acquisition

Ebay acquires Hunch to make ecommerce personalized

by Paul Joseph November 21, 2011 Featured

Recommendation Engine Hunch.com has been acquired by eBay. Hunch is an online platform launched in 2009 that delivers customized recommendations to its users based on their individual tastes. Reports pegged the acquisition at $80 million. eBay buyers are expected to benefit from Hunch’s predictive ability to generate meaningful, yet often non-obvious, recommendations for items available on eBay based on their specific tastes. “With Hunch, we’re adding new capabilities to personalizing the shopping experience on eBay to the individual relevant tastes and interests of our customers. We expect Hunch’s technologies to benefit eBay shoppers as they browse and buy, and to bring sellers on eBay new ways to connect the right products with the right customers.”said Mark Carges, Chief Technology Officer and Senior Vice President, Global Products, Marketplaces. Hunch uses inputs from across the Web including social networks, things members like, who they follow, and answers to Hunch’s own questions – to build unique user profiles that make more personal recommendations and model individuals’ tastes. Once integrated, unlike traditional online retail approaches, Hunch will enable eBay to move beyond standard item-to-item recommendations and use a broader variety of members’ online tastes and interests to suggest new and interesting items for them to browse and buy on eBay. Hunch’s employees will remain with the company, including co-founders Chris Dixon, Tom Pinckney and Matt Gattis. Hunch will continue to be based in New York. “We owe huge appreciation to many people who helped us get to this point. Thanks to our investors, including Ron Conway, Bessemer Venture Partners, General Catalyst and Khosla Ventures. Most of all, we appreciate the contributions and input of the passionate Hunch community (Ictus and Rhapsody and so many others, I’m talking to you) who helped build the Taste Graph from the very beginning. ” said cofounder Chris Dixon. Are social and recommendations the next big thing when it comes to ecommerce? Join us as we debate this and more at our flagship event focused on ecommerce: ESparks.  Please  register now to attend e-Sparks 2011  – India’s premier e-commerce startup showcase, on 17th Dec at IIM Bangalore. If you are an Indian e-commerce startup, then please do  register now to be the e-Sparks 2011 . You may also like to read: eBay Census reveals eCommerce trends across all 28 States & 7 Union Territories eBay Green Team is Awarded for Social Innovation Yatra.com ties up with eBay India

0 comments Read the full article →

Nexus backed Gluster to be acquired by Red Hat for $136mn

by Paul Joseph October 4, 2011 Featured

RALEIGH, NC – October 4, 2011  – Red Hat, Inc. (NYSE: RHT), the world’s leading provider of open source solutions to the enterprise, today announced that it has signed a definitive agreement to acquire Gluster, Inc., a leading provider of scale-out, open source storage solutions for standardizing the management of unstructured data. With this acquisition, Red Hat will define a new baseline for how enterprise IT manages the explosion of big data, whether deployed on-premise or spanning into the public cloud. Red Hat is expanding into a critical part of enterprise infrastructure, enabling it to deliver open storage solutions that protect customer investments as they approach the new era of computing. “The explosion of big data and the new paradigm of cloud computing are converging, forcing IT to re-think storage investments that are cost-effective, manageable and scale for the future,” said Brian Stevens, CTO and vice president, Worldwide Engineering at Red Hat. “Our customers are looking for software-based storage solutions that manage their file-based data on-premise, in the cloud and bridging between the two. With unstructured data growth (such as log files, virtual machines, email, audio, video and documents), the 90′s paradigm of forcing everything into expensive, single-system DBMS residing on an internal corporate SAN has become unwieldy and impractical.” Founded in 2005, Gluster’s goal was to simplify storage using open source software and commodity hardware. The heart of Gluster is GlusterFS, a software-only, scale-out storage system. It allows enterprises to combine large numbers of commodity storage and compute resources into a high-performance, centrally-managed and globally-accessible storage pool. By combining commodity economics with a scale-out approach, customers can deploy abundant storage without compromising on cost, performance and manageability. Gluster has emerged as an innovative open source leader, relied upon by companies such as Pandora, Box.net and Samsung to efficiently manage large volumes of data. “We are extremely pleased to be joining Red Hat,” said AB Periasamy, co-founder and CTO of Gluster. “We believe this is a perfect combination of technologies, strategies and cultures and is a great development for our customers, employees, investors and community.  Gluster started off with a goal to be the Red Hat of storage. Now, we are the storage of Red Hat.” “Enterprises and service providers have struggled to manage their rapidly expanding unstructured data stores with conventional storage systems,” said Henry Baltazar, senior analyst of The 451 Group. “The scale out storage technology and expertise Red Hat is gaining from the acquisition of Gluster will serve as a powerful foundation for future public, private and hybrid storage clouds.” Red Hat has agreed to acquire Gluster, a privately-held company, for approximately $136 million in cash.   As part of the transaction, Red Hat will also assume unvested Gluster equity outstanding on the closing date and issue certain equity retention incentives.  The transaction is expected to close in October, subject to customary closing conditions. The acquisition is expected to have no material impact to Red Hat’s revenue this fiscal year but should begin to grow next year based on a subscription revenue model.  Red Hat is reaffirming its Q3 and fiscal 2012 guidance, provided on its September 21, 2011 earnings call, for revenue, non-GAAP operating margin, non-GAAP earnings per share and operating cash flow, assuming the exchange rates of September 20, 2011 identified on the call.  Non-GAAP operating margin and EPS estimates exclude the impact of stock-based compensation and amortization of acquisition-related intangibles.  Stock-based compensation and amortization expenses are estimated to increase by $1 million and $2 million, respectively, per quarter. “Industry analysts estimate the total addressable market for unstructured data storage at approximately $4 billion and growing.  This is an exciting new area of potential growth for Red Hat and one in which we intend to invest aggressively,” said Charlie Peters, EVP and CFO of Red Hat.  “While we expect Red Hat’s operating income to continue to grow nicely next year based on revenue growth, we expect that non-GAAP operating margin for fiscal year 2013 could be approximately 150 basis points lower than fiscal 2012 as we make additional investments to help realize Gluster’s potential.  At that level, Red Hat’s operating margin will still be among the highest compared to other high-growth software companies when they were at the $1 billion revenue stage,” he added.  Red Hat expects to offer additional guidance for fiscal year 2013 on its fourth quarter earnings call. Read the YourStory exclusive interview with Gluster founders – Hitesh Chellani and Anand Babu Periasamy published few weeks back here You may also like to read: Nexus backed Gluster ropes in Ben Golub as President and CEO YourStory Exclusive: California based Indian Entrepreneurs powering petabytes of cloud storage, the Gluster story Nexus Venture Partners launches Nexus Seed program

0 comments Read the full article →

Jishnu Bhattacharjee, Nexus Venture Partners: “We’re very bullish about product tech companies in the cloud & mobility space.”

by Paul Joseph July 19, 2011 Featured

We at YourStory recently caught up with Jishnu Bhattacharjee of Nexus Venture Partners in the backdrop of their investee company Cloud.com, being acquired by technology major Citrix Systems (click here to read Citrix’s release after the acquisition). Citrix reportedly paid close to Rs.1,000 crore ($200-250 million) for the cloud computing startup. This deal marks India-based Nexus’ biggest exit… (Visit Yourstory.in for full news, other content, and much more!)

0 comments Read the full article →

Citrix Acquires Open Source Cloud Computing Platform, Cloud.com

by Paul Joseph July 12, 2011 Featured

Citrix Systems today announced it has completed the acquisition of Cloud.com, a market leading provider of software infrastructure platforms for cloud providers. The company’s innovative CloudStack™ product line helps providers of all types deploy and manage simple, cost-effective cloud services that are scalable, secure, and open by design. This acquisition further establishes Citrix’s role in… (Visit Yourstory.in for full news, other content, and much more!)

0 comments Read the full article →

Google acquires Admeld

by Paul Joseph June 14, 2011 Featured

Google takes over Admeld, a company aimed to deliver simplicity in buying display ads. This deal has been doing rounds over the web in the last week which eventually got confirmed by The Official Google blog. Google’s vice president, Neal Mohan, explained in the post, this acquisition will make Google a sure choice for advertisers. It is often heard that managing ads is too complicated when it… (Visit Yourstory.in for full news, other content, and much more!)

0 comments Read the full article →