The best-known right now has to be Bill Gross's IdeaLab
http://www.idealab.com/. Gross sold his company, Knowledge Adventure,
to Broderbund a few years ago and, among other things, plowed some of
the proceeds into a sort of incubator (along with some othe very high
profile investors). He behaves like a VC in some respects except that
he expects a larger equity stake in exchange for a more complete
package of support. IdeaLab maintains a central resource of business
support services, from photocopying to accounting to board level advice
and so far they have seen through a number of tech ventures (all net
companies so far, I think). None have reached maturity yet but two that
are getting lots of attention are Keith Teare's Centraal
http://www.centraal.com/ and Gross' own GoTo
http://www.goto.com/.
Launching a venture, or launching an incubator? If the former, I'd
strongly suggest checking out Mario Morino's "Netpreneur" efforts:
http://netpreneur.org,
and reading through all of the old archived
discussion materials, which cover loads of IT start-up venture issues.
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