• October 25th, 2010

    Netflix Says Sorry, Offers Account Credit For Recent Streaming Downtime

    Netflix has apologized for the brief outage of its streaming service that happened last Friday. And that’s all well and good, but even better is that Netflix has started offering its users a small credit, applicable to their next bill. → Read More

    October 25th, 2010

    Tech World Welcomes Digg Refugees With Open Arms

    This morning most of us woke up to the disappointing news that social news site Digg, once a promising destination for Silicon Valley talent, was losing 37% of its staff as well experiencing key executive departures.

    While the usual armchair Twitter quarterbacks responded to the what the layoffs mean for the ailing site, another more positive trend was also evidenced; People making clear that the kind of top tier engineering talent that worked for Digg was welcome at a spectrum of high profile startups and full fledged companies. → Read More

    October 25th, 2010

    Inside the Logitech Revue

    Our buddies at iFixIt have torn down the Logitech Revue Google TV box and found what amounts to be a mini computer powered by an Intel Atom CE4150 1.2 GHz processor. Oddly enough, for a device with no storage space, it contains 5GB of NAND flash. → Read More

    October 25th, 2010

    Ford Earmarks An Additional $850 Million To Build Fuel Efficient Cars

    With car sales starting to inch higher and the threat of bankruptcy only faintly visible in the rear-view mirror, Ford is loosening its purse strings once again.

    On Monday afternoon, the Dearborn, Michigan based company announced that it will invest another $850 million into the development of more fuel efficient cars and technology.

    That cash, which is earmarked for 2011 to 2013, is still contingent on whether the Michigan Economic Development Council approves a robust package of incentives (due for consideration later this week). According to reports— if the package gets the greenlight— Ford will benefit from roughly $400 million in state incentives. → Read More

    October 25th, 2010

    T-Mobile G2 owners pledge cold, hard cash for a permanent hack

    At face value, the HTC G2 for T-Mobile seemed no harder for the Android modding community to crack into than any of the handsets that came before it. Once the hackers really had a chance to tear into it, however, something strange started happening: it… repaired itself. Hacks could be made, but they’d disappear as soon as the handset was reset. Understandably, these temporary hacks just weren’t enough for some folks. Though much of the hardware hacking community is already attacking the issue full force, a group of users have come together to speed up the process with the oldest trick in the book: by throwing money at it. → Read More

    October 25th, 2010

    Video: Is This Woman A Time Traveler?

    Is this woman a time traveler? Never mind the fact that time travel is, indeed, possible, but this is just silly. It’s the latest Internet meme, and it shows a woman walking down the street, ostensibly as an extra in the Charlie Chaplin movie The Circus. But look closely? Is she, what, talking on a mobile phone? In the year 1928? Pretty sure mobiles didn’t exist back then. → Read More

    October 25th, 2010

    Can Samsung Replicate Apple's Success As A ‘Brand Curator?’

    Will Samsung ever be as big as Apple? Well, maybe “big” isn’t the word to use, maybe “hot”? You know what I mean: whenever Apple has a media day, everyone loses their minds, even if the event isn’t really all that special. The closest Samsung has gotten, I think, was this past September at IFA in Germany, where it announced the Galaxy Tab. Tons of people in the crowd&mdash:I was there, remember—and tons of heat online after the fact. → Read More

    October 25th, 2010

    Another Digg Exec Is Out: Longtime CFO John Moffett Leaves

    More bad news for Digg. Earlier today we broke the news that Digg was having a large wave of layoffs that cut 37% its staff, which came alongside the exit of Chief Revenue Officer Chas Edwards. We’ve just confirmed that Digg has also seen another departure from its executive team: Chief Financial Officer John Moffett recently left the company.

    Moffett wasn’t a recently appointed executive hire — he’s been with Digg for nearly five years, which means he’s been there for most of the company’s history (it launched in 2004). According to his LinkedIn profile, Moffett has served as Digg’s CFO since 2005, and has led the company’s “financial, legal, and human resource initiatives as part of the executive team.” → Read More

    October 25th, 2010

    Lose your phone? This site can help.

    Maybe you were drunk and decided it would be a great idea to hide your phone in the laundry hamper. Maybe you just didn’t see it slip between the couch cushions. Either way, you’ve gotta go somewhere now, and you’ve got no idea where your phone is. You’ve already asked your significant other to call your misplaced phone twice this week, and doing it again might make you seem downright irresponsible. How are you going to take care of a baby when you can’t even take care of an iPhone? WHAT IF YOU LET THE BABY SLIP BETWEEN THE COUCH CUSHIONS? WHAT THEN, GREG? Fret not. There’s a new site on the interwebs, intended solely to give your misplaced phone a ring. → Read More

    October 25th, 2010

    Ubercab, Now Just Uber, Shares Cease And Desist Orders

    UberCab — which was recently renamed “Uber” to avoid the appearance of marketing itself as a taxi business — has shared the full contents of the cease and desist orders it received this week from city authorities in San Francisco regulating transportation businesses there. → Read More

    October 25th, 2010

    T-Mobile Optimus T might just be the cheapest Android phone yet

    Back when T-Mobile announced that the Android-2.2-powered and “budget-friendly” Optimus T would be hitting their network, they got away without mentioning two important bits: pricing and launch date. Fortunately, they’ve gone ahead and remedied that this morning. → Read More

    October 25th, 2010

    Google Finally Updates FeedBurner To Focus On Real Time Stats And Twitter

    Three and a half years ago, Google made what seemed to be a pretty big $100 million acquisition: FeedBurner. You remember that company, right? They’re the ones that dominated RSS management before all of that real time tech came along and rendered it obsolete for many people. Today, Google is putting the real time paddles to FeedBurner’s heart in an attempt to rivive it.

    If you visit FeedBurner today, you’ll see a “Try out our NEW (beta) version!” message in the top menu. Clicking on this will take you to the new version. So what’s new? The entire look and feel has been revamped. The new Home screen is loaded up with overview stats and alerts for the sites you run. But the real key, of course, is in the Feeds area. → Read More

    October 25th, 2010

    Has The Threat Of Cyber War Been Overstated?

    Set aside several minutes of your afternoon to read Seymour Hersh’s latest article in the New Yorker entitled “The Online Threat.” It’s a long, long yarn on the dangers of cyber war. It begins with the United Stats’ utter lack of respect for the technological capabilities of China, and then goes on to address a larger question: is the U.S. prepared for any sort of cyber attack? → Read More

    October 25th, 2010

    Digg Founder Jay Adelson Is Okay With Not Selling Early, Even In Light Of Layoffs

    On stage at FailCon today, Jay Adelson went over his storied career from Equinix to Digg. Adelson kept emphasizing the fact that he had no regrets despite Digg having failed to pin down acquisition offers from both Current and Google, while the news broke during the panel that Digg had just laid off 37% of its staff.

    I asked Adelson while he was onstage whether he wanted to revaluate his “no regrets” comments with this recently reported information, particularly with regards to selling the company early. → Read More

    October 25th, 2010

    Spotify sees a future with HP's Palm, launches on webOS

    Say what you will about Spotify‘s delayed US launch or whether its freemium model is ultimately flawed, but when it comes to rolling out mobile clients, the music streaming service can’t be bettered. While other companies set the bar at an iPhone app (and possibly Android), Spotify, with its European roots, has already gone where many dare not, developing a fully-fledged client for Nokia’s Symbian, along with iPhone, Android and Windows Phone.

    Today, the company has announced a version for Palm’s webOS, a niche platform if there ever was one. Although with HP’s acquisition of Palm, that will hopefully change. It’s also a particularly US-centric brand, so that could be telling in itself. On that note, it’s curious that RIM’s BlackBerry is still missing in action. Any theories on why? Jump in on the comments. → Read More

    October 25th, 2010

    The Truth: Why iPhone Users Will Ditch AT&T and Run to Verizon

    jobs happy

    Last week we saw the carriers’ growth numbers for Q3 2010, and AT&T completely blew away Verizon with new subscribers. Despite mass availability of Android phones, Verizon only added 1 million subscribers in Q3, its lowest total in years. AT&T added 2.6 million.

    It’s now completely clear why Verizon has finally capitulated and cozied up with Apple—even with tons of Android models, Verizon simply can’t compete with AT&T in terms of new subscriber growth.

    Right now the question du jour among iPhone aficionados is how many net subscribers will leave AT&T and switch to Verizon once the iPhone becomes a reality in January 2011. That number is going to be a lot larger than people think for a series of compounding reasons. → Read More

    October 25th, 2010

    Is Cloud OS Maker Jolicloud Preparing To Sell A Netbook Of Its Own?

    Jolicloud, which set out to build a cloud-based operating system for netbooks, appears to be preparing to build and sell its own line of actual netbooks, too.

    Tariq Krim, founder and CEO of the French startup, earlier today tweeted links to two interesting pictures.

    As others are speculating, these pictures suggest Jolicloud is working on a proper netbook rather than sticking with just building software to run them. → Read More

    October 25th, 2010

    A Week In The Technology-Packed 2011 Ford Edge Sport

    Hello, gorgeous. A 2011 Ford Edge Sport just hit my driveway and I’m in love. This vehicle is a looker inside and out. It’s funny how much more modern this model feels over last year’s model — I guess a bit of sheet metal plastic surgery can go a long way. There’s now a large grill and sweeping headlights up front that define the rest of the crossover’s lines. Even the wheels got hit with the redesign hammer, going from wannabe-luxury to urban. The biggest update is inside, particularly at the infotainment suite. The 2011 Edge is one of the first vehicle’s in Ford’s line-up with a totally-redesigned center stack and gauge cluster dubbed MyFord Touch. Gone are the days of push buttons and analog gauges. This vehicle instead employs two totally customizable LCD screens on either side of a traditional speedometer along with a robust entertainment screen in the center of the dash. Think of it as the smartphone of in-vehicle controls. I would drive a Ford Pinto if it had this system. → Read More

    October 25th, 2010

    PaperBecause: A Paper Industry Astroturf Defending Paper

    How prescient! I just wrote that the dead-tree book is dying and a tipster sent us in this charming little site dedicated to the joy of paper – funded by a paper manufacturer, one of the biggest in the world. Domtar is the “largest integrated producer of uncoated freesheet paper in North America and the second largest in the world based on production capacity” and business, thus far, has been good. Like buggy whip manufacturers, however, the writing is on the wall – a great deal of the paper they spew out will soon be replaced by bits. While most of that information, including the lip-service to sustainability, is false, I don’t envy Dotmar’s position. They are a massive paper conglomerate and their bottom line is being attacked by a free newspaper app you can download for iPad. Their best customers for centuries are now, slowly, turning away from them. That said, the website is a ham-handed attempt (one example bit of advice “Senior Executives prefer print…A resume is a summary of your professional career, not a blog about what you had for breakfast.” That’s why they’re called Senior. Duh!) by an entrenched industry to keep making money. → Read More

    October 25th, 2010

    First Startup Weekend Barcelona wrap-up

    Barcelona Activa hosted its first ever Barcelona Startup Weekend, which kicked off this last Friday, meticulously organized by Ellas 2.0, a growing initiative and community dedicated to cultivating technological entrepreneurship among women in Spain.

    To generate the right hype, focus and motivation, Ellas 2.0 invited Isabel Arcones, founding partner of Inveready First Capital and SpainNexus, a business accelerator based out of San Francisco for up and coming Spanish tech companies looking to grow out of the Spanish market into a successful US presence.

    On Friday afternoon, 66 participants pitched a total of 20 projects, which quickly slimmed down to a total of seven. Of that seven, 30% (still low) of participants were women, who led 3/7 of the final projects: → Read More

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    Crunchbase

    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
    Enterprise Ireland — Invested in Copperfasten.
    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
    Enterprise Ireland — Invested in Copperfasten.
    5.27.2012
    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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