com
Digital East: www.digitaleast.com
Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com
Tags: Biotech, Durham, financing, Hatteras Ventures, Intersouth Partners, Lilly Ventures, Morrisville, NC, Novartis Option Fund, Pharma, Viamet Posted in Carolinas, North Carolina | Comments Off
Tuesday, February 15th, 2011
DURHAM, NC – EvoApp Inc., which includes former Inspire Pharmaceuticals CEO Christy Shaffer and iContact’s Ryan Allis among its directors and investors, has raised $1.1 million of a targeted $1.5 million share offering, according to a regulatory filing.
Founded in 2009 by North Carolina School of Science and Math alumni Joe Davy and Alexey Melnichenko, the company develops collaborative tools to help companies interact with customers.
A recent McKinsey Quarterly report said companies using Web 2.0 technologies to communicate internally and externally are seeing a variety of measurable benefits, including higher profit margins. The findings suggest that firms such as EvoApp will be able to demonstrate strong ROI for their products and services.
Other investors in the Durham, NC-based firm include Rick Stone, chair, NCSSM and Tom McMurray – a former partner at Sequoia Capital.
The company says its software:
- Identifies key customer relationships
- Creates transparency with customer service operations
- Proactively detects upsale opportunities
- Quickly highlights change in sentiment value for existing and new product offerings
- Collects and analyzes competitive intelligence
- Analyzes customer feedback postings in social media sites
The company disclosed the financing in a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.
TechJournal South is a TechMedia company. TechMedia presents the annual conferences:
SoutheastVentureConference: www.seventure.org
Internet Summit: www.internetsummit.com
Digital East: www.digitaleast.com
Digital Summit: www.digitalsummit.com
Tags: Alexey Melnichenko, business collaboration tools, Christy Shaffer, Durham, EvoApp, financing, icontact, Inspire Pharma, Joe Davy, McKinsey Quarterly, NC, NC School of the Arts, Rick Stone, Ryan Allis, Sequoia Capital, Tom McMurray Posted in Carolinas, Internet/New Media, IT, Money, North Carolina | Comments Off
Tuesday, January 25th, 2011
By Allan Maurer

- Allan Maurer
UPDATED - RESEARCH TRIANGLE, NC – I’ve got my 10,000 hours in writing for the Web. I started writing for online media in 1999 and averaged 1,000 hours a year or more since.
In his recent book, “Outliers,” Malcolm Gladwell, who also authored “Blink,” makes a case for the theory that it requires about 10,000 hours of practice to make someone an expert at just about anything.
Gladwell describes how Bill Gates, Bill Joy, and Steve Jobs all managed to acquire 10,000 hours on computers well ahead of most everyone else by being in the right place at the right time – leading to their success and riches.
He also shows that the theory applies just as readily to the success of the Beatles, who grabbed their 10K hours playing 12-hour gigs in demanding Liverpool nightspots before exploding into worldwide fame and acclaim. It applies, he suggests, to just about any endeavor.
Gladwell’s book, which I highly recommend, details many other components of “outlier” success, which include such things as the luck to be in the right place at the right time.
Right place, right time
I was fortunate to be in the right place at the right time as well, actually. In 1997 I left a magazine in Charlotte, NC, to freelance as a writer, but I had been working for regional and local publications instead of the national magazines that had been my primary sources of income previously. Let me tell you, it is tough to make a living writing primarily for local and regional publications anywhere, but particularly so outside of major media cities.
I wrote for every publication that bought copy in Charlotte: Creative Loafing, The Charlotte Business Journal, Charlotte Magazine, Charlotte’s Best Magazine, and more, but at the same time was learning to function on the still young Internet. I saw that the Internet was the future of publishing and journalism. I began spending hours every day interacting with people on newsgroups and through email. I began acquiring Internet skills – in search, security, and instant communication, among others.
You had to learn to avoid what were then called “flame wars,” how to search quickly and effectively – which was a bit more difficult in those days than now, and to double check your writing before zipping it off into cyberspace.
And I went job hunting online.
I also started hunting for an online job. The first company I actually interviewed with, a city site firm doing things similar to those I had done at city focused magazines, just flat turned me down, much to my surprise, considering how qualified I was for the position.
But it was the first of a number of strokes of luck that led me to a new career, and at twice what the company that had turned me down paid.
Pioneering tech news site
There were so many jobs popping up online in mid-1999 I barely hesitated at losing the first gig and moved on to applying for the next. I hit the bullseye with a company called dbusiness dot com (a url now owned by an entirely different company), later renamed LocalBusiness dot com. It was one of the first national online news sites covering local technology, startups, funding stories, business profiles. It spawned many imitators.
I had the qualifications they wanted. I had worked for daily newspapers as a reporter, was founding editor of two regional business journals (Northeast PA Business Journal is still going), had covered technology for OMNI, Science Digest, and Longevity, among other national magazines, and had written a book about lasers for Arco in the 1980s (Lasers, Lightwave of the Future), among other credits. You could probably pick up a copy at Amazon for a penny plus shipping and handling.
Versatility is always a selling point for a writer. I worked for a wide range of national publications over the years: from Playboy to Modern Maturity (both of which paid in the $1 a word range in the 1980s). I even wrote a seafood cooking column for a national dive magazine called USA Today for seven years.
$10,000 raise in one day
So they hired me. It was unlike any job I’d had before. We were expected to crank out at least four, usually five stories a day. While initially, we rewrote news releases without so much as a call, I began breaking news stories using traditional reporting methods within a month.
“Glad to know someone can find news without using the wire services (Business Wire, PR Newswire, etc.),” my editor said. But still, the sheer amount of copy we were expected to turn out daily was daunting.
I was one of the first reporters for that company to start breaking news about startups landing funding and broke a number of the biggest stories from the Research Triangle area in that arena, beating even AP to some $100 million deals in those heady times. But it was the daily grind of finding stories, finding sources to talk about them, and finding ways to make technology and business less jargon ridden and more easily grasped that was the real training.
I must have been doing something right, because when a then popular technology business magazine called Upside tried to hire me, LocalBusiness gave me a $10,000 raise instantly to beat their offer. The extra money was in my paycheck the next week. I admit, I do miss the way money flew around in those Internet boom years.
I worked for several other online news publications since, and co-founded LocalTechWire.com, now owned by WRAL in Raleigh. I joined TechJournal South in 2007, and the pace of doing half a dozen stories a day has not slowed. And I’ll say this, once you’ve worked for an online media company, going back to working for a print publication, which I did for a time, feels just like leaving the Interstate where you were doing 80 miles an hour to a back road doing 35.
What I’ve learned
Speed is the main thing I’ve developed working online. That has its consequences, especially working without an editor except Microsoft (and you know how good he is).
The Internet is a hungry beast and has to be fed at regular intervals. Developing that speed was particularly daunting at first, when I worked on an IBM PC dinosaur and dial-up Internet connections. One of the first things I learned was to get high end equipment and the fastest Internet connections I could find. People still comment on how fast I get a story posted following an interview. It wasn’t always that way. When I first started writing for the Web, doing five stories a day felt like whooshing through the galaxy at warp speed.
I also learned the need to be nimble and adaptable, because unlike staid grey lady print media, the Internet media landscape changes rapidly. New technologies, new competitors, new media models, and new tools evolve continually.
Most recently, after years using a variety of proprietary content management systems or tools such as Dreamweaver and FrontPage, I adapted to using WordPress. That added another layer of things to learn.
Learning SEO
Learning SEO, for instance, required paying attention to details that I had never needed to think about before as a writer and editor and in an arena that changes as Google and other search engines refine their algorithms.
How? You can’t skip steps in the SEO process. You have to put in alternative text for images, do the 160 character or less headlines, descriptions and key word lists. You also need to stay abreast of search engine algorithm changes. Finally, you have to look at your analytics regularly to see what stories are working and which are not, the search terms people use to visit your site, and where they are coming from (search engines, organic, or referred).
It’s tough not to make some errors working fast, in quantity, and without an editor. But people are forgiving of Internet typos and such. You do see them everywhere, including the New York Times and other top publications online.
One of the most important lessons I’ve learned is that the Internet is largely self-correcting. When I make a mistake, whether it is a typo, a misinterpretation, or bad link, I hear about it from readers and correct it, usually before our eWire goes out in the afternoon.
From the time of that first online position through to the present, I averaged more than 100 hours a month writing for web sites, those I worked for full time, those I created, and those for which I freelanced. You deal with more than just writing web copy doing a job like this.
Adapting is essential
You learn to do most of your own IT, from using increasingly sophisticated applications and technology to managing security and ergonomic considerations. A list of the programs I’ve learned over that time would fill a page, including eight different content management systems.
All of which means that in this job, you don’t stop learning and adapting and maybe that’s the essential lesson?
When you think about it, I fit Gladwell’s other criteria of being in the right place (a market LocalBusiness dot com wanted covered) with the right background (solid journalism credentials and experience as both a business and technology writer), at the right time (the very beginning of daily web-only reporting.) To get that 10,000 hours in, you had to start then or earlier.
I was and I did, so, I should be getting good at this sometime soon.
Email TJS Editor Allan Maurer: Allan at TechJournal South dot com.
Tags: 10K hours as a web writer, Allan Maurer, Charlotte, Charlotte Magazine, column, Creative Loafing, dbusiness, Durham, I've got my 10K hours in as a web writer, Localbusiness.com, LocalTechWire, Longevity, NC, OMNI, Research Triangle Park, SEO advice, tips for writing on the web, Viewpoint, WRAL, writing advice Posted in Business advice, Carolinas, North Carolina, Viewpoint | 2 Comments »
Thursday, January 20th, 2011
LANHAM, MD -Lanham, MD-based Optoro has closed a $1.85 million Series A financing from Durham, NC-based SJF Ventures, QED Investors and Phil Pfeffer of Treemont Capital. Optoro sells comprehensive asset recovery solutions for the distressed inventory of retailers, manufacturers and 3rd party providers.
Optoro was founded in 2004 to remarket the idle assets of businesses by leveraging the buying power of millions of online shoppers. It evolved from exclusively an eBay reseller to multi-channel online asset recovery with proprietary software and remarketing algorithms. Currently, Optoro provides our scalable solutions to clients ranging from mid-sized online retailers to large publicly-traded manufacturers.
Optoro specializes in direct-to-consumer remarketing of customer returns, overstock and refurbished products. Its services include reporting & analytics, warehousing & fulfillment, inspection & testing, research & marketing and eco-friendly product disposal.
Optoro says its solution recovers significantly greater value than through a traditional liquidator and is scalable for clients ranging from mid-sized online retailers to large publicly-traded manufacturers.
“Optoro is quickly becoming a leading direct-to-consumer remarketing platform for the reverse supply chain,” said David Griest, managing director at SJF Ventures.
“With over $100 billion of distressed inventory annually in the U.S., Optoro is disintermediating the conventional middlemen and providing higher returns with fully transparent visibility and data analytics for its clients.”
Tags: distressed inventory recovery, Durham, Lanham, MD, NC, Opturo, Phil Pfeffer, QED Investors, retail, SJF Ventures, Treemont Capital Posted in Carolinas, Internet/New Media, Marketing, Maryland, Money, North Carolina, Potomac | Comments Off
Monday, January 10th, 2011
RALEIGH, NC – Red Hat, the major seller of Linux open source software, says it will keep its headquarters in Wake County and add more than 500 jobs over the next five years. The company currently employs about 700 people at its headquarters at North Carolina’s Centennial Campus.
North Carolina awarded Red Hat nearly $15 million in incentives for its two-tiered expansion.
The company will invedst $109 million in new headquarters in Wake County of 300,000 to 4000,000 square feet and add 540 jobs – 240 in the next four years and 300 in 2015 as it introduces new products.
Companies have to meet hiring goals to receive the full amounts of Job Development Investment Grants from the state.
Red Hat has not yet selected the site for its expansion, but said it will be in Wake County.
The company has acknowledged considering sites in Austin, Texas, Atlanta, Boston, and in nearby Durham, NC.
Tags: Atlanta, Austin, Boston, Durham, Economic Development, jobs, NC, open source sofware, Raleigh, Red Hat, TX Posted in Carolinas, Economic Development, IT, North Carolina, TechJobs | Comments Off
Wednesday, December 22nd, 2010
DURHAM, NC – Bellevue, WA-based HTC, which designs smart phones, says it will open a research and development office in the American Tobacco Campus in Durham, NC. The company plans to employ 45 people and open the office in March.
The company will benefit from $150,000 in incentives from Durham.
The move is the latest in a flurry of activity at the American Tobacco Historic District. Its American Underground site, which just opened earlier this year, is now home to the NC CED and a handful of start-up firms.
The company lists 14 positions open in Durham on its web site.
“HTC has been successful bringing its unique brand of people-centric innovation to consumers, and with the establishment of this new R&D office, we are taking an important step to extend our leadership position in the wireless industry,” Ron Louks, HTC chief strategy officer, said in a statement. “Durham is a perfect place to open our new R&D office because we are able to tap into this deep pool of technical talent that complements HTC’s leading-edge R&D efforts going on around the world.”
Tags: American Tobacco Campus, Durham, Economic Development, HTC, NC, smart phones Posted in Carolinas, Economic Development, Internet/New Media, IT, North Carolina, Tech Space, Telecommunications | Comments Off
Wednesday, December 22nd, 2010
DURHAM, NC – Rumors about the possibility of Raleigh-based Red Hat (NYSE:RHT) moving its headquarters have persisted throughout 2010 and may be resolved next year, if talk on the street is correct.
Talk of moving the Linux software developer to the West Coast has been one rumor that former executives confirmed earlier this year never ceased to be discussed within the company.
Now, while the company has made no secret of needing larger digs than its current space at North Carolina State University’s Centennial Campus in Raleigh, rumors suggest the company may be considering a move to Durham.
Much of the Research Triangle Park itself is in Durham, but a space there would be isolated from amenities just as the Centennial Campus is. Many RTP firms decry the lack of choice in restaurants or even a place to drop off dry cleaning and have for years. Still, the company could probably find the increased room it needs there and address remains prestigious.
Durham, on the other hand, has a flourishing tech community centered around the American Tobacco Campus that includes the recently opened American Underground, now home to CED and a number of start-ups, as well as some larger tech tenants.
Of course, Red Hat would want a much larger space – as much as 300,000 square feet, some say – but even being near the ATC would add to the collegial atmosphere of a more tightly knit tech community.
That seems to be the new paradigm for many technology centered parks these days, which are as likely to spring up in a downtown area of a city as in some dedicated industrial site.
The Piedmont Triad Research Park in Winston Salem, NC, and the North Carolina Research Campus in Kannapolis, NC, both life sciences oriented, were built on that new model of a community, not just an industrial park.
Rick Smith over at WRAL’s Local Tech Wire, has suggested the possibility of a Red Hat move to Durham. Capitol Broadcasting Co., owner of WRAL, is also an owner of The American Tobacco Campus.
Email TJS Editor Allan Maurer: Allan at TechJournalSouth dot com.
Tags: American Tobacco Campus, Centennial Campus, Durham, NCSU, Raleigh, Red Hat, rumor of Red Hat HQ move Posted in Carolinas, IT, North Carolina, Tech Space | Comments Off
Thursday, December 16th, 2010
SARASOTA, FL – Sarasota Medical Products, an early-stage company developing products for wound and ostomy care, has raised $950,000 from 10 investors and opened a second equity offering with $150,000 toward a targeted $4 million round, according to regulatory filings.
The company was founded in January 2010 by developers of current products and processes used in wound and ostomy care. It has developed four new products. According to Sarasota news reports, the company plans to hire up to 60 people over the next five years at an average salary of $50,000 a year.
The company disclosed the offerings in filings with the US Securities and Exchange Commission. Principals cited in the filings are Walter F. Leise III from Abbot Laboratories and Denis Keyes, Fred Brown and Walter F. Leise Jr.
Earlier in December, Sarasota Medical signed a binding letter of Intent with Durham, NC-based Oxygen Biotherapeutics (Nasdaq:OXBT) (SIX Swiss Exchange:OXBT) to determine the feasibility of pursuing a joint research and development venture for treating chronic ischemic wounds.
Oxygen Biotherapeutics’ Wundecyte product is a novel gel under development. It is designed to be used as a wound-healing agent that delivers oxygen to a wound alone, or in combination with a specialized oxygenating bandage.
SMP’s oxygen delivery devices include WoundSeal I, a chambered device specifically designed to deliver liquids and gels to a wound surface; WoundSeal II, a dressing with a plurality of layers designed to deliver one or more beneficial materials to the skin for the treatment of chronic wounds and burns; and OxyShield, a topical oxygen chamber designed to deliver hyperbaric oxygen to acute and chronic wounds to aid in initiating angiogenesis. Patents are filed for all three devices.
The company does not appear to have a Web site.
Tags: Durham, financing, FL, NC, Oxygen Biotherapeutics, Sarasota, Sarasota Medical Products, wound care Posted in Carolinas, Florida, North Carolina | Comments Off
Tuesday, December 14th, 2010
 Artist's rendering of the American Underground space
DURHAM, NC – Two months after opening its doors as a new hub for entrepreneurs and start-ups, the Underground — located at the American Tobacco Campus – welcomes five new companies: Acorn Innovestments, Adzerk, Jaargon Ltd., Preation and Two Toasters.
The American Underground is providing the type of space many early stage companies always wished existed in the Research Triangle Park. It has restaurants and other amenities within walking distance and an atmosphere that promotes interaction.
“We want to be in what we believe will be the hotbed for a new wave of entrepreneurs and startups in the Triangle area,” said Rachit Shukla of the eight-person Two Toasters.
Aaron Houghton of Preation echoed the point, “There are 50 software start-ups in walking distance of the American Underground. We want to be part of the Durham start-up scene.”
After ramping up in what might be record time, the Underground is now stocked with a slate of diverse and dynamic organizations, many with backing from seasoned entrepreneurs like Houghton (co-founder of iContact).
“Being close to other start-ups and organizations supporting start-ups is incredibly valuable,” said Adzerk’s James Avery. “It gives us a chance to learn from each other and someone to enjoy a late night beer with before going back to work.”
The new team joins the Underground’s original line-up of Launchbox Digital, Joystick Labs and CED (Council for Entrepreneurial Development).
“Being close to Duke University and the airport makes the Underground great for connections and travel,” said Keval Mehta of Jaargon Ltd, the company behind, among other ventures, GoToAid. “The setup of the conference rooms and class rooms, and having other entrepreneurs to confer and network with is the best.”
The fast start took even the Underground’s founders by surprise. “Yes, Durham is a hive of entrepreneurs, and, yes, those entrepreneurs need a stimulating, central place to work and make connections,” said Michael Goodmon, vice president of real estate for Capitol Broadcasting Company,which owns American Tobacco. “We suspected there’d be interest, but it’s been exciting to see it come to life so fast. And there’s still more ahead.”
But being a small start-up in Durham can have its drawbacks. At Acorn Innovestments, one of the key players cottons to Duke while the other Walter Devins of Devins Law Firm — lines up with UNC-Chapel Hill.
Acorn’s Mike Noël said , “During certain local collegiate sporting events, the atmosphere within the partnership is at times a bit tense.”
The Underground’s new neighbors are chasing the following missions, in their own words:
Acorn Innovestments, Mike Noël : “Acorn Innovestments focuses it’s investments on start-ups and early stage companies with special attention to advanced materials, manufacturing, and environmental technology, in addition to other investments in which Acorn can contribute strong strategic value-add. In 2011, we will grow our networks in the Triangle and state-wide start-up community, while being an integral part of its growth and promotion.”
Adzerk, James Avery: “Adzerk is building a next generation ad server, our goal is to make the bannerads and other advertisements you see on the web more effective, faster, and less intrusive. In 2011, we are going to be launching our product to the public (we are currently in privatebeta). We will also be hiring our first full-time employees.”
Jaargon Ltd, Keval Mehta: “Jaargon Ltd is becoming a leader in delivering health care information conveniently and on demand through mobile devices. Our first project, GotoAID, is the premiere first aid resource on the internet and on mobile devices. Our focus is on ‘Mobilizing Healthcare’ by taking the medical “jargon” out of health care and bringing it to a level a non-health care professional can understand. We believe that by providing these tools we can empower people to take responsibility for their own health.”
Preation, Aaron Houghton: “Preation helps small businesses acquire new customers from the search engines and social networks. In 2011, we are launching version 2.0 of our Eden Platform product and will be hiring more software developers and user interface designers.”
Two Toasters, Rachit Shukla: “Two Toasters is a mobile agency; we focus on strategy, design and development of iPhone and Android applications. We are the mobile team behind a lot of successful venture-backed startups. In 2011, we will hire exceptional individuals who understand that mobile is the future of computing, achieve national recognition as mobile experts and have fun growing the business we started from scratch.”
Tags: Aaron Houghton, Adzerk, American Tobacco Campus, American Underground, Capitol Broadcasting, CED, Durham, Jaargon, James Avery, Joystick Labs, Keval Mehta, LaunchBox Digital, Michael Goodmon, Mike Noël, NC, Preation, Rachit Shukla, Two Toasters, Walter Devins Posted in Carolinas, Internet/New Media, IT, North Carolina, Tech Culture, Tech Space | Comments Off
Thursday, December 9th, 2010
By Allan Maurer
 The Logitech Squeezebox radio
DURHAM, NC – I finally bought a standalone table top Internet Radio. I picked up a morning, evening and late night NPR habit years ago, and have been signal chasing local NPR FM signals on conventional radios indoors ever since. No more.
Most NPR stations are easy to pull in on a car radio on highways, which is where the majority of people listen. Pulling them in elsewhere can be dicey. In my condo in North Durham, you need the hands of a safe cracker to dial in any of the three NPR stations near each other on a conventional radio. I almost always had static or interference tuning when listening early in the morning or late at night at home.
Now WUNC, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill NPR station broadcasting from the American Tobacco Campus in Durham, NC, comes in perfectly clear on a digital signal every time I press the power button on my Logitech Squeezebox Internet radio.
Shop before you buy
I’m not sure I bought the best Internet radio available. The Squeezebox model, which seems to be the one most widely sold in brick and mortar retail stores- sells list for $179, which is what I paid unfortunately. It’s available from other sellers online and in stores for about $149. This is the first time TigerDirect (Comp USA) let me down. It’s store prices are usually comparable to the best Internet prices.
The Squeezebox also has drawbacks that I don’t mind as much as some might. It has a single speaker system with separate woofer and tweeter elements so the sound is rich and full. You can get full stereo from the headphones or plug in speakers. It connects to your home Wifi system when you turn it on the same way a computer does.
It only has six presets, but you can add favorites to the menu (though not all that easily without going through a fairly cumbersome process of putting the station url into the system’s PC-based connection. It’s easier if you add favorites using a “More” button, but that won’t work when it’s connected to the MySqueezebox.com site for some reason. Programming the radio is cumbersome using either the manual interface or the Squeezebox.com one.
Better human engineering would be helpful
Whoever designs the interfaces for devices such as this should be required to take courses in human engineering. There is really no excuse for any number of things to be as time-consuming a trial and error process as the Squeezebox makes them, especially for a device that is somewhat overpriced.
It is light and portable, so it’s easy to move around the house or even take outside. It connects to my 802.11n Wifi just fine even out back on the patio – where I am again pleased that I don’t have to fiddle for reception.
It has many other advantages over conventional radio. The Squeezebox, while a pain in the nether regions to program via its dial a letter or number system, connects to my favorite Internet radio service, Pandora, among others (such as Live365, BBC, etc.) easily. It also makes it relatively simple to find music, talk, or special programming from any of the thousands of global Internet stations
Exploring is fun
If you enjoy exploring that wealth of music, talk, old time radio, new radio, the BBC, the major city NPR stations (NYC, Boston, LA), podcasts, dramas, and more, it really is entertaining, informative and a time-stealer (as if we needed another one, huh?).
You can listen to Internet radio from any PC or laptop, of course, but that does pose other problems of other sorts if you listen in bed at night and in the morning or outside.
If you decide to buy a stand alone Internet radio, shop online first. I found that most of the currently available Internet radios seem to have problems that troubled buyers, generally different problems for different units. At least one has built-in memory that allows users to record a song or program. That could certainly be useful. Others have many more presets, which is something I miss on the Squeezebox. Be careful, though. At least one model does not allow you to program in stations yourself.
I’m certainly far from alone in listening to radio streaming online and preferring it over-the-air broadcasts.
Half of those who listen to online radio do not listen to over-the-air broadcasts
Nearly half — 48% — of Americans who listen to streaming audio do not use the “over the air” broadcasts of AM and FM radio stations. This is the latest finding from the “Successful Audio Streaming Strategies” study from Coleman Insights, which was conducted during the second and third quarters of 2010. Coleman Insights released previous findings from the study in September.
“On the surface these numbers should be of some concern to radio broadcasters,” said Coleman Insights Vice President Sam Milkman, who authored the study. “However, our findings suggest that they are not the result of many streaming audio users disengaging from radio brands, but simply changing the distribution platform they use to consume radio content.”
Additional findings from the “Successful Audio Streaming Strategies” study include the fact that younger streaming audio users — particularly young males — are even less likely to use “over the air” signals than older streamers, minority streaming audio users are less likely to listen to broadcast signals than non-minority users and that the mostly positive perceptions of AM and FM radio that streaming audio listeners have are shared by those streamers who do not listen to “over the air” signals.
A supplement to the original “Successful Audio Streaming Strategies” report is available for free download at www.ColemanInsights.com/streaming. In addition, visitors to Coleman Insights’ website can download the report and view an online presentation from the original release of the study, which debuted at the RAIN Summit East in Washington on September 28, 2010.
Tags: Allan Maurer, Coleman Insights streaming radio report, Durham, FM, Logitech Squeezebox Internet radio review, NC, NPR, WUNC Posted in Carolinas, Internet/New Media, North Carolina, Reviewed | 2 Comments »
Wednesday, December 1st, 2010
 Dr. David Fitzpatrick
JUPITER, FL - The Max Planck Florida Institute has named David Fitzpatrick, Ph.D., as Chief Executive Officer and director of its Department of Cortical Circuit Function.
Dr. Fitzpatrick is currently James B. Duke Professor of Neurobiology at the Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, and Director of the Duke Institute for Brain Sciences. His scientific contributions have earned him international recognition as a leader in systems neuroscience, with a focus on the functional organization and development of neural circuits in the cerebral cortex—the largest and most complex area of the brain, whose functions include sensory perception, motor control, and cognition.
Dr. Fitzpatrick said, “It is no exaggeration to say that we are at the dawn of a new era in our understanding of brain function and it disorders. I am delighted to join the outstanding neuroscientists already on the ground at the Max Planck Florida Institute and look forward to working with them to build an exceptional environment for the development and application of new approaches to neural circuit function.”
Dr. Fitzpatrick’s wife, Dr. McLean Bolton, Research Assistant Professor in the Neurology Division of Duke’s Department of Pediatrics, will also join the Max Planck Florida Institute. She will become a research group leader focusing on disorders of neural circuit function.
The addition of Dr. Fitzpatrick and Dr. Bolton to the growing Institute brings the number of scientists in Jupiter to nine and the total staff number to 45.
Bringing the new Max Planck institute to Florida was one of the state’s key moves in boosting it up the ladder as a player in the biotechnology industry in the US. It managed to carve out a niche in the space quickly in a remarkably short amount of time with aggressive recruitment and some serious spending.
Tags: Dr. David Fitzpatrick, Dr. McLean Bolton, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, Max Planck Florida Institute Posted in Carolinas, Florida, North Carolina, People | 1 Comment »
Monday, November 22nd, 2010
DURHAM, NC – Tranzyme Inc., a Durham-based drug developer, has filed for a $75 million initial public offering of stock.
The company, which has raised about $53 million in venture backing, develops drugs for gastrointestinal and metabolic disease. It plans to use funds from the IPO to further development of its lead product, Ulimorelin, an intravenous hormone intended to treat gastrointestinal motility disorders, which affect two-fifths of the U.S. population.
Ulimorelin is headed for late stage trials, while another drug for the same indication is in mid-stage development by Tranzyme.
Normally, food moves through the digestive track via rhythmic contractions called peristalsis. In people with digestive motility disorders, the contractions are abnormal. That can result in a host of problems caused by food not moving through the system properly, including gas, heartburn, vomiting, constipation, and diarrhea, among others.
Tranzyme plans to trade on Nasdaq under the ticker symbol “TZYM.”
Investors include H.I.G. Ventures, Thomas McNerney & Partners, and Quaker Bioventures, each with a 21.4 percent stake, along with Desjardins Venture Capital and BDC Venture Capital, both with just over 12 percent.
With what appears to be a receptive window for IPOs open, we expect to see more registrations popping up.
Tags: BDC Venture Capital, Desjardins Venture Capital, digestive motility drug, Durham, H.I.G. Ventures, IPOs, NC, Quaker Bioventures, Thomas McNerney & Partners, Tranzyme Pharma, Ulimorelin Posted in Carolinas, IPOs, North Carolina | Comments Off
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