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M&A Roundup: comScore, Zayo, Boeing, Lightyear make acquisitions

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

comScoreRESTON, VA,  CHARLOTTE, NC, LOUISVILLE, KY, &  ATLANTA – The jobs recovery may be slow, but mergers and acquisitions in the Southeast continue to proceed with most days seeing one or more.

ComScore acquires Nexius products division

RESTON, VA – comScore Inc. (NASDAQ: SCOR) , a leader in measuring the digital world, today announced that it has acquired the products division of Nexius, Inc., a leading provider of mobile carrier-grade solutions that deliver network analysis focused on the experience of wireless subscribers, as well as network intelligence with respect to performance, capacity and configuration analytics. Financial details were not disclosed.

“Our acquisition of the products division of Nexius expands the value we are able to bring operators through the actionable intelligence required to optimize customer experience,” said Dr. Magid Abraham, comScore president & CEO.

Zayo Group Closes its Acquisition of AGL Networks

CHARLOTTE, NC & ATLANTA – Zayo Group, a Colorado-based provider of bandwidth infrastructure and network-neutral colocation services, has closed on its buy of AGLN, which provided dark fiber bandwidth infrastructure services in Atlanta, Phoenix and Charlotte.

The deal adds approximately 850 route miles of owned fiber footprint and 270 buildings to Zayo’s Network.

Boeing Acquires Argon ST

FAIRFAX, VA – Boeing Co. is acquiring Fairfax, VA-based Argon ST, a developer of command, control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance and combat systems in an all-cash deal valued at $775 million.

Boeing says the acquisition will help it meet new requirements of the U.S. Defense Dept., which is investing in high-tech intelligence equipment rather than big guns and armor as it battles terrorist groups and insurgents.

The acquisition will likely be completed by the end of third quarter 2010, subject to the tendering of a majority of outstanding shares of Argon ST and regulatory approval.

Lightyear Network Solutions to Acquire SouthEast Telephone Inc.

LOUISVILLE, KY, Lightyear Network Solutions, Inc. (OTCBB: LYNS), a provider of telecommunication services to large, medium and small businesses, as well as residential consumers throughout North America, has agreed to acquire the business assets of SouthEast Telephone Inc., a Kentucky firm.

Southeast had previously filed a voluntary petition for relief under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky, Pikeville Division.

SE Acquisitions will pay up to $560,000 in cash to Seller for Seller’s administrative and priority expenses; $4,000 in cash for each of Seller’s employees who are not offered employment with the Company; and,  an aggregate of 200,000 shares of Company common stock, par value $0.001 per share, to Seller’s equity holders.

SE Acquisitions will also assume approximately $3,765,000 of Seller’s secured debt and expects to provide a minimum of $2,000,000 in investment capital, post closing, to fund working capital needs and network expansion.

M&A action: three SE firms in acquisition deals

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010

Salient SolutionsSOUTHEAST – Salient Federal Solutions of Fairfax, VA, information technology and engineering solutions company, founded in partnership with Frontenac Co., a private investment firm, has acquired SGIS, a federal government contracting firm, from Skillstorm. The firm says the acquisition supports the company’s aggressive growth plans to build a world-class federal IT and engineering solutions company.

Financial details were not disclosed.

San Diego, CA-based SGIS provides innovative technology-focused services and solutions in the following areas: information technology solutions, intelligence solutions, engineering, training and logistics services, and cyber security solutions with its primary focus on the intelligence community and Department of Defense markets.

Lifeforce Cryobank Sciences aquires assets of Cryobanks International

ALTAMONTE SPRINGS, FL – Lifeforce Cryobank Sciences Inc., a Delaware based corporation founded in 2009, has obtained the assets of Cryobanks International Inc., an umbilical cord blood and stem cell technology company located in Altamonte Springs, FL, and will continue all stem cell related operations at that location as Lifeforce Cryobanks, a Division of Lifeforce Cryobank Sciences Inc. Financial details of the deal were not disclosed.

Growth Technologies International buys BulovaTech Labs

TAMPA, FL – Growth Technologies International, Inc. (Pink Sheets:GRWT), has closed on its acquisition of BulovaTech Labs from Bulova Technologies Group. No financial details were disclosed.

Growth Technologies International Inc. focuses on disruptive technologies in the fields of defense, alternative energy, alternative healthcare, healthcare information, and construction and building materials.

In connection with the LABS acquisition agreement, the Company granted Bulova Technologies Group, Inc. a first right of refusal with respect to defense technologies.

The technologies are concentrated in the following fields:
Defense
Alternative Energy
Alternative Healthcare
Healthcare Information
Construction and Building Materials.

Resonate gains attitude with $5M first round for Web ad tech

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

ResonateRESTON, VA – Resonate Networks, a company that helps advertisers target customers via their beliefs and attitudes, has raised a $5 million first round of financing led by Greycroft Partners and iNovia Capital.

Resonate says it will use the funding to enhance research and development, as well as continue to grow its sales and marketing presence with brand and corporate social responsibility advertisers.

We’ve seen increasing interest among VCs in firms with online advertising technology since the beginning of 2010. Numerous studies by comScore and other digital measurement companies have shown that advertisers are moving to digital media at a rapid rate. Startups devising various methods to target customers are in the hottest space and the ability to do that through digital media is one of the reasons advertisers are increasingly turning to Web and mobile campaigns.

Launched in 2009, Resonate has pioneered Attitudinal Targeting, an entirely new method for reaching consumers based on their values, beliefs, and attitudes. Resonate’s says its platform is the only pure methodology for online targeting based on these psychographics, and it is entirely independent of cookie-based behavioral data.

“Resonate offers an innovative approach to online advertising that fills a critical gap for brand advertisers by helping them better identify, connect and engage with desired audiences online,” said Alan Patricof, founder and managing director, Greycroft Partners.

“Our investment underscores the enormous potential we see in Resonate and its unique research methodology. With Resonate, brand marketers and agencies can match their sophisticated understanding of consumers directly to the delivery of online campaigns.”

“We have seen so many me-too targeting companies that use browsing behavior as a substitute for intent. The results are in and that methodology doesn’t work. There are no shortcuts. You have to do the research if you want to find consumers with a propensity to buy your product,” said John Elton, partner, iNovia Capital.

Resonate was originally founded to help advocacy organizations and political campaigns reach an audience defined by a more sophisticated set of characteristics than simple demographics or purchase behaviors. (For a Washington Business Journal profile of the company see: Resonate Tailors Advertising to Consumer Beliefs.

5 things to consider when raising capital

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

By David H. Jones, President, CEO and Co-Founder of Peak 10, Inc.

David Jones

David Jones, president, CEO, Peak 10

Surviving these economic times has been challenging and has created shifts and changes along with “refocusing” on core operating principles, scale of operations, business retention and financial leverage.  Remapping is taking place. By that I mean that access to efficient business solutions impacting the speed of change in systems and information technology has led to new business ideas.

This reality does not overshadow the fact that access to the right balance of capital in the form of venture capital, private equity or line of credit requires careful consideration as our financial markets continue to seek predictability.

Postitive potential for raising capital

I was recently asked if I had thoughts about what entrepreneurs might need to consider today in the effort to raise capital. First off, I do not think the fundamentals today are much different than they have been in the past.

The ability to attract capital for a business idea or plan, whether from friends and family, angels, venture funds, private equity or debt, boils down to a combination of factors and that certainly includes the economic environment.

I believe the potential for accessing capital today is positive. However, to attract it with favorable terms depends on several tightly interrelated factors.

1. Strength of the plan and the leadership.

Whether starting a company or attempting to expand, the financial requirements and what the money is used for, will determine how attractive the opportunity is to a capital investor. The track record of the leadership of the enterprise adds very significant weight to that attraction, but also a clear message of the vision and purpose of the business solution along with what and how the business achieves that purpose is obviously critical.

A showing of commitment from the leadership team (with their own investment) and positive progress since inception establish a basis that will be attractive to a potential investor and are fundamental to raising outside capital.

2. Purpose of the investment.

When raising money for physical assets such as infrastructure to support a business case, you may need to look to a different potential investor group than raising capital to execute on an “idea” to develop a software solution or an ecommerce business plan for example. There may be a presumption that a physical asset has some recoverable (or collateral) value, and “brick and mortar” often has more attraction today than capital for a “soft” product deployment.

On the other side of that statement, there are numerous examples of new interfaces that provide access to unique information via a variety of platforms (public and private cloud, social media databases, etc.) and thus new products or services that require little investment in physical infrastructure.

The point here is to make sure you are in the right investor interest market, and avoid a shotgun approach. Get advice or references for the venture group or capital sources that understand the line of business you are focused upon.

3. Taking the money

With all else equal, take the money if you have done due diligence on the venture group or private equity group and there proves to be a match of philosophies.  “Taking the money” is one of the most difficult decisions you will make. The favorability of the terms will be determined by the perceived risk the investor has in your team, your execution plan and how dire the situation is in terms of “need.”

If the need is to fund an idea, it is quite a different scenario than funding a plan that has been launched where the investment is “growth capital” to accelerate execution of the plan.

Ultimately when you have reached this point, you are at the intersection of a decision about your belief in your strategy and your ability to execute and grow, and your belief that with the new investor your odds of success and time to market are noticeably better than you would otherwise expect to achieve.

Giving up ownership

Giving up part of your ownership can only be offset by your belief and commitment that this is the best move for your enterprise and ultimately because of that, the best move for you as the founder or key executive and for your team.

One last point here, since you have made a decision to consider raising capital if you have not approached this need with your early investors, you have an obligation to inform them of the potential impacts of the change.

By virtue of the determination you have made to seek outside capital, it is presumed that you have earlier discussed this need with your investors and that group is not in a position to address the magnitude of the capital need. At the same time you must determine from the new investor if there is flexibility to offer follow-on investment to current investors.

4. Your partnership.

Once you are in a partnership with an investment group, make sure you communicate regularly the good and the bad news. No surprises.  Nothing jeopardizes the relationship with your significant investors than poor communications and engagement. Typically a venture or private equity group’s role is not in operating the business, but one of strategic advisor and sounding board.  Nevertheless, do not forget that this new investor is your partner and shares an important equity stake along with you.

Engage the investor in board committee responsibilities that foster one-on-one interaction away from the board room. Face it: your business will likely require morphing, changing and adapting to reach the performance goals you have set. The economy and technology innovation alone will change and challenge your operating environment. Your co-investors may have some of the best “eyes” into these changes since yours are focused on your sales, operations and culture that fosters customer loyalty and growth.

5. Managing the results.

Prepare a “best case” business plan but present a realistic, achievable plan to raise capital. A venture or private equity firm will have a ‘haircut’ case that will be the basis for their investment. Know the inflection points in your plan and ensure that your team understands them.

Also understand the goals of your investor; they may not have the same long term aspirations as your plan contemplates. Investment funds have a life term; determine where your investment fits into the life of the fund. If you do not know the investor’s return goal(s) you will have a difficult time understanding their strategic decisions.

There is nothing wrong with an investor exiting, as long as the exit is positive. If they are cutting their losses by exiting their investment, and that comes as shock to you, it is obvious that either you were not aligned to start with, you are not realistic about the success of your venture, or you are in love with an idea that is not sustainable. However, in most cases the latter is rectified on the front end of the process.

I believe that we are seeing a renewal of entrepreneurial activity and growth as we emerge from the stress of the economic slowdown that has changed our business environment over the past 18-20 months.  For those of you who have successfully raised capital for your business, you may have a few more tips that are relevant, but I have found that the ones above hold true over time and must work in concert with one another.

Peak 10 is a managed services company with world-class data centers. It delivers scalable, economical and reliable solutions for hosting and managing complex information technology infrastructure. The company owns and operates data centers in ten key markets that include Cincinnati, Ohio; Atlanta, Ga.; Raleigh and Charlotte, N.C.; Tampa, Jacksonville and Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; Nashville, Tenn.; Louisville, Ky.; and Richmond, Va.

Satisfaction is all a customer wants

Monday, June 21st, 2010

Corporate Executive BoardARLINGTON, VA – Going “above and beyond” customer expectations to delight them does not pay, says new research from the Corporate Executive Board’s Customer Contact Council. After years of focus on the “above and beyond” service mentality, research indicates that most customers only seek a satisfactory solution to an issue, and that companies themselves are actually artificially raising expectations in their efforts to over-satisfy them.

The research also suggests, and CEB advises, that reducing the level of effort a customer exerts in the service channel is a more effective and lucrative path to customer loyalty.

CEB’s research found that, in aggregate, customer service interactions are nearly four times more likely to lead to disloyalty than loyalty. For companies seeking to mitigate disloyalty, reducing customer effort—not delighting the customer-is the greatest lever the contact center can pull.

We have experienced this effect ourselves. If a company spends an undue amount of time with unnecessary and time-consuming attempts to delight us instead of getting right to the problem, it turns us off.

“Everyone is talking about loyalty—how to build it, what it means, and how to monetize it—but many companies are operating under false pretences,” said Matt Dixon, managing director, CEB.

“There’s lots of uncertainty out there and we wanted to help our members sift through what really matters in customer service. What we found was surprising and really challenged conventional wisdom. Now, when customers ask us how to best delight their customers, we say don’t—reduce their effort instead.”

We agree. Don’t make it hard for us to address an actual issue. Get to the point.

To arrive at the findings, The Corporate Executive Board conducted extensive qualitative analysis to determine key loyalty drivers in the service channel and surveyed a sample of nearly 75,000 customers globally across multiple industries.

For more information on how to reduce customer effort and build loyalty or to complete the Customer Effort Audit, visit www.executiveboard.com/ccc-customer-effort. To learn about the Customer Contact Council, see: www.ccc.executiveboard.com.

Virginia’s OcuCure Therapeutics raises $825K of $5M for AMD treatment

Friday, June 18th, 2010

AMD

Age-related Macular Degeneration

ROANOKE, VA – OcuCure Therapeutics has raised $825,000 of a funding targeted at $5 million, according to a regulatory filing. The company is developing topical eye drops to treat Age-related Macular Degeneration (AMD) and Diabetic Retinopathy.

Investors in the company include The Carleton Biomedical Institute, and Newport Assets Inc.

The company previously raised a $1.5 million seed round followed by$881,000 in 2006 and $781,000 in 2007.

The company has an entirely new approach to treating wet AMD. AMD is caused by the formation of abnormal new blood vessels in the eye.

OcuCure’s drug, administered as topical eye drops, stops harmful new blood vessels from forming. Current treatments for AMD are not considered optimal.

The Carleton Institute says research results on OcCucure’s treatment have been very encouraging.

There are more than 200,000 new cases of AMD in the U.S. each year, representing a $1 billion a year market.

Privaris raises $2.67M in another debt financing

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

PrivarisCHARLOTTESVILLE, VA – Privaris Inc., which makes biometric ID products, has raised $2.67 million in debt, including $500,000 in cash and $2.17 million from converting promissory notes to new notes, according to a regulatory filing.

The company raised $2.07 million in debt in November 2009 and $1.53 million in debt in August 2009.

The company previously raised about $20 million in venture backing from institutional investors including Harbert Venture Partners, Noro-Moseley Partners, River Cities Capital Funds, RedShift Ventures, and SpaceVest Capital. It was funded by private individuals prior to its first round in 2005.

The company disclosed the current raise in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Founded in 2001, the company has patented technology.

The core Privaris product is a patented, wireless, keychain device that uses fingerprint-based biometrics to authenticate its user prior to releasing the information needed to perform a transaction.

The products work with existing physical and IT security infrastructure to authenticate the identity of an individual prior to that individual being granted access to facilities, IT resources, services and transactions.

The fingerprint data is stored and processed only on the device and is never released so as to protect an individual’s personal privacy.

Online Resources names Cowan president, CEO

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

Online ResourcesCHANTILLY, VA – Online Resources Corp. (Nasdaq: ORCC), a provider of online financial services, has named Joseph L. Cowan president and CEO.

He succeeds interim CEO John C. Dorman, who will continue as chair of the company’s board.

Cowan brings to Online Resources a proven track record in executive management in technology companies, including significant experience in repositioning companies for sustainable growth. Most recently, he served as chief executive officer of publicly owned Interwoven, an enterprise content management software company. At Interwoven,  Cowan achieved record financial performance, growing revenue from $200 million to $260 million and operating profit margins from 11 percent to 19 percent over a two-year period.

Prior to Interwoven,  Cowan was chief executive officer of Manugistics Group, a publicly owned supply chain management software company.

Cowan also served as president and chief executive officer of EXE Technologies, and in management positions at Invensys, Wonderware, Texas Instruments, Eurotherm Corp. and Monsanto.

Online Resources powers financial interactions between millions of consumers and the Company’s financial institution and biller clients.

Netuitive measures up with $10M financing

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

NetuitiveRESTON, VA – Netuitive, a company selling information technology performance management software, has nabbed $10 million in a new equity round led by MK Capital and Rembrandt Venture Partners.

The company previously raised over $27 million from MK, Cross Creek Capital, Bessemer Venture Partners, Columbia Capital, Flagship Ventures, Noro-Moseley Partner and Thomas Weisel Venture Partners, says PE Hub.

The company says the proceeds will be used to expand Netuitive’s global sales and marketing operations to accelerate revenue growth and strengthen the company’s already-established leadership position.

Netuitive sells self-learning performance management software. Based on nine patented technologies resulting from 20 years of academic and commercial research and development, Netuitive products replace human guesswork with automated mathematics and analysis to improve performance of systems, business services and virtual infrastructures.

“Netuitive is poised to become a new standard in IT performance management,” said In Sik Rhee, General Partner at Rembrandt Venture Partners and previously co-founder of data center automation pioneer Opsware. “They have an amazing technology advantage, and are applying it towards winning deals over much larger competitors.  Their customer roster is also very impressive, and this investment will help Netuitive accelerate their ability to reach more customers in more markets.”

Rhee joins the Netuitive board in conjunction with the funding.

The new investment follows a record year for Netuitive, marked by 100% year-over-year growth, strong profits and a customer list that topped 300 customers – including 7 of the 10 largest banks.

Netuitive also won the CODiE Award for “Best Systems Management Solution” for the second consecutive year and received the “Best of VMworld” Award for virtualization management.

“We’re in a very unique position right now,” said Nicola Sanna, Netuitive’s president and CEO.  “The explosion of virtualization and growing interest in cloud computing is driving the demand for our self-learning performance management software because organizations need control over these very complex environments.  The new investment from MK Capital and Rembrandt Venture Partners is enabling us to seize a giant opportunity.”

Merger and Acquisition Roundup: deals worth more than $108M

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

TeocoATLANTA, WASHINGTON, DC, FAIRFAX, VA, CHARLOTTE, NC – Mergers and acquisitions in the Southeast include deals worth more than a total of $108 million, with Fairfax, VA-based TEOCO’s $58 million all-cash planned acquisition of Israel’s TTI Telecom leading the pack.

TEOCO develops cost routing and revenue management software. TTI Telecom, which TEOCO says has deep expertise in network management that will “yield greater innovation” for its clients, may solicit counter-offers. TEOCO has the right to match them.

ATLANTA – Tri-S Security Corp. sells Paragon Systems fo $34.5M

Tri-S Security Corp. (OTCBB: TRIS), formerly a provider of security services for government entities, today announced that it has sold its sole operating subsidiary, Paragon Systems Inc., to Pinkerton Government Services Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Securitas AB. Paragon provides contract guard services to various Federal government agencies throughout the United States and maintains its principal office in Washington, DC.

Pinkerton purchased all of the outstanding shares of Paragon capital stock for a purchase price of approximately $34.5 million, subject to post-closing adjustments.

DC’s Liquidity Services acquiring Network International in deal worth up to $15M

Liquidity Services Inc., which developed an online marketplace for suplus assets, is acquiring Houston-based Network International, developer of an online marketplace for energy-related assets such as surplus and used equipment in the oil, gas and power generation industries, in a deal worth up to $15 million.

LSI said it will pay $7.5 million up front and up to $7.5 million more based on Network International’s performance over the next 18 months.

CHARLOTTE – Goodrich Corp. acquires Crompton Technology Group

Goodrich Corp. (NYSE:GR) has acquired UK-based Crompton Technology Group, a designer and manufacturer of advance carbon fiber composite products for the aerospace, defense, advanced vehicle and clean energy markets.

Financial terms of the deal, which closed June 9, were not disclosed.

AVG Technologies acquires NC-based WAlling Data

AVG Technologies, developer of a popular free anti-virus program, has acquired Walling Data, a security software distribution company. Financial details of the transaction were not disclosed.

Since 2001, Walling Data has distributed AVG offerings across the United States specializing in serving resellers, education, government and non-profit organizations. Walling Data was founded in 1994 by Luke Walling and has been widely recognized for providing unlimited, expert, US-based technical support services at no additional charge for its base of more than 100,000 reseller and end user customers.

Virginia-based EdgeConneX nabs $4M

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

ComcastMCLEAN, VA – EdgeConneX, a company selling edge-based hosted solutions for cable operators, fiber providers and wireless carriers, has raised $4 million of a mixed securites offering targeted at $4.2 million, according to a regulatory filing.

Philadelphia-based ComCast Interactive Capital’s David Zilberman and James Pastoriza of Chevy Chase, MD-based TDF Ventures are listed as directors in the filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission disclosing the funding along with company executives Randall W. Brouckman, president and CEO, Edmund Wilson, and director John Burke.

The company’s Web site is currently just a place-holder with no additional information. We’ll keep an eye out and make a few calls to see if we can find more information for you about the company.

Altegrity gobbling up Kroll for $1.13 billion

Monday, June 7th, 2010

AltegrityFALLS CHURCH, VA – In the latest in a series of recent acquisitions, Altegrity, a screening and security solutions company, has acquired risk management firm Kroll Inc. in an all-cash deal valued at $1.13 billion.

In February, Altegrity acquired DC based Corporate Risk International.

In November, it acquired John D. Cohen Inc., a contract provider of national security policy guidance and counsel to the federal government.

Following the completion of the transaction, Altegrity companies will have approximately 11,000 employees across 30 countries providing information and insight to business leaders making decisions about employment, litigation, investment, security, risk and regulatory compliance matters.

Virginia-based Comtex News Network goes private

Monday, June 7th, 2010

ComtexALEXANDRIA, VA – The Comtex News Network, an online news aggregator that supplies content to Websites and newsletters from more than 70 publishers, has gone private following a reverse stock split.

The company earned $1.9 million in revenue in the third quarter, up 27 percent from the same period last year. It reported a net loss of $191,000, up from $33,000 a year ago, due to higher sales and marketing expenses.

We’ve noticed that content-focused companies are increasing hot items in the online world. The phrase “content is king,” is being bandied about by the likes of AOL, Yahoo, and other major players.

Players in the space are probably good acquisition candidates–although not necessarily Comtext– as well as being poised to boost revenue.

InZero bars the bad guys from attacking your computer

Friday, June 4th, 2010

InZero deviceBy Allan Maurer

HERNDON, VA – No matter how much anti-virus, adware, and malware software we run, the bad guys seem to be winning the cyber security wars. There is a reason for that. Software can never completely protect a PC from hackers, trojans and viruses because computers were never built with security in mind, says Lou Hughes, CEO of InZero Systems, a Herndon startup which has engineered a device from scratch that corrals the bad guys so they can’t get at your machines.

Hughes, one of three investor-founders of InZero who put more than $10 million into the company, says he was initially skeptical when Dr. Alexander V. Pyntikov, now president and COO of the firm, and Oleksiy Shevchenko, CTO, co-inventors of the device, said it could totally protect a computer against hackers and malware. “I thought their claim was a little outrageous,” he tells us.

Shevchenko came up with the idea for the device when he was a computer engineer in the Ukraine in 2002. Trying to help a policeman friend with security concerns, he junked the typical approach of using software and created a device that acts as a second computer (or sandbox) that sits between an ordinary PC and the Internet.

Hughes, formerly president and COO at Lockheed Martin and before that a vice president at General Motors Corp., is no fool. He did not blindly accept their claims. He was on the board of British Telecom at the time, which does a lot of cyber security work for the British government. “They have a top research lab there, so they tested it for a month and couldn’t break it,” Hughes says.

That intrigued him, so he then took it to colleagues at Lockheed Martin. “They tested it, couldn’t break it.”

Then he took it to a national certification lab, “And they validated it.”

Even more validation

Now convinced the InZero system worked, Hughes decided to invest and the founders created the company in 2004.

Since then, it InZero hired Telos (TLSRP.PK) a computer and network security company to to evaluate the system, which says it couldn’t find a way to circumvent it. Former DARPA Director Anthony J. Tether, told Business Week, “It was very secure.”

Using a hardware device rather than software is a “Radically different approach and a paradigm change,” Hughes notes. Rather than treating malware, viruses and hackers as a disease you cure with injections of software antibodies, the InZero approach walls off the bad guys behind what it says is an impregnable barrier. “It creates a safe area around each computer that cannot be contaminated. We force the Internet through our box. You use your keyboard and screen the way you would normally, but all the data you get from the Net is physically sitting in our gateway unit. In effect, you have a parallel computer.”

It’s not an uncomplicated device, he notes. “It has highly complex architecture with 60 million lines of software code governing it.”

An airlock in space

Hughes says Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff compared it  to “An airlock on a spaceship.”

Not only that, Hughes says it will also find and jail malware that may already have infected a computer, preventing any malware from communicating with a hacker or using the machine as a bot.

“We designed it to run the gamut from individual consumer use to highly sophisticated corporate environments,” Hughes says.

The company is looking for investment dollars, but wants it from a firm or firms with expertise in the space, Hughes notes.

Just coming to market this month (June 2010) the system will sell for several hundred dollars for the unit and will require a monthly fee of $20 to $40.

But, says, Hughes, “You can throw all those other security programs away.”

INFOCUS Acquires Continental Services Inc.

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

InfocusWARRENTON, VA – INFOCUS Marketing Inc. has acquired Continental Services, Inc., located in Manassas, VA, a print, mailing services and fulfillment company to trade associations, government organizations, non-profits and small to large businesses. Financial details were not disclosed.

INFOCUS sells list management and brokerage services to over 150 national, professional associations and trade organizations, as a full-service direct marketing firm; specializing in list management and brokerage, design, copywriting, email services, direct mail, digital printing and fulfillment solutions for both national associations and business organizations.

Virginia-based D.A.T.A. flies in $2M in financing

Friday, May 28th, 2010

datalogoVIENNA, VA – Duer Advanced Technology and Aerospace Inc. (D.A.T.A.), which provides IT services and Intelligence Analysis support to military and civilian agencies, has received $1.5 million in new funding. The woman-owned business received a Small Business Administration loan and a $500,000 revolving credit line from Access National Bank.

Susan Duer, the CEO and president of D.A.T.A. said, “Additional working capital will allow the company to continue to grow organically as well as to fund our expansion into other vertical markets within the federal ecosystem.”

D.A.T.A., which was incorporated in 1997, is now a self certified woman-owned business as a result of this financing transaction.

It will use the SBA loan to repurchase equity and for further expansion.

Virginia-based Encell charges up with $5.5M funding

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

EncellCHARLOTTESVILLE, VA – Encell Technology Inc., a company developing advanced energy storage systems, has raised a $5.5 million equity financing, according to a regulatory filing.

Founded in Atlanta in 2006, the company moved its headquarters to Charlottesville, VA, recently. It also has R&D and manufacturing facilities in Alachua, FL.

Encell has developed and manufactures a family of green, safe and economical rechargeable industrial batteries. One of the main applications for Encell’s batteries is to provide energy storage and power back-up for the base transceiver stations of mobile network operators.

It also develops and manufactures green rechargeable batteries for the automotive sector, green building industry, the computer industry and other vertical markets.

Encell’s near term focus is on the mobile communications industry and secondarily on the fixed line telecommunications and data storage industries. To address these markets, it designed and patented a power storage solution, the Sentinel Smart Power System.

The Sentinel is based on Nickel Metal Hydride (NiMH) chemistry. The Sentinel™ improves operating efficiency and reduces the cost of maintaining back-up power installations.

The company recently is working with the University of Virginia to develop novel battery chemistries and designs.

Encell disclosed the funding in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

McAfee acquiring mobile management firm Trust Digital

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

McAfeeMCLEAN, VA – McAfee Inc. (NYSE:MFE) has agreed to acquire Trust Digital, the McLean-based company selling enterprise mobility management software.

Financial terms were not disclosed.

Venture-backed Trust Digital is backed by Summerhill Venture Partners, Fairhaven Capital, Core Capital Partners, Avansis Ventures, MMV Financial and Square 1 Bank.

Trust Digital sells enterprise mobility management and security software targeting Global 2000 companies and is deployed by a growing number of businesses to deliver mission critical data to the point of service using Apple iPhones and iPads.

IT organizations rely on Trust Digital to secure, rapidly deploy and centrally manage smartphones, as well as a new generation of always-available line of business applications and services.

MeadWestVaco moving innovation center from Raleigh to Richmond

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

meadwestvaccoRALEIGH, NC – MeadWestVaco (NYSE:MWV) says it will move its Packaging Innovation Center from the Centennial Campus at North Carolina State University in Raleigh to Richmond this summer.

The Richmond-based company will invest $10 million in its new center in Virginia, creating about 128 jobs, according to various reports.

The company employs about 140 people at the Raleigh operation.

Soluble Systems kicks raise up to $1.8M

Monday, May 24th, 2010

Soluble SystemsNEWPORT NEWS, VA – Soluble Systems has increased its raise to $1.8 million for its advanced wound care dressings. We reported the company had raised $1.2 million of the mixed securities offering back in March.

The company sells the TheraGauze polymer wound care dressing that regulates moisture at the wound site.

The company points out that the level of moisture needed to heal wounds varies. Too much damages surrounding skin and can lead to infection. Too little can cause the wound to dry and make dressing changes very painful and dry wounds do not heal properly. Moisture balance helps rapid healign and reduces the spread of infection.

TheraGauze, the company says, will not dry the wound or adhere to the wound or surrounding tissue and remains moist and active up to seven days, reducing the frequency of dressing changes.

We’ve had dressings removed from dried wounds and it does indeed smart when they come off. And we think anything that helps reduce the chance of infection–which leads can lead to many complications–is a plus in wound treatment.

In a double-blind study comparing wound closure rates, TheraGauze closed wounds 24 percent better at 20 weeks than growth factor treatment(Regranex).

It is also, on the average, $5,000 less expensive than Regranex treatements the company says.

TheraGauze is manufactured in a certified clean room in Hampton, Virginia by a team of handicapped and non-handicapped individuals in partnership with the Arc of the Virginia Peninsula.

Soluble Systems disclosed the latest financing in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.