March 27th, 2010

Quick Look: America's Test Kitchen for Nintendo DS

Here’s a quick look at the crazy cooking title, America’s Test Kitchen: Let’s Get Cooking. It’s essentially a very thorough cookbook with 300 recipes and a lot of very odd features – including voice control – so you can scroll through recipes almost effortlessly. It’s beguilingly strange to “play” a cookbook on the DSi XL. → Read More

March 27th, 2010

Weekend Giveaway: An HTC HD2 from T-Mobile

Wakey wakey, eggs and a culturally accepted meat or vegetable product that can be diminutized to rhyme with “wakey!” Have we got a surprise for you. This weekend we’re giving away an HTC HD2 GSM phone for T-Mobile. If you recall, the HD2 is a glorious Windows Mobile 6.5 phone with lots of great things built-in including a huge, beautiful screen, Wi-Fi, and it even comes with two Transformers movies right on the handset. Seriously good stuff. I haven’t been a fan of Windows Mobile since 2000 and even I like it. How do you win? → Read More

March 27th, 2010

The Final Tally: More Than 1100 Cities Apply For Google's Fiber Network

Yesterday, Google product manager James Kellyposted a blog post stating that 600 communities applied to be a guinea pig for the search giants experimental fiber network. And 190,000 individuals wrote letters of support for their communities to be chosen. But the post was written with 5 hours until the deadline, so it was expected that more cities would apply to be chosen by the end of the day on Friday. Yesterday night, Kelly updated the post with the final tally: 1100 communities submitted applications, and 194,000 individuals posted letters of support for their communities.

Google also posted a map showing the locations of the applications and letters of support. Each small dot represents a government response, and each large dot represents locations where more than 1,000 residents submitted a nomination. It appears that applications centralized around both coasts, with a few of the central areas of the U.S. noticeably lacking in participation. → Read More

March 27th, 2010

Why America Needs To Start Educating Its Workforce Again

Ask any old-time IBMer, and you will hear stories of IBM’s legendary workforce-development practices. When a manager identified a manufacturing worker with promise, the company would teach him how to dress, how to speak to clients, and how to service products. These technicians would then be trained to be computer programmers, sales reps, or product managers. IBM president Thomas Watson, Sr., considered education so important that, in 1932, he started a mini-university for employees, the Endicott schoolhouse.

That was until the ’70s. IBM still provides good training, but try getting a job there today: unless you have just the right skills, you won’t even score an interview. New recruits don’t receive the year or so of training that was common; they get a few days of orientation, after which they’re expected to be productive. It’s the same at Microsoft, Google, Apple, and almost every tech company. Unless you have the alphabet soup of technologies on your resume, you’ll get nothing more than an auto-response to your job application. If you do get hired, it’s up to you to stay current or get booted out with the first dip in sales. American corporations consider their workforce to be disposable — like ball-point pens and cigarette lighters. Gone are the days when a company would train a factory worker to become a computer programmer or offer lifelong employment. It’s all about quarterly revenue and profits now. → Read More

March 27th, 2010

Update on #GeeknRolla, April 20, London #gknr

Tommy Ahlers, founder of ZYB which was acquired by Vodafone for €31.5m in 2008 – will be keynoting at this year’s GeeknRolla in London on April 20. GeeknRolla is an annual London conference for technology startups to launch, network with investors and talk about how they create and build themselves.

Before founding ZYB, where he has held the position of CEO since the company’s inception, Ahlers spent six years in strategy and management, partly in the mobile industry. He was previously with McKinsey & Company for more than four years, where he served as an engagement manager working with mobile operators to shape their strategies. In addition to ZYB, he also founded another start-up which provided a global SMS-service to mobile users.

He’ll be joined by Morten Lund, among others. We’ll be rolling out the rest of our speaker programme next week. → Read More

March 27th, 2010

Eight Days A Week

Only 8 more shopping days to be completely wrong about the iPad. By this time a week from tomorrow, those of us who are confident that the iPad will be the same sort of enormous disruptive event will be busy enjoying the birth of a new millennium. Everybody else will just have to buy a clue. Is this about whether the tablet is a viable form factor? No, it’s about the percentage of time that the iPad and its brethren in waiting will suck away from existing media. Right now, that means the iPhone, laptops, desktops, TV, paper, and fireplaces (real or synthetic logs or gas.) In percentages diverted, that’s 25%, 45%, 75%, 20%, 60%, and 4%. That’s in Month 1. Month 2 will see an all-out running of the bulls, as publishers stampede into the marketplace with 2nd generation refactoring of their core data. The multimedia scaffolds of Month 1 will have done nothing other than establish an incumbents list, with little additional value attached to inline video from newspapers or analyst content being thrown over the wall in violation of the core value proposition. The cable news channels are already in turmoil because the cable and satellite big boys are reluctant (read: completely against as in Republicans and health care reform) to allow destabilization of their basic cable rationale for existence. If Comcast won’t let Netflix a la carte them to death, neither will CNN or CNBC. Once Month 2 shows up with the beginnings of the real new wave, the majors will switch from value add to value transfer. The pole position won by the Wall Street Journal, NY Times, and selected social pubs (Vanity Fairish hybrids like Rolling Stone meets Wired) will translate from a fashion show to a metadata farm, where the iPad’s ability to capture the gesture stream in association with the social networks creates a pool of data with which to train the content developers into the new model. That is, not interactive but socially aware swarming and its signatures. Once there are enough unique cross-over streams of related data, the bidding can commence. This realtime market of social pooling metadata will produce a form of virtual value exchange, where the most attuned members of the audience (those with particularly acute sensitivity to social graph authority and a kind of viral leapfrogging talent) will achieve a new form of rank and the ability → Read More

March 26th, 2010

Texas Hold 'em on the Microsoft Surface

Games like this are exactly why Microsoft Surface is going to be a compelling platform. Some students ported Texas Hold ‘em to Surface, but added the ability to look at your cards from a mobile device. Placing a bet is as easy as dragging a chip on to the playing field, and you can even split a chip’s denomination by tapping it. I’d be interested to see what the final version of this product. It’s also good to see Surface gaming used for more then just role playing games. [via Gizmodo] → Read More

March 26th, 2010

iPad App Store Leak II: The Leakening

Oh, iPad leaks. I just wrote up one of you less than an hour ago, and now there’s a better one. The life of a blogger is a hard one, friends. So anyways, it seems that Apple left the door open on the iPad app store screenshot warehouse, because everyone and their dog is now accessing shots of the various pages – I won’t duplicate their content here, just head on over to AppAdvice and check out the new leak. I don’t think these are final final, because as you can see in the shot above, there are some weird stretch issues going on with the app screenshots. I’m guessing the layout is pretty much set at this point, though. → Read More

March 26th, 2010

NVIDIA's flagship DX11 card drops, and the reviews are… decent

There’s been a lot of buzz about the code-name Fermi series of cards NVIDIA has been cooking up. They’re the company’s first DirectX 11-compatible cards, and rival AMD has had the DX11 58xx series on the market for months now, giving them a definite head start. The hope (among NVIDIA fans) was that the Fermi/GF100 cards would blow AMD’s out of the water despite the delays. That doesn’t seem to be the case: although the new GTX 480 flagship card is competitive with AMD’s best, it doesn’t blow it away by any means, and the feature set ends up being the deciding factor.

Check out the reviews from our favorite hardware sites, and our take. → Read More

March 26th, 2010

Google VP Bradley Horowitz Talks Buzz's Future, Gmail Innovation, And More (Video)

Last night dozens of entrepreneurs and investors met up in Palo Alto for Startup2Startup, a program founded by Dave McClure and Leonard Speiser that’s meant to help new entrepreneurs connect with their peers, and perhaps meet some potential investors. Each month, Startup2Startup invites a seasoned entrepreneur or tech executive to speak to the attendees; this month’s guest was Google VP Product for Google Apps Bradley Horowitz, who is charged with managing a big chunk of Google’s services, including Docs, Gmail, Calendar, Voice, and more. We’ve embedded the full video of the talk below.

During his talk, Horowitz spoke at length about Google’s new Apps Marketplace, which allows businesses using Google Apps to easily sign up for a variety of third party services like TripIt and Aviary, directly linking them to their Google accounts. → Read More

March 26th, 2010

The Connection Between Fake Steve Jobs And Walt Mosspuppet

The rumor circulating around Silicon Valley yesterday: Walt Mosspuppet, the foul-mouthed and funny puppet version of the Wall Street Journal’s Walt Mossberg, is actually the brainchild of Newsweek’s Dan Lyons, AKA Fake Steve Jobs. Lyons, says the rumor, actually writes the scripts for all of the videos, and Brian Hogg acts them out with the puppet.

The fact that Lyons promotes many of the Mosspuppet videos on Fake Steve certainly suggests a strong connection.

The truth, at least according to Dan Lyons (I think I was talking to Dan, but it may have been Fake Steve. I’m never sure with him): → Read More

March 26th, 2010

Interesting read: writer recounts his addiction to games and cocaine

There’s still a lot to be said in the “games as art” or even “games as legitimate forms of expression and entertainment” debate, and articles like this will… probably work for both sides. Tom Bissell was a successful and prolific writer, but after a cocaine-fueled run through (ironically) GTA:Vice City, he found himself more and more a slave to the console.

He’s battling it as he would any other addiction in some ways, but what makes it different to him (different from, say, his coke habit) is that his experiences aren’t fleeting, chemical fantasies but episodes of true profundity and emotion. It’s an interesting story. → Read More

March 26th, 2010

iPad App Store screenshots leaked

It had to happen some time: purported shots of the iPad app store have leaked onto the ol’ webbernet, and they’re pretty much what you’d expect. Big buttons, long vertical scrolling pages, and big versions of apps — the “HD” versions we saw leaked earlier in some cases. → Read More

March 26th, 2010

Review: WD My Passport Studio external hard drive

Short version: The drive performs as well as any other, and the e-ink display is handy. It’s up to you to judge whether it’s worth the extra cost. → Read More

March 26th, 2010

Suggestions for CrunchGear's first game night

Image via A Homegrown Life We’re toying with the idea of having a weekly or monthly game night. You guys would pick the game and venue, and we’ll provide some sweet-ass prizes. Cool? But we need to know some details up front so click the link below for a four-question survey. Oh, and sorry, none of us have a PS3 so that’s not an option. Click here for the quick survey. → Read More

March 26th, 2010

A Recap Of The Daniel Ek SXSW Spotify Keynote — In Rap Form

Whenever there’s a big event, like SXSW, we usually have people there to live-blog the important keynotes and/or write recaps of it afterwards. I’m not gonna lie, sometimes those are boring. You know what’s better? Rap songs that recap keynotes.

Hip-hop artist SaulPaul has released a video on YouTube which recaps the keynote Spotify CEO Daniel Ek gave at SXSW this year (here’s our more traditional write-ups of it). It’s awesome. I want all my conference recaps this way. Me and Jason Kincaid are going to have to learn how to freestyle for sure — or get SaulPaul to do these for us. → Read More

March 26th, 2010

PAX East 2010: In which we talk to a dude wearing a WWE belt for some reason

OK, so PAX may be crawling with people dressed as Chris Redfield and, um, Generic Skimpy Outfit Female, but it takes a certain kind of geek to walk around with a WWE championship belt. I use the word “geek” with all due respect, of course: we’re all geeks here at PAX. → Read More

March 26th, 2010

Thank You TechCrunch Sponsors!

We would like to take a minute to thank all of our amazing sponsors. You guys rock!

We are also still looking for sponsors for our exciting New York City event, TechCrunch Disrupt that is taking place May 24th-26th. Contact us to find out about our packages.

Crucial |Cloud Connect |Interop |Terremark |MediaTemple | AskYourTargetMarket.com | Ooyala | StrataScale | Loopt | Cotendo | OpSource | Web 2.0 Expo → Read More

March 26th, 2010

PAX East 2010: Clearly Rockstar is a popular company

Rockstar wins the early “which publisher has the biggest line?” award here at PAX. I think they get a free pizza party at the end of the day as a result. → Read More

March 26th, 2010

What's the deal with these Microsoft Seinfeld ads?

I’m not quite sure what this was important to someone, but Todd Bishop of TechFlash sat down with Microsoft to discuss those crazy Seinfeld ads from way back in ought-8. He essentially asked Microsoft “What were you thinking?” and got some interesting replies.

Essentially, Microsoft wanted to introduce Windows 7 in a big way but they weren’t sure how to go about it. Their marketing execs wanted an icebreaker to invite the world back into the mind of Microsoft. The result? Some of the craziest commercials the company ever released. → Read More

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Pinwheel — Received $7.5M in Series A funding from Redpoint Ventures
2.17.2012
HCP & Company — Company added to CrunchBase
2.25.2012
Redpoint Ventures — Invested in Pinwheel.
2.17.2012
2.23.2012
AVG Technologies — Went public with stock symbol NYSE:AVG.
2.2.2012
2.23.2012
Lightwire — Acquired by Cisco for $271M.
2.24.2012
AppAssure Software — Acquired by Dell.
2.24.2012
Recurve — Acquired by Tendril.
2.24.2012
Chomp — Acquired by Apple.
2.23.2012
Pinwheel — Received $7.5M in Series A funding from Redpoint Ventures
2.17.2012
Wireless Toyz — Received $487k in Grant funding
2.24.2012
Energid Technologies — Received $500k in Grant funding from National Science Foundation
2.24.2012
Octopusapp — Received Seed funding from Boris Wertz and Point Nine Capital
2.23.2012
2.23.2012
Redpoint Ventures — Invested in Pinwheel.
2.17.2012
Point Nine Capital — Invested in Octopusapp.
2.23.2012
Boris Wertz — Invested in Octopusapp.
2.23.2012
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
HCP & Company — Company added to CrunchBase
2.25.2012
Career Training Academy — Company added to CrunchBase
2.25.2012
Wireless Toyz — Company added to CrunchBase
2.25.2012
Lightwire — Company added to CrunchBase
2.25.2012
Energid Technologies — Company added to CrunchBase
2.25.2012
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