• September 26th, 2010

    Offline/Online Convergence, Mobile Commerce, and Life After Check-ins

    For years, offline merchants have been acquiring data about you in attempts to personalize your experience through loyalty and rewards cards, credit card data, and surveys. But the problem is these interactions occur after it’s too late: at the point of sale. You’ve already checked out and are leaving the store, or have ordered dinner. For a merchant to convince you to add an extra item to your shopping cart, or buy an appetizer with your meal, the interaction must happen sooner.

    Online check-ins, as a trend and use-case, have created a remarkably compelling opportunity for offline merchants to interact with consumers who are in the store before the sale happens. When you announce you’re at a store or restaurant by checking into Foursquare or Facebook Places, for example, your experience can be shaped and molded in compelling ways. → Read More

    September 26th, 2010

    Windows Phone 7 to be shipping Nov 8 in the US

    While not officially confirmed by Microsoft, Windows Phone Secrets are saying that they have it on good authority that WinPho7 will ship on November 8 in the US. We’d previously heard that the new OS would launch in October, it now seems that this may be a European launch date, with the US having to wait an extra month. Bummer. Of course, this isn’t confirmed, and I don’t know who this “very reliable source” is, so take this with a pinch of artery-hardening salt. At launch, you can expect to see devices like the HTC HD7, the LG Optimus 7, and the Samsung Cetus. [via Electronista] → Read More

    September 26th, 2010

    T-mobile G2 won't support tethering at launch, maybe later

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    September 26th, 2010

    Sunday Afternoon Read: History Of Game Controllers

    I just happened upon this interesting blog, a record of this guy’s research and other stuff while putting together a book on game controllers — their design, inspiration, pieces, tech, etc. Some interesting pictures and links in there if you’re into that kind of thing, and the book looks like it’s going to be pretty sweet as well. [via Metafilter] → Read More

    September 26th, 2010

    AngelGate: Chris Sacca Responds To Ron Conway

    As I said the other day, there would be more private emails getting published. This one is from Chris Sacca, a prominent “super angel” who was not at the meeting I stumbled into but was at a previous meeting. He wrote a response to the Ron Conway email. It’s worth pointing out that this email is time stamped a good half hour before our story broke, meaning he wrote it thinking it would all still stay private.

    This is also the first leaked email we’ve received that actually includes names in the header of some of the people who are involved in this mess. Like the Ron Conway email, we have separately confirmed this email is authentic, although Sacca will not comment on it. → Read More

    September 26th, 2010

    GoPro Releases The Low-Cost HD Hero 960 Wearable Sports Camera And We Go Hands-On

    http://player.ooyala.com/player.swf?embedCode=83OWtxMTrj42breWai40MczwjirhbakO&version=2 GoPro isn’t a new name in the sports camera world. People have been strapping their cams to motorcycles, surfboards, and cars for some time now and their latest model brings high-def video for a bit less. The HD Hero 960 offers most of what the big brother HD Hero does, but for nearly half the price. You might not mind what’s missing, though. → Read More

    September 26th, 2010

    TC Hackathon Alum GroupMe Hits 1 Million Texts, Adds Sponsored Groups

    Born from the cradle of Disrupt’s NY Hackathon, GroupMe is turning the codefest into something of a company tradition. The startup, which officially launched in August and recently raised $850,000 from a few prominent investors, took the stage on Sunday at the San Francisco Design Center to pitch their latest hack in 60 seconds or less. → Read More

    September 26th, 2010

    WiseDame Wins The TechCrunch Disrupt Hackathon, A Black Box For Real Life

    This weekend, 450 or so developers descended upon the San Francisco Design Center to hack. The result? Some really cool/interesting/crazy stuff being made at our TechCrunch Disrupt Hackathon. On Sunday, it was time to present before our selection of judges: Cyan BannisterBrett BullingtonRebekah CoxChris DixonBradley HorowitzDean HoveyMichael MarquezChristopher PooleJoshua Schachter, and Mike Schroepfer.

    After 86 60-second presentations on stage, the judges went backstage to pick the ones they felt put their time to best use last night (and/or gave the best presentation on little or no sleep).

    Updated: Video with the winner ahead. → Read More

    September 26th, 2010

    Silicon Valley Just Ain't What It Used To Be—And That's a Good Thing

    Dan Lyons raises a provocative question in his latest Newsweek article: Is Silicon Valley still solving hard problems? After all, the “silicon” in Silicon Valley comes from its being the birthplace of the microprocessor. The magic of shrinking circuits gave rise to the computer industry, the Internet, and all of its offspring. In contrast, Lyons suggests that today’s Silicon Valley companies are not tackling big enough challenges that could fundamentally alter the economy and or how people live. He points to Facebook, Twitter, and Zynga, “the three hottest tech companies today,” as proof that Silicon Valley is nothing more than Silly Valley.

    There are so many things wrong with Lyons’ argument that I don’t know where to start. For one thing, he hangs the entire thing on quotes from Nathan Myrhvold, the former Microsoft CTO who is now best known as a patent extortionist. So I guess it’s Myrhvold’s argument. But using a patent troll’s complaints about the lack of “real” innovation in Silicon Valley as your main example is flawed. Let’s separate the argument from its source. The question on its own is still important, and should not be rejected out of hand → Read More

    September 26th, 2010

    The First Shot Of a Working SoBi Bike-Sharing Lock

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    September 26th, 2010

    The All-Electric Coda Sedan, Made In California And China, Coming To U.S. Markets

    A new electric vehicle, the Coda Sedan, is set to hit the streets stateside, starting in California in 2010 and expanding sales to Hawaii in 2011. In the U.S. the Coda Sedan is priced to compete with the Chevy Volt and Nissan Leaf at $44,900 before federal and state discounts or incentives.

    Reports by Car And Driver revealed that the Coda Sedan is a four-door, five-seat, totally electric vehicle with a body and chassis licensed from Mitsubishi. The body and chassis will be modified and assembled in China then shipped to California for the installation of electrical systems. → Read More

    September 26th, 2010

    View Twitter Through Other People's Eyes With TwtRoulette

    Intrigued by the experience of viewing a friend’s Twitter timeline, angel investor Shervin Pishevar collaborated with 15 year-old iTunes Instant creator Stephen Ou to create Twtroulette.com after a week of work.

    With Twtroulette, users can now visit what industry notables like Mike Arrington, investor Brad Feld, and YouTube’s Hunter Walk see when they open Twitter i.e. what it’s like to follow the people they are following. People can also volunteer their own timelines by adding themselves to the directory. And, like Chatroulette, there’s a random function so one can shuffle through profiles if they’re feeling lucky. → Read More

    September 26th, 2010

    Ron Conway Would Like To Clarify His Nuclear Attack On Fellow Angels

    If angel investor Ron Conway wants us to post something here on TechCrunch, we’re going to post it. This morning he asked us to do just that.

    This is a clarification, he says, to the private email slamming investors over “AngelGate.” That private email became significantly less private last week when we posted it here on TechCrunch. → Read More

    September 26th, 2010

    Don't Click The WTF Link On Twitter Unless You DO Like Sex With Goats

    Either a lot of Techies are into really kinky things, or there is a Twitter worm going around. It looks like a ton of people just started sending out Tweets saying “I Like Anal Sex With Goats.” This Tweet is followed by another one that says “WTF” and includes a link. Do NOT click on this link; it appears that it will cause you to send out the same series of Tweets from your account. It looks like this is happening across third-party clients and on Twitter.com

    As commenter Andrew Nacin points out, the bug is called a cross-site request forgery. Web programming security 101. It should only affect twitter.com, as it relies on an iframe of twitter.com and a little JavaScript to post the tweet form (twice). It seems that if you click this link “http://pastehtml.com/view/1b7xk3b.html”, and you are signed into Twitter, it will autotweet two Tweets with the sex with goats bit and the WTF link. → Read More

    September 26th, 2010

    Watch LIVE: The TC Disrupt Hackathon Showdown

    If you live in the San Francisco Bay Area, you have no reason not to attend the Hackathon Demo session this morning, which is free and open to the public. For late stragglers, there are still available seats at the San Francisco Design Center Concourse.

    However, because we know most of you will not be able to join us in person to witness the thrilling conclusion to SF Hackathon 2010, we are streaming the entire event live, starting at 11am PST, thanks to Ustream. So sit back, relax and enjoy the parade of blink-and-you’ll-miss-it 60 second presentations and root for your favorite in the comments. Watch the feed ahead. → Read More

    September 26th, 2010

    The Disrupt Hackathon Movie (And Slideshow) TCTV

    Picture this: late night coding, new and tenuous liaisons, the driving desire to create something great and just a dash of booze. No, I’m not talking about that movie, I’m talking about the pressure cooker that is TechCrunch Disrupt’s Hackathon.

    With less than 4 hours until show time, the programmers, designers and entrepreneurs have been slaving away (or at least that’s the expectation) through the night to make something stage-worthy and coherent. Starting at Sunday 11:00am EST, you can watch the frenzy as the teams deliver 60-second presentations in rapid-fire succession to our panel of expert judges. However, before we hurtle to the triumphant, disoriented end, let’s savor the blood, sweat and Redbull: please enjoy this trailer (sorry, I didn’t have time to find a creepy soundtrack).See video ahead. → Read More

    September 26th, 2010

    From Accelerate 2010 In Singapore: List Of "Asia's Top 50 Apps"

    Earlier this week, I attended Accelerate 2010 in Singapore, a two-day tech and mobile industry event that attracted no less than 2,000 international attendees. Organizer and major telco SingTel (which boasts around 350 million customers worldwide) offered up a slew of presentations and panels. But giving in to my penchant for discovering Asian startups, I will just focus on Accelerate’s so-called “Asia’s Top 50 Apps” program in the following (head over to e27 for more coverage of the event).

    Here are thumbnail sketches (of varying depth) of all these 50 Asian mobile apps and web services, starting with the top 10 and in no particular order (luckily, almost all products listed up after the break are available in English). → Read More

    September 26th, 2010

    [NSFW] TechCrunch Disrupt: The Drinking Game

    In a little over 24 hours, the sun will rise on the second TechCrunch Disrupt conference, brilliantly titled “TechCrunch Disrupt: San Francisco“. (Rejected titles include “TechCrunch Disrupt 2: Money Never Sleeps”, “TechCrunch Disrupt 2: For a Few Dollars More”, and “TechCrunch Disrupt 2: I Still Know What You Did Last Summer”.) For those of you who missed the inaugural Disrupt, held in New York back in May, the event is a mash-up of two formats: a start-up competition where 24 as-yet-unlaunched businesses compete for $50,000 and an old bowling trophy The TechCrunch Disrupt Cup – plus a star-studded conference where the likes of Erick Schmidt and Barry Diller take to the stage to inspire entrepreneurs and attempt to out-swear Carol Bartz. It’s a ridiculously impressive line-up, with a ratio of three Chabillionaires to every Chamillionaire. READ MORE → Read More

    September 25th, 2010

    Like The Ping Sidebar, iLike Founder Hopes Apple Copies Mission Of Helping Small Artists

    If the new Ping sidebar that was launched today as a part of iTunes 10.0.1 looks familiar, perhaps it’s because you’ve been using the iLike Sidebar — an iTunes (and Windows Media Player) plug-in that does pretty much the same thing. We know at least one person finds the two very similar: Ali Partovi, the co-founder of iLike.

    I just hope Apple also copies iLike’s mission of democratizing music by empowering artists, especially the little guys. With Ping’s restrictions so far on artist signup, the major labels are the winners, not artists, and that breaks my heart,” Partovi told us today when asked about Ping’s newest feature. → Read More

    September 25th, 2010

    An Illustrated Slice Of TC Disrupt Hackathon Life

    Pizza has just arrived for the second time (!) here at the TC Disrupt Hackathon at the San Francisco Design Center Concourse and it’s finally cooled down after weathering one of the hottest days we’ve experienced in San Francisco in awhile.

    I’ve been here for about seven hours and met some great and incredibly nerdy folks. Some of us are working hard, some of us are hardly working and some of us are already asleep at 8:00 PM PST. → Read More

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    Copperfasten — Received €500k in Unattributed funding from Enterprise Ireland and Oyster Technology Investments
    5.27.2012
    Himax Technologies — Company added to CrunchBase
    5.28.2012
    5.27.2012
    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
    GlobalEnglish — Acquired by Pearson for $90M.
    5.25.2012
    Chick Approved — Acquired by Lockerz.
    5.25.2012
    PowerReviews — Acquired by Bazaarvoice for $151M.
    5.24.2012
    Copperfasten — Received €500k in Unattributed funding from Enterprise Ireland and Oyster Technology Investments
    5.27.2012
    Undo Software — Received Unattributed funding from Cambridge Angels group
    5.27.2012
    Soteira — Received $375k in Debt funding
    5.25.2012
    Spectra Analysis — Received $125k in Debt funding
    5.25.2012
    Exec — Received $3.3M in Seed funding
    5.25.2012
    5.27.2012
    Enterprise Ireland — Invested in Copperfasten.
    5.27.2012
    5.27.2012
    NextView Ventures — Invested in TurningArt.
    5.23.2012
    TELUS — Invested in SecureKey Technologies.
    5.25.2012
    Facebook — Went public with stock symbol NASDAQ:FB.
    5.18.2012
    Himax Technologies — Company added to CrunchBase
    5.28.2012
    Medivation — Company added to CrunchBase
    5.28.2012
    Copperfasten — Company added to CrunchBase
    5.28.2012
    Undo Software — Company added to CrunchBase
    5.28.2012
    SGL Network — Company added to CrunchBase
    5.27.2012
    Google Chromium — Product added to CrunchBase
    5.26.2012
    TacoGrid.com — Product added to CrunchBase
    5.26.2012
    cloudbank — Product added to CrunchBase
    5.26.2012
    mywheebox — Product added to CrunchBase
    5.26.2012
    Antifraud publications — Product added to CrunchBase
    5.26.2012
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