February 27th, 2010

Google, Nokia sniffing around local business review site Qype

Hamburg, Germany based Qype, a Yelp-like site that’s focused on European markets, has recently had long acquisition looks from both Google and Nokia, we’ve heard from multiple sources. A deal with Nokia in particular was looking extremely likely until recently.

The site was first launched in 2005 and today attracts 9 million monthly worldwide visitors, according to Comscore, just a little less than Yelp’s 11 million. Both likely have far more actual visitors, but Comscore is good for comparision – in December, for example, Qype told us they had 17.7 million unique visitors. A year ago the company brought in a new CEO and have been expanding rapidly across Europe. → Read More

February 27th, 2010

Bill in UK may disallow public wi-fi

Good luck sorting this one out, short-sighted lawmakers. An upcoming piece of major legislation in the UK, called the Digital Economy Bill, would essentially force all public wi-fi points offline by requiring impossibly high levels of copyright protection by libraries and small businesses. The bill, which bears some similarity to the controversial DMCA here in the US, is ostensibly aimed at providing copyright holders the means of controlling their content online.

But while an ISP may detect a violation by one of its subscribers and send a nastygram to the appropriate party, it’s difficult to do that when your “subscriber” is a pub or café that offers free wi-fi to customers. If someone buys a cup of coffee, downloads a few songs, and then leaves and never returns, who is at fault? According to the Digital Economy Bill, the café. → Read More

February 27th, 2010

Facebook Buzz Exists! It's A Stream… Of Beer.

Since Facebook started on a college campus, it makes sense that they celebrate kegs. But did you know they actually have a Facebook application dedicated to the keg in their office? And they like to have fun with it.

While Keg Presence isn’t an official Facebook app, it was created and is maintained by Facebook employees. So what does it do? The app is a steady stream of information about what’s going on with the Facebook keg. For example, Keg Presence sends out notices to let users (other Facebook employees) know what type of beer is in the keg. And when the keg is empty, it posts pictures of BevMo, where Facebook employees apparently go to refill it. → Read More

February 27th, 2010

The many hi-tech wonders of Adidas at this year's World Cup

Will Spain repeat its Euro 2008 success? Greetings from lovely Seattle! I’m here on the West Coast for two reasons. One, Thursday was Adidas’ World Cup Media Day in Portland, and I was invited to check out all the hi-tech wonderment that the company has in store for this World Cup year. Needless to say, being a bit of a soccer fan, I was very excited to attend—I met the guy from Univision, Fernando Fiore, so I’m pretty sure I’ve accomplished all there is to accomplish in life. Two, then I took the choo-choo train to visit Devin. We’re at a café and everyone has their laptop out. It’s very Seattle. But let’s talk about this Adidas thing for a minute. → Read More

February 27th, 2010

And here's a video of a guy carving BioShock's Big Daddy out of wood with a chainsaw

Take a trip to the American Mid-West and chances are you’ll run across some sort of convention with a grizzly man carving random animals outside the main entrance with a chainsaw. There will likely be teenage boys onlooking, too. I can’t tell you why this man has dedicated his life to the chainsaw arts, but he’ll likely carve anything you’ll like as long as it’s a perched bald eagle or black bear. Then there’s the guy in the video above. He must be some sort of rare hybrid woodsmen and gamer who fell in love with Big Daddy from BioShock. There likely isn’t many like him so he should be treasured and encouraged to carve more iconic video game characters. Let me suggest that his next chainsaw carving be of Gordan Freeman smashing a headcrab with his crowbar. → Read More

February 27th, 2010

CONTEST! Win these handsome pump-action salt and pepper grinders

Nothing commands respect like winning $40 worth of pump-action, one-handed salt and pepper grinders. Just enter a comment on this post and we’ll pick a winner at random. Contest available to US residents only, please. Entries will be counted until 11:59 PM Eastern time Sunday night and announced Monday morning. → Read More

February 27th, 2010

This LEGO Avatar helicopter would only be cooler if Michelle Rodriguez came with it

Sure, this LEGO creation looks impressive just sitting there, but click the Read More link to see it in action. → Read More

February 27th, 2010

Nexus One hitting Verizon on March 23rd?

The last we heard the Nexus One was navigating its way through the FCC and Verizon was targeting a “Spring 2010″ launch. But now there’s a rumor floating around that states quite clearly that March 23, 2010 will be the launch date. Interesting… → Read More

February 27th, 2010

Can Entrepreneurs Be Made?

Silicon Valley investors often have a picture in their heads of the type of person who is worthy of funding: young, brash, stubborn, and arrogant. They believe that successful entrepreneurs come from entrepreneurial families and that they start their entrepreneurial journey by selling lemonade while in grade school. Angel investor and entrepreneur, Jason Calacanis said as much in his recent talk to Penn State students. And after meeting Wharton students, VC Fred Wilson expressed shock when a professor told him that you could teach people to be entrepreneurs. Wilson wrote, “I’ve been working with entrepreneurs for almost 25 years now and it is ingrained in my mind that someone is either born an entrepreneur or is not.”

Jason, Fred, and Silicon Valley VCs, I’ve got news for you: you’ve got it all wrong. Entrepreneurs aren’t born, they’re made. And they aren’t anything like you think they are. → Read More

February 27th, 2010

PayPal To Restore Bank Withdrawal Service In India On March 3rd

About three weeks ago, eBay’s electronic payments daughter PayPal suddenly started blocking personal payments going in or coming out of accounts from Indian customers, resulting in a flood of online complaints from the latter that ranged from accusations of racism to sheer amateurism.

Last week, rumors that PayPal was actually forced into halting personal payments by Reserve Bank Of India (RBI) because they did not comply with all relevant regulatory requirements, were confirmed. Last night, PayPal posted a status update on its corporate blog, saying that they anticipate to resume part of its service, namely bank withdrawal abilities, as of Wednesday, March 3rd. → Read More

February 27th, 2010

The Steady, Efficient Decline Of Yahoo

Efficiency is a business school idea that suggests a company is running smoothly. It’s absolutely terrific when you’re talking about a coal mining operation or a Supercuts. But when it comes to a company like Yahoo it’s not a positive. The Internet is still in its wild west days, and the “ready, fire, aim” game plan of Facebook and the other young guns is eating their lunch. Even the massive Google is still trying to shake things up with new and controversial products.

Yahoo’s strategy seems more like “ready, aim, aim, aim, aim…”

Yesterday Jordan Rohan at Thomas Weisel Partners described Yahoo in his first analyst report on the company. He thinks this is the right management team to bring more efficiency to Yahoo. But he spends most of his time talking about the negatives, and there’s no excitement around new products or ideas:

For the record, we happen to believe the current management team is the right one at this stage in Yahoo!’s corporate evolution. The team is bringing efficiency to a massively inefficient company. Yahoo! is weighed down today by dozens of code bases, thousands of revenue-producing properties, at least three sales force factions (display, search, ad network), and a few thousand “extra” employees needed to run the media company today due to its complicated legacy assets and far-flung acquisitions.

→ Read More

February 26th, 2010

webOS 1.4 now available for the Palm Pre and Pixi on Sprint, O2, Movistar, but not Verizon

Good news, Palm fans! If you’ve taken a break from jamming on the “Update” button, it’s time to go tap it one last time: the rollout of webOS 1.4 has just begun. The catch: it seems that it’s only for Sprint handsets right now (Update: In the US, that is – it’s also available on O2 UK, O2 Germany, O2 Ireland, and Movistar in Europe), with the Verizon Pre Plus and Pixi Plus still reporting that 1.3 is the latest release. → Read More

February 26th, 2010

Video: Taris lives on in Star Wars The Old Republic

Good news, Taris isn’t gone. It might have been obliterated in The Knights of the Old Republic, but not to the point of no return. The upcoming MMORPG Star Wars The Old Republic will feature a Taris coming back to life 300 years after its destruction and will allow players to impact its future. Clever indeed. → Read More

February 26th, 2010

The iPhone's Peephole

Daring Fireball’s John Gruber wrote what I thought was a good response to my post about Apple’s App Store sexy app policy. While I noted that one of the reasons Apple’s policy was silly was because each iPhone contains two apps, iTunes and Safari (both made by Apple), that grant users access to content much worse than the kind of stuff now being banned from the App Store, he comes back to say that maybe the idea isn’t to remove this content from the iPhone itself, but rather just from the actual App Store.

My first reaction to this was the humorous thought that both iTunes and Safari would be banned from the App Store had they not been included by default on every iPhone. But that actually lead to a more interesting thought that a few other posts around the web back up today: Safari is the iPhone’s peephole. → Read More

February 26th, 2010

Acer launching ultra-thin Calpella notebooks soon

Acer announced today that they are working on a new generation of ultra-thin notebook systems sometime during 2Q2010. The new notebooks will be using the often delayed Intel Calpella chipset, which was released in October 2009. → Read More

February 26th, 2010

Qype, The Yelp Of Europe, Gets A Look From Google & Nokia

Hamburg, Germany based Qype, a Yelp-like site that’s focused on European markets, has recently had long acquisition looks from both Google and Nokia, we’ve heard from multiple sources. A deal with Nokia in particular was looking extremely likely until recently.

The site was first launched in 2005 and today attracts 9 million monthly worldwide visitors, according to Comscore, just a little less than Yelp’s 11 million. Both likely have far more actual visitors, but Comscore is good for comparision – in December, for example, Qype told us they had 17.7 million unique visitors. A year ago the company brought in a new CEO and have been expanding rapidly across Europe.

Google supposedly took a look at the company and passed, opting instead to just import Qype’s content. Nokia made a run for the company after Google, with one source saying that a term sheet had been signed in the $50 million range. → Read More

February 26th, 2010

Competition! Mad Lib your favourite site's sign up page for fame, shampoo and other prizes

Yesterday, Luke Wroblewski – Chief design architect at Yahoo! – wrote a blog post singing the praises of audiosharing site Huffduffer. But it wasn’t Huffduffer’s service that got Luke W animated, so much as their sign-up page.

While most sites use a standard form with text-boxes and radio buttons for new sign-ups, Huffduffer presents its questions as a ‘Mad Lib’ style statement…

“I would like to use Huffduffer. I want my username to be _____________ and I want my password to be _____________. My email address is _________. By the way, my name is ______________ and my website is ___________.”

…which is kinda neat. → Read More

February 26th, 2010

Brightkite: 2 Million Users And A Lot Of Local Promo Interest

Yesterday, I wrote that location was going to be this year’s Twitter at SXSW. Today, my inbox exploded.

It seems that just about every company, advertiser, and even plenty of users associated with the location space emailed me with pitches, ideas, thoughts, etc. To say that space is red-hot right now, is putting it mildly. One of the companies that reached out to me was Brightkite, one of the earliest hot location players.

CMO and co-founder Rob Lawson admits that the network has been “pretty quiet for a while,” but hints at some exciting stuff coming up for March (yes, around the time of SXSW). But he also wanted to share some things they’re working on right now, and a few interesting bits of data. → Read More

February 26th, 2010

Review: Razer Vespula double-sided mousepad (and giveaway)

Short version: A very slick, but rather small mousepad well-suited to those of you who like hard, slidey surfaces to mouse on. If that sounds good, maybe you should try winning it! Woo! → Read More

February 26th, 2010

Thank You TechCrunch Readers and Sponsors!

We wanted to take a minute to thank all of our readers and sponsors. Because of you, we have been able to grow explosively in the past year, now getting over 30 million pageviews and reaching more than 9 million unique visitors per month across our network!

Thanks for keeping our lights on!

Crucial |Cloud Connect |Interop |Terremark |MediaTemple | AskYourTargetMarket.com | Ooyala | StrataScale | Loopt | Cotendo → Read More

Real-Time
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
CrunchBase