January 30th, 2010

Why Bigger Is Better: The iPad And The Arc of Computing

The following guest post was written by Edo Segal (@edosegal).

Earlier last week, as the day was coming to an end and I was speaking with my 5 year old at bedtime we shared the highlights of our day. I started by telling him the company that created the iPhone is about to come out with . . . I paused—how do I describe it?—well, a “big iPhone” I said. About this big, I gestured holding my hands about 10 inches apart. “Wow, Amazing!” was his instant reaction as his eyes lit up. Even my 5-year-old knows that bigger is better, especially when it comes to tactile interfaces. In fact, the advantages are probably more obvious to his generation than it is to ours.

For this first generation born into a world of the iPhone, Wii and soon the Xbox’s Project Natal, the distance between the metaphor created by these devices and the reality of their interaction is constantly shrinking. My wife is currently doing her PhD research on the merits of tangible interfaces for young children in education and the data is telling. There is no doubt that there is great potential to enhance learning with tactile computing. Through that lens the “Bigger iPhone” is akin to a bigger yard to play in or a bigger room. This insight is telling. For these kids the iPhone’s primary function is by no means a phone. It is first and formost a gaming device, followed by a networked camera, followed by everything else. Through this lens one can see the importance of the iPad in the historical trajectory of our human-computer interaction. What’s lost in all the complaints about what the iPad is lacking (multitasking, camera, etc.) is that people need to view the iPad on more than its merits as a first-generation product. Rather, they need to understand it in context of the evolutionary arc of computing. → Read More

January 30th, 2010

Remember when I was all like "The iPad does Flash?" Yeah. Well. No.

Yes, I knew Apple would never add Flash. Yes, I knew it was probably an accident that they showed Flash. But Apple, as we see, does nothing without running it past a vat full of lawyers. That they showed Flash on an iPad running on the NY Times website was clearly a mistake and, more important, was a mistake they quickly repaired. → Read More

January 30th, 2010

Sweet Merciful Yoda, that’s a big Star Wars collection

This, my friends, is a close up. → Read More

January 30th, 2010

The next frontier: Converting 2D to 3D

Remember at CES when all of the companies were like “We’ll convert your 2D to 3D?” Yeah, ummm, nah. What will happen is that studios will back-convert some of their old movies – or movies not shot in 3D – to 3D using a time-consuming, partially automated process. Like in love, the first cut is the deepest:

The first step is to separate the shot into somewhere between two and eight layers of depth. Take, for example, an image of a man standing in front of a brick wall, with a blue sky behind the wall. The graphic artist might separate the shot into three layers: the man, the wall, and the sky. Then, he would take each layer and draw contour lines around any object that appeared there. He’d start by marking depth lines on the man using a computer, turning the image into a sort of topographical map. He’d repeat the process for any objects in the other layers. (If there were a bird in the sky, he’d draw lines there, too.)

→ Read More

January 30th, 2010

ClientShow Debuts Realtime Collaboration App For Creative Pitches

Last fall, TechCrunch50 startup ClientShow presented its innovative application to help creative, advertising and marketing professionals show, pitch, share and sell their work to clients more effectively through real-time collaboration and communication. Similar to a WebEx for creative professionals, ClientShow allows users to essentially create a “virtual agency” to collaborate and share ideas with clients. This week, the startup is debuting its platform in private beta. We have 1000 invites for Techcrunch readers here.

The application, which is built on Adobe Air, includes a dashboard which lets the agency view client lists, projects and pitch sessions at a single glance. The dashboard acts as an organizational launching pad, where you can see attached notes and images about upcoming pitches and a schedule of sessions. The second feature is a “work” section which actually lets you set up and prepare for the sessions. You can drag and drop your files into the application, where you can view the projects. → Read More

January 30th, 2010

Weekend Giveaway: Sporty Friends Commemorative Olympic Swatch Watch

Yeah, guys! Do you like Yetis? Penguin things? Vancouver? Well today is your lucky day because we’re giving away one sexy Swatch watch commemorating the upcoming 2010 Vancouver Olympics. → Read More

January 30th, 2010

A Japanese vision of augmented reality

N Building from Alexander Reeder on Vimeo.

This is a vision of augmented reality I thought it worth sharing. A person can hold up a mobile to a building and see the realtime Tweets coming from individuals inside, who are tracked by their location. If you’re worried about privacy, this could make your head explode. Other than that it’s completely plausible. Fascinating use of QR codes as well. → Read More

January 30th, 2010

The Yo-Yo Life of a Tech Entrepreneur

This is a guest post by Mark Suster, a 2x entrepreneur who has gone to the Dark Side of VC. He started his first company in 1999 and was headquartered in London, leaving in 2005 and selling to a publicly traded French services company. He founded his second company in Palo Alto in 2005 and sold this company to Salesforce.com, becoming VP Product Management. He joined GRP Partners in 2007 as a General Partner focusing on early-stage technology companies.

TechCrunch Europe ran an article in November of last year that European startups need to work as hard as those in Silicon Valley and I echoed the sentiment in my post about the need for entrepreneurs to be maniacal about their businesses if one wants to work in the hyper competitive tech world. → Read More

January 30th, 2010

Will China Eat America's Lunch in Cleantech?

In the State of the Union Address last Wednesday, President Obama said “the nation that leads the clean energy economy will be the nation that leads the global economy and America must be that nation.” At the same time, on the other coast, 75 clean energy investors, entrepreneurs, and researchers were debating whether the U.S. can gain this leadership position. They agreed that even though Silicon Valley leads the world in technology, it is not clear if it will ever lead in Cleantech. The Valley may develop some breakthrough technologies, but without government help these are unlikely to translate into global leadership. The technology world is rightfully allergic to government assistance and intervention. Cleantech is different, however, and we aren’t dealing with a level global playing field. → Read More

January 30th, 2010

Belgian Band Gets Creative With Video Annotations On YouTube

YouTube has long introduced ways for users to annotate their videos and add links to external websites, other videos on the site, and more. But I haven’t seen that many people or companies make use of video annotations in creative ways – I don’t spend that much time on YouTube to be honest, so maybe it’s just me.

Belgian electro band The Subs got in touch with us to let us know how they use video annotations to spice up their The Famous Videocast project, and the result is pretty neat if you ask me. → Read More

January 30th, 2010

Patent Troll Sues Apple Over Wireless Messaging Technology

Intellect Wireless, a tiny company based in Reston, VA has filed suit against Apple over mobile picture/video messaging technology it claims to have successfully patented years ago.

The patent infringement suit was filed on 28 January in Illinois Northern District Court.

The complaint states that Apple infringed on the company’s patents when it provided wireless portable communication devices (you know, like the iPhone) that “receive and display caller ID information, non-facsimile pictures, video messages and/or Multimedia Messaging Services.” → Read More

January 30th, 2010

Context is King: How Videos Are Found And Consumed Online

Editor’s note: This is the third in a series of posts by guest writer Ashkan Karbasfrooshan. Previously, he wrote about the State of Online Video, and 12 Surprising Things Holding Back Online Video Advertising.  In part 3 today, he examines how videos are found and consumed online. Karbasfrooshan is the founder and CEO of WatchMojo , a producer of premium, informative and entertaining video content. The company’s catalog of 5,000 videos has generated over 110 million streams since 2006.

To try to understand—let alone guess—the future of video advertising, one needs to start by looking at the biggest trend in media over the past few decades.  In November 2006, Bear Stearns Cable and Satellite analyst Spencer Wang published a study called “Why Aggregation & Context and Not (Necessarily) Content are King in Entertainment”.  While Bear Stearns has since been acquired by JP Morgan and is now a mere footnote in business books, the study’s findings are more relevant than ever.  Let’s examine 8 key factors behind online video consumption → Read More

January 30th, 2010

Owen Van Natta Talks About His First 8 Months Running MySpace (video)

I sat down with MySpace CEO Owen Van Natta at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland earlier this week to talk about his first eight months on the job. This is one of Owen’s first video interviews since taking the job last April.

We talk about Van Natta’s vision for the once-mighty MySpace. The site was at one time the worlds largest social network and had more page views than any other U.S. website. But in the last couple of years it has been eclipsed by Facebook’s stunning growth.

Still, Van Natta and team have a plan. The MySpace of the future will be all about the social experience around content, and the company’s strong offerings in music and music videos through MySpace Music will be the cornerstone of that effort. From the interview: → Read More

January 30th, 2010

iPad v. A Rock

This speaks for itself. Thanks to Phil Santoro for creating it and sending it us (a play on the iphone v. rock joke). → Read More

January 29th, 2010

Apple, here, this is the iPad we wanted

It seems so elementary to all of us around CrunchGear’s HQ that the iPad should have had three simple features: a camera, SD card slot, and external battery indicator. I mean, the iPad missed the mark by a lot in many areas, but it’s just silly that Apple didn’t included those items. I won’t bother with another rant about the iPad because we already vented our frustration here. Reader Martin heard our cries all the way over in Germany and made this mock up that meets our approval. See, Apple, how hard is that? Just a front facing camera, SD card slot and battery meter would make the iPad so much more useful while not taking away from the device’s aesthetics  at all. Thanks, Martin. Wonderful job. → Read More

January 29th, 2010

Stealth Jets. Now in Russian!

Air superiority hasn’t been top news in a while. But Russia’s got a nifty new stealth fighter jet they’re showing off. Video after the jump. → Read More

January 29th, 2010

iPad makes Apple ~$200-300 per unit

No small margins here. It seems that the iPad, while certainly not a cheap device to make, will end up lining Apple’s pockets considerably — if they sell any. A bill of materials analysis puts the cheapest iPad’s manufacturing cost at just over $270, which of course sends $230 in Apple’s direction. The 3G radio runs for around $36, and of course they sell it for $130. Now, I know we were all pleasantly surprised by the price, but we were all unpleasantly surprised by the limited capabilities of the device, so I think the surprises kind of cancel each other out. → Read More

January 29th, 2010

Goodnight Moon Mission: Obama redefines NASA goals


Well, son, I know you wanted to go to the moon and all, but it looks like that’s just not going to happen. In the meantime, I guess you’ll just have to be satisfied with a sojourn on the International Space Station. It seems that Bush’s moon initiative kind of fell through, and Obama and his advisors have decided not to throw good money after bad. Instead, they’re putting $6bn into extending the life of the ISS and encouraging private spaceflight. Still sounds good to me. → Read More

January 29th, 2010

Firefox Mobile For Maemo Officially Launches

Good news, everyone! Firefox is officially available for Maemo devices, like the Nokia N900! What’s that you say? Firefox has been available for Maemo for a while now? Sure, but now it’s official. → Read More

January 29th, 2010

The iPad And Chrome OS Netbooks Are On A Collision Course

We don’t know how to build a $500 computer that’s not a piece of junk.”

Netbooks aren’t better at anything.”

Those two quotes are both from Apple CEO Steve Jobs. The first was during an earnings call in late 2008 when Jobs fielded a question about why Apple wasn’t cutting prices amid the rising success of netbooks. The second came on Wednesday as Jobs was unveiling the iPad.

Apple has made it clear all along that they had no plans to build a netbook. And true to their word, they haven’t. But that doesn’t mean that Apple didn’t feel there was a need for a device that resided in between a full laptop and a mobile phone — in fact, that’s squarely where Apple is positioning the iPad. With it, they feel that they’ve created a $500 (for the baseline version) device that is superior to every netbook out there. → Read More

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Crunchbase

Scan — Company added to CrunchBase
2.23.2012
Jim Pallotta — Invested in Scan.
2.23.2012
Roundarch — Acquired by Aegis Group for $125M.
2.22.2012
AVG Technologies — Went public with stock symbol NYSE:AVG.
2.2.2012
Roundarch — Acquired by Aegis Group for $125M.
2.22.2012
Mykonos Software — Acquired by Juniper Networks for $80M.
2.22.2012
Zone Impact — Acquired by eRecycling Corps.
2.22.2012
SuccessFactors — Acquired by SAP for $3.4B.
2.22.2012
LiteTouch — Acquired by Savant Systems.
2.21.2012
Nomos Software — Received €500k in Unattributed funding from Kernel Capital Partners and Enterprise Ireland
2.22.2012
Integrated Diagnostics — Received $10M in Series A funding
2.22.2012
retickr — Received $1.5M in Series A funding from Lamp Post Group
2.23.2012
Innoveer Solutions — Received $1.9M in Unattributed funding from HarbourVest Partners and Adam Honig
2.22.2012
Jim Pallotta — Invested in Scan.
2.23.2012
Troy Carter — Invested in Scan.
2.23.2012
Start Fund — Invested in Scan.
2.23.2012
Transmedia Capital — Invested in Scan.
2.23.2012
Naval Ravikant — Invested in Scan.
2.23.2012
AVG Technologies — Went public with stock symbol NYSE:AVG.
2.2.2012
Brightcove — Went public with stock symbol NASDAQ:BCOV.
2.17.2012
Jive Software — Went public with stock symbol NASDAQ:JIVE.
2.3.2012
Scan — Company added to CrunchBase
2.23.2012
Vibe — Company added to CrunchBase
2.23.2012
Roundarch — Company added to CrunchBase
2.23.2012
Aegis Group — Company added to CrunchBase
2.23.2012
Nomos Software — Company added to CrunchBase
2.23.2012
Reeli (iPhone App) — Product added to CrunchBase
2.21.2012
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