February 6, 2010
Chris O'MalleyNot even a year has passed since Scale Computing launched its first product, yet CEO Jeff Ready forecasts 2010 revenue
with the confidence of a meteorologist giving the three-day outlook.
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January 30, 2010
Jim CotaThe latest from Apple could change the face of publishing.
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January 30, 2010
IBJ StaffLocal technology firm's VideoHere system allows companies to embed videos in their marketing e-mails.
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January 23, 2010
IBJ StaffBlueLock is among several companies owned by Collina Ventures, an investment firm created by local tech entrepreneurs Mark
and Karen Hill.
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December 26, 2009
Peter SchnitzlerIndianapolis regulatory compliance consultant Safis Solutions snares contracts with Eli Lilly, other big clients. CEO Ping
Poulsen has built company to 20 employees.
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December 5, 2009
Chris O'MalleyThe amount raised since October is in addition to the $69.9 million it received in May from three venture
firms on the coasts, in what was the third-largest venture deal in the nation during the second quarter,
according to the National Venture Capital Association.
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December 2, 2009
Indianapolis’ largest computer consulting firm on Wednesday received property-tax abatement relating to its plans to
create 200 high-paying jobs and invest $600,000 in new equipment.
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December 1, 2009
Scott OlsonIndianapolis' largest computer consulting firm is seeking property-tax abatement relating to its plans to create 200 high-paying
jobs and invest $600,000 in new equipment.
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November 16, 2009
Indianapolis-based CTI Group Holdings Inc. lost $337,549 in the third quarter on significantly declining revenue.
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October 31, 2009
Jim CotaAugmented reality is, essentially, the melding of our physical world with digital information.
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October 28, 2009
IBJ StaffZuna Infotech will locate in Kokomo's Inventrek Technology Park, a high-tech business incubator and state-certified technology
park.
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October 17, 2009
Chris O'MalleyFile-hosting firm is launching new security software that could set it apart in a crowded field.
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October 6, 2009
Cory SchouteA city board this week will consider tax abatements worth about $47,000 over six years for Indianapolis-based IT consultant
Apparatus Inc., which is moving its headquarters to the former WFYI building at 1401 N. Meridian St.
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September 2, 2009
Scott OlsonIndianapolis-based information technology consultant Apparatus Inc. plans to expand its local operations and create up to
130 jobs by 2012, the company announced this morning.
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August 29, 2009
IBJ StaffThe Anderson-based Flagship Enterprise Center is on a roll. In the last two months, the small-business incubator
and growth-stage accelerator signed up two new clients: software developers Soveryn Inc. and Coeus Technology.
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August 17, 2009
Chris O'MalleyFor a city feverishly growing its technology and life sciences sectors, it seemed a bit anticlimactic last January when
Purdue University dedicated its new technology center with only one tenant. But the lone tenant in the $12.8
million complex, FlamencoNets, a high-tech telecommunications firm, is about to get some company.
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August 10, 2009
Chris O'MalleyQuest Information Systems does the kind of contracting where any screw-ups—even those not necessarily of its own
doing—can bring an unflattering public spotlight. The Indianapolis custom software developer works for politicians
and bureaucrats, a group many businesses seek to avoid.
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August 3, 2009
Chris O'MalleyInvestors in a company built around clinical research software bought from Eli Lilly and Co. have found their exit, though
it’s far from the lucrative payoff they’d once imagined.
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August 3, 2009
IBJ StaffChaCha Search, the increasingly popular creation of serial inventor Scott Jones, was bombarded last month
after early reports that Michael Jackson had died.
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June 1, 2009
Chris O'MalleyIQuest Internet LLC, the largest Indiana-based Internet service provider, is going global, having bought a British company
that monitors and manages data, voice and video networks.
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May 25, 2009
Tim AltomToday, there are some small "notebook" machines on the market that mock the high prices of their bigger siblings. These can
be had for $200 to $400, and have enough features to make them real business tools if you're not too demanding.
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February 2, 2009
Chris O'MalleyA company founded by military veterans that performs database administration for clients ranging from Fortune 500 companies
to the U.S. Department of Defense is adding a second office in Lawrence and plans to hire about 100 more people over the next
two years, doubling its staff.
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January 26, 2009
Whitney Lee,Jim Jordan founded Strategic Data Management, a consulting firm that sells suites of software and hardware
designed to handle the flow of information throughout a company from the time it's produced to when the data is archived to
make sure information gets to the right people at the right time.
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January 19, 2009
Chris O'MalleyA 2000 study has proven to be "remarkably prescient" in identifying information technology as a mainstay of the
local economy that would "affect
all industries and all jobs," said Michael J. Hicks, the top economist at Ball State University.
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December 22, 2008
Tim AltomData gets lost depressingly often.
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Irvington is up and coming much like Fountain Square. We would love to have something like this in our neighborhood!
Why do we care who has submitted proposals if we can't review the proposals? It's publicly owned land, but the public has zero say in what gets chosen to be built there. Yep, that sounds about right.
Perhaps May 21 is "Evangelical Day" over at the IBJ?
I don't know what's more depressing: that this passes for a defensible elective in a publicly funded SCIENCE class, or that more than half of the posters here are defending this charlatan. Intelligent design is creationism. Creationism is religion. Yes, we have freedom of religion, which deserves to be protected. Now someone kindly show Professor Hedin his freedom by escorting him over to the Religion department at BSU. Carry on.
I hope people realize that the 'vocal' opposition at the meeting represent the minority of people against this project. As with any controversial project - those who don't want it are the loudest, while those who like it or really don't care one way or the other don't come to such meetings. Unfortunately the same may be true of the survey now being offered by the BRVA. I live less than a 5 minute walk from BR Avenue and can tell you that I and most of my neighbors are support this exciting project, or are ambivalent. And how great that it includes quality apartments - something that BR sorely lacks. This is a first class opportunity that we should embrace (and no, I'm not with the BRVA or the developer.) As for the fellow who owns the Good Earth store, if he doesn't want competition then let him pull together his own investors and out bid Whole Foods to operate the proposed grocery component! Come on folks - let's move ahead.