Friday, January 11, 2013

Alpha Lab grad

Alpha Lab grad

Welcome to a Digital Camera Battery specialist of the Sony Digital Camera Battery

A former AlphaLab grad, NoWait has generated a buzz in the region as the Open Table for casual restaurants. It was no secret that the startup was quickly outgrowing its space in StartUptown this summer. The company announced this week it has hired a new CEO, Ware Sykes who will replace founder Robb Myer who remains as president and chief product officer. While the team will remain in Pittsburgh, Sykes will work from New York. NoWait raised a $2 million investment round in August. The service has seated more than six million diners to date.

Yet another fast-growing Alpha Lab grad, The Resumator hit its stride this year when it was tapped by both presidential campaigns for their hiring needs. Another highlight--in addition to moving into an 8,000 square-foot office space and doubling from 18 with battery such as sony NP-F550 battery, sony NP-FR1 battery, sony NP-FM50 battery, sony NP-FM51 battery, sony NP-F10 battery, sony NP-FE1 battery, Sharp VL-Z900W battery, Canon BP-512 battery, Canon BP-508 battery, sony DSC-T7 battery, Sony NP-68 battery, Sony NP-98 battery to 30 people—was an investment by Salesforce.com.

2013 may be an even better year as the firm looks to take the national stage and partner with larger businesses to exponentially grow the customer base, says CEO Don Charlton.

Working under the radar since 2009, Safaba is ready to make its presence known. The Squirrel Hill firm provides automated language text translations to some of the world’s leading global enterprises.

Companies that are ready to take the international stage have tapped Safaba to translate all their online and text corporate materials into other languages. PayPal used Safaba to develop online ecommerce in the Nordic languages. One of the greatest accomplishments of 2012, says Safaba’s Udi Hershkovich, vice president of business development, was tackling the world’s largest machine learning project, the translation of Dell’s online content into 27 languages.

"Our goals for 2013 are still open to question,” he adds. But they quite ambitious. “We’d like to replicate the success of 2012 by four times.”

The Oakland company moved beyond its anti-phishing tools in 2011 and began offering companies a broader security net through a more comprehensive approach to cyber security. With it has come triple digit customer growth and triple digit product revenue for two years running.

Wombat has received three information security industry awards and recognition from the respected security trade pub, SC Magazine, for its cyber security tools. The coming year will bring new software training solutions that will help people learn to avoid cyber-attacks when using mobile devices.

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