July 26th, 2009

Are Apple And The Music Labels Mixing Holiday "Cocktails" On The Tablet?

An interesting report hit the Financial Times today, indicating that Apple is working with all of the major music labels on a way to boost album sales. But the report is confusing in a number of regards, and is propelling new rumors that Apple’s new large form iPod touch, or tablet (which itself is naturally still a rumor, though an increasingly likely one), could be rushed to be out in time for the holidays — this year.

But let’s take a step back for a second here. FT seems to go back and forth between tying this new Apple/music label effort, which is apparently code-named “Cocktail”, with this new device. At first, it indicates that it’s separate (emphasis mine): → Read More

July 26th, 2009

Justin.tv Opens Its API For Free, Hopes Live Video Will Explode

“Archive video has clearly exploded all over the internet, but live video hasn’t. We think it’s because more flexibility is needed that no single product can meet, but an open platform can.” That’s what Justin.tv VP of Marketing Evan Solomon tells us in announcing the opening up of the service’s API.

The API, which has been in closed testing for about a month now, will now be available to anyone who wishes to use it, for free. Justin.tv can do this because they’ve made live video cheap to serve. Their internal network has capacity for some 100 million hours of video viewing per month, we’re told. For some perspective, that’s roughly 2.5% of media giant Comcast’s capacity, but Justin.tv is run at a fraction of the cost. → Read More

July 26th, 2009

CrunchDeals: Walmart offers up one free game with purchase of a Wii

Not to be outdone by Gamestop, Walmart is now offering one free Wii title with the purchase of a Wii system for $249. But are the games any good? Hit the jump to find out. → Read More

July 26th, 2009

The F1Showcar simulator is kind of cool

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July 26th, 2009

Palm Pre at Best Buy for $99 – Update

The internet is all aflutter with stories rolling in concerning the Palm Pre being sold for $99 with a two-year contract at neighborhood Best Buy locations. Although the Pre is nowhere to be found on Best Buy’s website, here’s an in-store photo from PreCentral.net for your enjoyment. Not a bad deal at all, considering the $99 price is out the door — no rebates or anything like that. Looks like you’ll have to actually get in the car and go to the store if you want to get in on this deal, though, but maybe grab the wife and kids and make a day of it! [Pre Central via FatWallet] Update – False alarm, everyone. John Bernier is saying via Best Buy’s Twitter help line – Twelp Force – that the price is still $199. Now, you still might be able to get the deal if your local Best Buy hasn’t had the price changed or is feeling rather gracious. YMMV. → Read More

July 26th, 2009

AT&T Reportedly Blocks 4chan. This Is Going To Get Ugly.

As if AT&T wasn’t already bad enough. In an act that is sure to spark internet rebellions everywhere, AT&T has apparently declared war on the extremely popular imageboard 4chan.org, blocking some of the site’s most popular message boards, including /r9k/ and the infamous /b/. moot, who started 4chan and continues to run the site, has posted a note to the 4chan status blog indicating that AT&T is in fact filtering/blocking the site for many of its customers (we’re still trying to confirm from AT&T’s side).

Reports of the blocking began to surface on reddit this afternoon, and a number of blogs are beginning to pick up on the story, though it doesn’t seem like any have managed to get a comment from AT&T (we’ve reached out to the company and will update once we hear back). → Read More

July 26th, 2009

Investing Or Marketing? The Real Reason Lightspeed Invested In Ning At A Crazy Valuation

A lot of readers were incredulous over last week’s news that Ning raised another $15 million in venture capital from Lightspeed Venture Partners at a $750 million valuation. That comes despite the fact that Ning traffic appears to be flatlining, and revenue to date is likely very small.

A typical comment to that post: “What an ASTOUNDING way to waste money.” Others pointed out that venture capitalists typically invest hoping to at least have a chance at a 10x return – and in Ning’s case, it seems unlikely that the company will be worth the necessary $7.5 billion any time soon. So, why’d they invest?

Marketing. → Read More

July 26th, 2009

A couple sprinkles of Donut lore as developers dig in

So yesterday we saw the new Android version, Donut, get released to developers. Lots of sweetness inside, as we detailed then, but there are just a couple corrections to be observed. It’s not Android 2.0 — the version numbers aren’t just going to jump up like that. I suspect Google is working on having the whole idea of version numbers be secondary to the pastry names. So Donut it is, and no more. Secondly, multitouch is still not implemented. While you can hack it in, as we’ve seen in the past, there are hardware limitations and just throwing it out there might break some apps. However, Donut has some “kernel commitments” in it, meaning that it will be made integral to the OS at some point. Just don’t expect any miracles when they roll out Donut for real. Keep an eye on Cyanogen’s Twitter, it’s been our best source for Donut news. → Read More

July 26th, 2009

Orb Bluetooth headset transforms into a ring, looks creepy

I’m skeptical of the early 2010 release date for this thing, since it seems pretty concept-y at this point. And how is it going to stay on your ear?!

The idea is fine, though: in one form it’s a ring that you wear, I suppose, on your finger. When you get a call, the little OLED display lights up and you can answer it by twisting the ring into its earpiece form. Somehow I don’t believe it’ll work as well as they want it to. → Read More

July 26th, 2009

Appsto.re – Because iPhone Apps Apparently Needed A Custom URL Shortener

Not sure which question is more appropriate here: why or why not? We’ve already witnessed the renewed interest in URL shortening services with the rise of communication platforms where brevity appears to be the norm rather than a side effect (Twitter!).

It was little surprising to see a custom one pop up that focuses specifically on iTunes links.

iTunes links are inherently long, non-sexy and practically unsharable web addresses that lead people directly to Apple’s media management software program where they can download applications for their iPhone or iPod Touch in a section called the App Store, à la http://ax.itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/browserRedirect?url=itms%253A%252F%252Fax.itunes.apple.com%252FWebObjects%252FMZStore.woa%252Fwa%252FviewSoftware%253Fid%253D321041850%2526mt%253D8. → Read More

July 26th, 2009

The Song of the PowerSquid: The Inside Story of the Life of an Invention Part 4

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July 26th, 2009

Retweet.com Looks To Be A TweetMeme Competitor With A Killer Domain Name

Those little green reweet buttons you see across the web on sites like this one have helped TweetMeme rise in popularity. The buttons are now so ubiquitous that the service has seemingly become the de-facto retweeting mechanism for content on the web. But it looks like it’s about to get a challenger, with a killer name, Retweet.com.

Retweet.com currently only has a a landing page saying that it’s “coming soon,” so it’s hard to know exactly what it is from that. But there are plenty of clues around the web pointing to it being a TweetMeme competitor. The main hint comes from a design contest taking place at 99designs. The prize is over $1,000 to design the site, and all of the mockups look very similar to TweetMeme (which, to be fair, takes a lot of its look from sites like Digg). → Read More

July 26th, 2009

The Netflix Prize Comes To A Buzzer-Beater, Nailbiting Finish

Who knew statistical computing competitions could be so cut throat? Since we reported on the contest last night, two teams in the Netflix Prize have spent the last few hours jumping back and forth on the Netflix leaderboard as the three-year-long competition ticked into its final moments, with last minute sniping submissions coming from both sides. Finally, the results are in: The Ensemble has managed to come from behind to upset BellKor’s Pragmatic Chaos with a top submission of 10.10% — an improvement of .01% — only 4 minutes before the contest closed.

It’s been a long road to get here. Over the last three years computer science teams around the world have been vying for the Netflix Prize — a competition that invited teams to try to improve on Netflix’s movie recommendation algorithm by 10%, with a reward of $1 million to the best submission. Since then teams have gotten progressively closer to the magical 10% mark, but it wasn’t until last month when a number of top teams joined forces to form BellKor’s Pragmatic Chaos that the barrier was finally broken, with a score of 10.08%. However, their announcement kicked off a 30 day last call period where other teams were invited to make their final submissions. → Read More

July 26th, 2009

What happens when artificial intelligence gets too advanced for its own good?

Imagine you’re sitting at the dining table reading the latest Wrestling Observer, as you do from time to time. Nothing too crazy, just minding your own business. Then, suddenly—it’s always suddenly—the microwave hops off the counter, wielding a knife, and comes charging after you. Oh, dear! → Read More

July 26th, 2009

The Value Of Virtual Currency: The Real Price Of Super Rewards Was Closer to $50 Million

Last week saw an unusual burst of acquisition activity among Web companies. Yahoo bought email add-on Xoopit for about $20 million, Nokia bought social address book provider Cellity, and overshadowing them all was Amazon’s $928 million purchase of Zappos.

But the week started off with another acquisition which quickly got lost in all the subsequent news. Advertising network Adknowledge bought KITN Media for its flagship virtual currency product, Super Rewards. The acquisition price was undisclosed, but Eric Eldon at VentureBeat noted that the rumored price was $30 million (he also noted that AdKnowledge disputed that number as “patently inaccurate.”)

I heard the same number the night before the acquisition was announced. It was being floated by one of AdKnowledge’s competitors. When I asked Adknowledge and Super Rewards about it, they gave me the same line: that it “was incorrect and it would be a material misrepresentation of the transaction.” I dug around a little more and found out that the price was actually more than $30 million. A source with direct knowledge of the deal told me that it was closer to $50 million. → Read More

July 26th, 2009

Gaming on the Throne: Review of Squash the Street for iPhone

Squash The Street by Last Legion Games, is the latest iPhone/iPod Touch game to be chronicled in my “Gaming on the Throne” series at CrunchGear (see explanation). Initially when I played STS I was a little underwhelmed. Don’t get me wrong, the execution was solid, but it seemed kind of repetitive to me. Then something happened that changed my mind and ultimately led to me giving it a thumbs up. We’ll come back to that. First let’s look at the game synopsis, directly from Last Legion’s website: Financial Crisis?  Let your rage rain down on the crooks and swindlers who caused it. → Read More

July 26th, 2009

NSFW: Bringing Nothing To TechCrunch

I don’t know about you, but I give this ridiculously misguided experiment three weeks. Three weeks until – at best – Arrington comes to his senses and realises that there’s a reason why I’ve been fired from every job I’ve had, most recently as a columnist for the Guardian. Three weeks until – at worst – I say something so insanely actionable about a deep-pocketed venture capitalist that TechCrunch finds itself sued out of existence. But in the meantime, here I am, and it’s traditional in the opening episode of a new column for the writer to introduce himself and to generally sketch out his plans for the column. So here we go… READ MORE… → Read More

July 26th, 2009

Mixx Traffic Took A Dive In June

News aggregator site and Digg-competitor Mixx had a rough June. Traffic to the site took a 68 percent nosedive in the U.S. from May to June, according to comScore (see chart). Compete shows a similar trend.

Wondering if Mixx had maybe been paying for traffic and had now stopped, I asked CEO Chris McGill if this was the case. Absolutely not. He replied: “We have never paid for traffic… Not once. How could we? … We have operated for two years on almost no money.” Hard to argue with that. Mixx has only raised $3.5 million to Digg’s $40 million, and is “nine guys sitting in a boiler room.”

So what happened? → Read More

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Zebit — Received $25M in Series D funding from Mohr Davidow Ventures, Crosslink Capital, Leapfrog Ventures, and QED Investors
5.24.2012
BatteriesInAFlash.com, Inc. — Company added to CrunchBase
5.24.2012
Leapfrog Ventures — Invested in Zebit.
5.24.2012
Compliance11 — Acquired by Compliance11, Inc..
11.15.2012
Facebook — Went public with stock symbol NASDAQ:FB.
5.18.2012
Compliance11 — Acquired by Compliance11, Inc..
11.15.2012
Bolt | Peters — Acquired by Facebook for $50M.
6.21.2012
NewsCurve — Acquired by Neodata.
5.23.2012
Spime — Acquired by Trimble Navigation.
5.23.2012
Erly — Acquired by Airtime.
5.23.2012
Zebit — Received $25M in Series D funding from Mohr Davidow Ventures, Crosslink Capital, Leapfrog Ventures, and QED Investors
5.24.2012
Echo360 — Received Unattributed funding from Revolution Growth Fund
5.24.2012
Prosonix — Received £17.1M in Series B funding from Gimv, Ventech, Gilde Healthcare Partners, Entrepreneurs Fund, Quest for Growth, and Solon Ventures
5.24.2012
Firefly BioWorks — Received $500k in Grant funding from Massachusetts Life Sciences Center
5.24.2012
Acousticeye — Received $6M in Unattributed funding from Israel Cleantech Ventures and Sequoia Capital
5.24.2012
Leapfrog Ventures — Invested in Zebit.
5.24.2012
Crosslink Capital — Invested in Zebit.
5.24.2012
QED Investors — Invested in Zebit.
5.24.2012
Mohr Davidow Ventures — Invested in Zebit.
5.24.2012
Revolution Growth Fund — Invested in Echo360.
5.24.2012
Facebook — Went public with stock symbol NASDAQ:FB.
5.18.2012
BatteriesInAFlash.com, Inc. — Company added to CrunchBase
5.24.2012
BatteriesInAFlash.com — Company added to CrunchBase
5.24.2012
YourPortal — Company added to CrunchBase
5.24.2012
web99hosting — Company added to CrunchBase
5.24.2012
TrekkSoft — Company added to CrunchBase
5.24.2012
Gluten Free Registry iPad App — Product added to CrunchBase
5.24.2012
BP Mobility — Product added to CrunchBase
5.24.2012
BluePoint Security Personal — Product added to CrunchBase
5.24.2012
BluePoint Security Mobile — Product added to CrunchBase
5.24.2012
BluePoint Security MDM — Product added to CrunchBase
5.24.2012
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