2006
07.26
[via BetaNews]
Technorati continues to improve its services, and introduced a new interface. Have a try!
Blog aggregator Technorati relaunched its popular site on Monday, redesigning the site to make it easier to use while making changes to the backend to improve indexing time of new posts. Additionally, the site has improved its link-counting mechanism, which in turn will improve its ranking and authority features, it says. [...]
A “discover” section will group interesting Web log posts into categories, which uses an algorithm to give a snapshot of whats being talked about in the blogosphere at any given time. The favorites section also has received a facelift, allowing a registered user to see posts from the blogs he or she most commonly visits on the front page of the site.
Finally, the site has also launched an area where it plans to highlight bloggers across the Web, putting faces to the blogs that people may read on an everyday basis. “I hope you’ll enjoy seeing the many ways in which we try to highlight the people who are the real power driving everything we do,” Sifry said.
2006
07.26
[via BetaNews]
For one time, I think that this merge deal makes sense, from an industrial and customer-offering points of view. Great.
AMD confirmed rumors Monday and said it was merging with graphics chipmaker ATI in a transaction worth $5.4 billion. The first computer systems that would take advantage of the strengths of the combined company will begin appearing in 2007, the company said.
The merger will allow AMD to offer integrated processor and graphics solutions to its customers. By 2008, AMD plans to introduce new processor configurations that would integrate the CPU and graphics processor into a single unit. The end result will be smaller, more powerful computers. [...]
The transaction also carries financial benefit: while positive impact would be limited next year, by 2008 AMD expects it to have a noticeable impact on its bottom line. Combining the two companies would save as much as $75 million in operating expenses.
ATI CEO Dave Orton will now serve as executive vice president of the ATI division. Two ATI directors would join AMD’s board of directors after the merger closes.
2006
07.23
An article from Daniel Joelson, business journalist based in Washington, D.C., published in Insurance Networking on July 1, 2006. Have a look here or here as pdf. The article is called “Helvetia Patria Architects A Drastically New E-Look“.
Some quotes:
Flat-footed Helvetia Patria had to first invest in a new IT system for a new distribution channel. Its headache only worsened when, as its web of systems grew, it had to adapt the systems to accommodate new products. This process is debilitating for insurance firms such as Helvetia Patria that want to experiment in finding the most effective distribution channels through which to sell its products.
“In the past, the back-office systems were like closed systems that were used only in-house,” [Nick Stefania] says. “And in-house, the systems are open so it is easy to access a lot of information regarding the customer, the policies and the claims. And when the e-business systems were opened for the outside brokers and partners over the Internet, we had to make sure data security and data protection was ensured.”
2006
07.20
Good and great news, my preferred-business-partner, Nick Stefania, who is managing ecenter solutions with me, has finally started to blog – Zone out.
As you can see below, we are managing the stuff together. Really, count the number of fingers, we are 2 :-)

Why should you subscribe to his blog / RSS feed (I am giving you the URL of the feed, Nick has forgotten to make an explicit link to it :-) ?
- He is a very smart, experienced (old? 44, umh, let’s say it is ok) and nice guy
- He is “just” the best project manager I have ever seen in action, world class!
- He is an incredible communicator
- If you are reading my blog, you are sharing some values and points of interest with me. So do I with Nick. Consequently Nick will be interesting also for you
- He has some strong Italian roots, which is annoying for soccer’s discussion, which is great for wines / meals / restaurants / etc.
- He has a marvelous and very nice wife, also with “some” Italian roots, but more from the south of Italy ;-)
- Great humor, excepted for soccer’s discussions
- I am irritated, just because your are asking, I have a *lot* of respect for him, so have a look ;-)
Two great post-examples from Nick:
- about our discussion with Stephen Wallis (bio, blog), VP of Optaros, who is helping us to define a commercial license with Open Source advantages and components (hehehe, you are interested? Stay tuned :-)
- about Dabbawala (Wikipedia’s article), an absolute great Indian story coming from our last hired colleague, Roy, who joined us in Mai and who is coming from Bangalore.
Just forget the post about the Italian victory, less important….
So Nick, welcome in the blogosphere!
2006
07.18
I am very proud to announce that one of our Board of Directors’ mate from Boomerang, Alex Martin – CFO of Bioxell and Member of the Executive Committee, has organized the IPO on the Swiss Exchange (SWX: BXLN) of the company he is working for. BioXell is a biotech company based in Milano – Italy and is coming from a Roche spin-off in 2002. It is focusing on the discovery, development and commercialization of novel therapeutics for urological disorders and inflammatory diseases that represent large unmet medical needs. They have raised to date a total of approximately €76m through top healthcare VC investors including MPM Capital, Index Ventures, BB BIOTECH, AlpInvest Partners, Life Sciences Partners, and TVM Capital, as well as Finlombarda. About 60 people are working now for BioXell.

Some links to the news:
- Press Release from BioXell (pdf)
- BioWorld: Italy’s BioXell Goes Public On Swiss Market, Gets CHF57.8M
- Forbes: BioXell says new shares priced at 44 sfr/share, at bottom of price range
- AltAssets: BioXell lists on Swiss Stock Exchange
Congratulations Alex, great step :-)
2006
07.18
[via Cambridge Evening News]
Syd Barrett, founder of pop super-group Pink Floyd, was laid to rest at a family funeral in Cambridge. [...] Syd, whose real name was Roger Keith Barrett, died earlier this month aged 60 at Addenbrooke’s Hospital, after living in Cambridge for 30 years. He was born in the city in 1946 and formed Pink Floyd in 1965, but later withdrew from public life and returned to live in the basement of his mother’s semi-detached house.
The band carried on without him, and penned one of their hits – Shine on You Crazy Diamond- as a tribute to their missing frontman.
Have a look at the great Wikipedia’s bio of Syd Barrett, as usual, great material, lots of interesting links. There is also an official website.
2006
07.16

With such kind of beautiful weather, it is just wonderful to stay at home, to rest yourself, to make some reserve of sun, to play, to read, to swim :-)
These types of week-ends are as holidays. And, by being in the garden and the pool, I really remember of far we are lucky and why we are working hard.
I hope you also had a great time during the last days.


2006
07.16
ComputerWorld New-Zealand published an article SOA hurdles forcing changes in IT units (pdf) from Heather Havenstein on May 15, 2006.
Helvetia overcame the “tough exercise” of bringing developers on board by using a change management programme from Hewlett-Packard, says Didier Beck, director of Helvetia’s eBusiness Centre.
Beck says the HP tools and services helped developers integrate 15 systems into a centralised SOA platform. “The way we are working today is really very different because before, there wasn’t any contact between the different subsidiaries — they had all their own development processes and tools,” he says. “The consequences and impact were really quite high.”
2006
07.13

As planned, my old mate Manu, the CEO of Boomerang, and myself were at the Montreux Jazz Festival the day before yesterday evening.
As usual, great evening, great atmosphere, great organization, music and public. Perfect :-)
Manu and myself with … Freddie

Freddie Mercury

Fourplay (Bob James, Nathan East, Larry Carlton, Harvey Mason)


Montreux by night

2006
07.13
[via eWeek.com]
Open Source approach and Microsoft, there are links, have a look!
A commercial company has to build intellectual property, while the GPL, by its very nature, does not allow intellectual property to be built, making the two approaches fundamentally incompatible [...].
Licenses like the BSD (Berkeley Software Distribution) and commercial software, on the other hand, are quite compatible with one another [...].
“One of the things I have learned is that engineers who work on commercial software really can’t work on open source on GPL and engineers who work on GPL can’t work on commercial software. You really have to separate the two”.
Asked what Microsoft had learned from the open-source community and what it could still learn, he said the development methodologies are very interesting, and in fact Microsoft has made community development process a standard part of its process.
“There were definite learnings for us on that. Open source was way ahead of us on that five years ago and we have learned from them. This whole thing where Microsoft is an open blog environment is about us trying to really embrace these existing trends that are very important in the industry and to being open to our communities across all of our products. Fascinating things happen there. That model is the way of the future and we’re embracing it”.