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Tech Events

March 2010
Sunday March 21, 2010
12:00 PM PDT
Tuesday March 23, 2010
9:00 AM PDT
Tuesday March 23, 2010
5:00 PM PDT
Wednesday March 24, 2010
5:00 PM PDT
Thursday March 25, 2010
7:00 AM PDT

Mass High Tech

TECHFLASH EXCLUSIVE

Intuit offers to buy Entellium assets

EntelliumFraudIgnition PartnersIntuitMergers and acquisitions

Financial software giant Intuit has entered into an agreement to gobble up the assets of Entellium, the troubled Seattle Internet startup whose former CEO is in federal prison awaiting trial on wire fraud charges.

The deal has not been approved, but Intuit spokeswoman Diane Carlini confirmed Sunday night in an interview with TechFlash that the company is pursuing an asset purchase. "We have made an offer for certain assets," said Carlini. She did not have any details on the purchase price, though one source who spoke to TechFlash put the figure at about $8 million.

LAWSUIT

Ex-Entellium worker sues over layoff

Bad newsEntelliumIgnition PartnersLayoffs

Leif Jensen, who lost his job at Seattle-based Entellium last month, wants his severance check. And he's filed a lawsuit in King County Superior Court to get it.

Jensen, who was let go just before Entellium's former top executives were charged with fraud, alleges that he was pressured by acting Chief Executive Charles Miller to sign a separation agreement on Oct. 3. Jensen says that agreement led him and other workers to surrender their rights to wages.

The former designer said he was given less than 30 minutes to review the document and was told that he would not be eligible for COBRA health insurance benefits if he didn't sign. Jensen -- whose wife is pregnant -- is the father of a 12-month-old son.

INTERNET SEARCH

Big Microsoft-Yahoo story debunked

GOOGInternet searchMSFTYHOO

Tech bloggers are roundly dismissing a Sunday Times of London story that has Microsoft in talks to acquire Yahoo's search business for $20 billion.

Problem No. 1: That would be a wacky price -- more than Yahoo's entire market value. Problem No. 2: One of the people purported to be involved in the deal, former Fox Interactive President Ross Levinsohn, says it's simply not true.

ONLINE SHOPPING

'Cashback' glitches nix big HP promo

Hewlett-PackardInternet searchMicrosoftPersonal computersShopping

HP and Microsoft generated lots of positive buzz last week with their Black Friday promise of 40 percent refunds on everything in the computer giant's online store. The promotion translated into huge discounts on HP desktops, notebooks and other devices through Microsoft's Live Search Cashback service.

At least, that was the idea -- before consumers were hit by a double-whammy of glitches.

SHOPPING

'Black Friday' online sales up 1 %

Amazon.comAMZNe-commerceShopping

Online sales inched up just 1 percent on "Black Friday" as compared to the same day last year, according to numbers released today by comScore. It found that $534 million was spent on online purchases Friday, which compares to $531 million last year. The report also noted that $10.41 billion has been spent online during the holiday shopping season to date, which is a 4 percent decline compared to the same period last year.

MELTDOWN

Kelman's recession survival tips

EconomyReal estateRedfin

In a guest post on TechCrunch, Redfin Chief Executive Glenn Kelman offers 10 tips for first-time CEOs to survive the recession. Here's #8, which Kelman titles: "Go on the attack." "Your competitors are hurting too. Be the aggressor, not the victim."

As the leader of an online real estate startup, the Seattle entrepreneur writes that he's had a year's head start trying to manage amid tough times. And he notes that the company will have to fight to reach profitability next year.  "The time we have left to succeed or fail is really just the measure of how long it took to adapt to our downturn," he writes. Redfin, which cut 20 percent of its staff last month, altered its pricing earlier this month.

WEEKEND READING

Melinda Gates on her new life with Bill

Bill GatesMelinda GatesMicrosoftPhilanthropy

Bill and Melinda Gates (Foundation Photo)

These two new Times of London stories about Melinda Gates read at times as if penned by Barbara Walters. One reporter can barely get past the second paragraph before writing about Gates revealing that her husband “often weeps at the stories of suffering” they encounter in their philanthropic work.

But mixed in with the saccharine prose are some actual insights into the lives of “Bill & Melinda” following the Microsoft chairman’s shift to full-time foundation work this summer. Here are some of the best nuggets.

BLACK FRIDAY

Poll: Shoppers crowd Amazon.com

Amazon.comAMZNe-commercePollShopping

Amazon.com's Web site slowed considerably Friday under the strain of holiday shoppers, but the Seattle online retailer held up better than Sears.com. The Associated Press reports that the Web site for Sears was inaccessible for two hours. Citing research from Keynote Systems, the AP says that the Web sites of Amazon.com and Target were taking about 40 seconds load versus 25 seconds last week.

We're split here at TechFlash when it comes to Black Friday. I am avoiding the shops, while colleague Todd Bishop is heading to Seattle's REI. Where are you going to shop this year?

BAILOUT

A sock puppet's triumphant return

e-commerceEconomyVideoWeb

The Pets.com sock puppet has returned just in time to poke fun at the government's proposed bail out of the Detroit automakers. The folks at reason.tv have put together a funny spoof using the iconic symbol of the dot com boom.

"Why are you talking about bailing out the auto companies when you let all of us tech companies just crash and burn?" asks the sock puppet. “I mean, I lost everything. I had to sleep on Jerry Yang’s couch for five years.”

Hat tip to VentureBeat's Eric Eldon, who writes "let’s give thanks for all the companies that didn’t get bailed out when the dot-com bubble crashed."

DEALS

Clearwire completes merger with Sprint Nextel, raises $3.2 billion

ClearwireCraig McCawMergers and acquisitionsMobile communications

It's in the books. Clearwire today officially merged with Sprint Nextel's WiMax business. As part of the deal, the Kirkland provider of broadband wireless service also raised $3.2 billion in cash from Comcast, Intel, Time Warner Cable, Google and Bright House Networks. The company, which retains the Clearwire name, will continue to be based in Kirkland.

VIDEO GAMES

Why Xbox isn't releasing new karaoke game in karaoke-crazy Japan

MSFTVideo gamesXbox 360

Microsoft Game Studios released the new "Lips" karaoke game for the Xbox 360 in the U.S. and Europe this month. It's one of the socially oriented games that the company is hoping will broaden the interest in the console as holiday shoppers head to the stores today. But despite the popularity of karaoke in Japan, the game isn't available there. Here's why.

ON THE MOVE

Next Yahoo CEO's Seattle roots?

AdvertisingCraig McCawInternet searchMicrosoftYahooYHOO

John Chapple

Could a Seattle area technology executive be on the verge of taking the top job at Yahoo? That's some of the speculation from Kara Swisher of All Things D, who writes today that former Nextel Partners CEO and current Yahoo board member John Chapple is a strong possibility given that investor Carl Icahn has quietly increased his position in the troubled Internet company. Chapple -- who runs Kirkland private investment firm Hawkeye Investments -- is an Icahn ally who was placed on the board in August as part of a compromise between Yahoo and the billionaire investor.

OPEN SOURCE

Valley firms back DotNetNuke

Open SourceSeattleStartupsVenture Deals

DotNetNuke, whose open source platform is used to power interactive Web sites, has raised a first round of funding led by Silicon Valley venture firms August Capital and Sierra Ventures. The Seattle startup didn't say how much was raised. But, in a blog post, co-founder Shaun Walker writes that it took 18 months to pull in the capital.

BLACK FRIDAY

PC shoppers bask in holiday deals as Microsoft, computer makers struggle

MSFTPersonal computersSteve BallmerWindows

Microsoft and computer makers are facing one of their most challenging holiday seasons in years as a result of the troubled economy, a shift toward lower-cost portable computers and the gap between major Windows releases.

The only real question is how bad it will get for them -- and how low PC prices will go for consumers.

SPORTS

High-tech Sounders FC tap social networking craze to connect fans

SeattleSocial NetworkingSports

Let's face it. Seattle sports are in the crapper. But -- as I pointed out to fellow passengers on the bus ride to the Seahawks ninth loss Sunday -- at least we've got Sounders FC coming next Spring.

And it appears that Seattle fans will be treated to quite the high-tech experience. As the PSBJ's Greg Lamm reports, the Sounders are incorporating all sorts of technology bells and whistles. That includes social networking tools to connect fans, including the ability to sit near like-minded supporters at Qwest Field. Keep reading to check out Greg's full report.


TechFlash Team

JOHN COOK
(O)206-876-5441
(C)206-913-7926
TODD BISHOP
(O)206-876-5466
(C)206-300-0265
ERIC ENGLEMAN
206-876-5430
STORY TIPS
SUBMIT AN EVENT
ADVERTISING: JOE HESLET
206-876-5447
TECH JOBS: MICHAEL WALL
206-876-5448

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TechFlash In Person

New WTIA chief sees good things ahead for state's tech industry
Q&A: Inside the business of MMO games, at NCSoft West in Seattle
Ex-Microsoft developer Koss on why he's now a 'Google fanboy'
Brady Forrest on Global Ignite, geek pride, and 15-second slides
William Lansing on InfoSpace's aggressive growth strategy

From the trenches

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How to find your seed investor: It's all about the relationships
Bill Carleton and Joe Wallin
Dodd's attack on angel financing
David Schneiderman
A world without newspapers
Brian Burke
Guest Post: Is the iPad worth the time for mobile app developers?
Shmuel Tennenhaus
Guest Post: Google Buzz, the Barack Obama of Social Media