January 26th, 2011

WebMynd Receives 100K TechFellow Award To Focus On Addon Developer Platform

YCombinator-funded WebMynd, which launched in 2008 and was most recently responsible for the browser addon Search Smarter, is today announcing that it is the recipient of one of our heralded 2010 TechFellows Awards, from none other than Paul Graham himself. WebMynd will be using the 100K in financing to develop a new product, the WebMynd Addon Developer Platform. → Read More

January 26th, 2011

DoNothingFor2minutes.com goes from zero to 1 million unique visitors in 6 days

You’ve got to hand it to Alex Tew. The guy who came up with the MillionDollarHomePage to fund his university education, flamed out with another idea, and came back with another, still has a feel for the zeitgeist. I would not call him a traditional startup guy – more a creative working in the mass medium of the web.

His latest cleverly conceived idea, literally titled DoNothingFor2minutes, where you must not move the mouse of touch the keyboard for 2 minutes as an antidote for internet addiction, has become an internet property in it’s own right.

As you can see from the below, the site has gone from zero to 1 million unique visitors in 6 days, according to Tew, with the average time on site being 46 secs, or 836,401 minutes (580 days) of… nothing. It’s also been Re-tweeted 18,424 times. → Read More

January 26th, 2011

YC-Backed Tutorspree Is An Airbnb For Tutoring

Launching today from the YCombinator Class of 2011, Tutorspree is a online marketplace for K-12 tutors along the lines of accommodations network Airbnb, but specific to tutoring (yes I’ve made this comparison before). Founded by Aaron Harris, Josh Abrams and Ryan Bednar, the startup is disruptive in the sense that the tutoring space up until now has been monopolized by agencies like Sylvan and Huntington Learning Center or risky alternative Craigslist. → Read More

January 26th, 2011

Motorola: Xoom On Track For February, Smaller Tablets On The Way

Confirming some speculation and defying some other speculation, Motorola announced today during its earnings call that its Xoom tablet is still on track for a late-February release, despite rumors that Honeycomb is only half-baked. I think we all know Honeycomb is going to be a bit of a rough launch; I’m waiting for 3.1. → Read More

January 26th, 2011

PSA: 3D Matrix Sequels Rumor Was A Hoax

You may have seen a few reports going around the webosphere to the effect that Keanu Reeves and the Wachowski brothers were in the midst of planning a pair of Matrix sequels. Not only that, but the two films were to be in 3D. It turns out the whole thing was basically made up, so never mind. Don’t propagate. → Read More

January 26th, 2011

Oops! Leaked Schedule Shows Galaxy S 2 And Galaxy Tab 2 At MWC

We saw some seriously interesting hardware at CES this year, but MWC is just around the corner, and it looks like Samsung was keeping a few surprises for the big European mobile show. This schedule, the source of which isn’t given, quite clearly shows two new Galaxy products coming out soon: the Galaxy S 2 handset and a new Galaxy Tab. → Read More

January 26th, 2011

Google Begins Soft Censorship Of Arbitrary Piracy-Related Queries

The efforts of media companies to quash online piracy are a bit like someone trying to put out a forest fire with a wet noodle. The latest pathetic flail comes in the form of coercing Google into censoring its results for some search terms. A number of words will no longer be autocompleted or trigger an instant search, among them the interesting and perfectly legal “bittorrent.”

It’s a new high for antipiracy theater, because you can of course still search for the terms by hitting enter, and get the same results as before, including direct links to torrent files hosted on well-known indexers. The move will accomplish two things, though: first, it will damage consumer trust of a company whose services are ostensibly objective, and second, it confirms for the hundredth time how quixotic and misguided the efforts of the MPAA et al. are in every action they take. → Read More

January 26th, 2011

LiquidKeyboard Makes Virtual Keyboards More Fluid

It’s a fundamental difference between real and virtual keyboards that with one, you rest your fingers on the home row, and with the other, you hover. This means that with the real keyboard, you are typing with muscle memory, and on the virtual keyboard, while that muscle memory helps, you can’t rely on it completely and must augment it with visual confirmation.

This concept by the University of Technology, Sydney, for a new kind of onscreen keyboard, called LiquidKeyboard, places the letters above wherever your fingers are resting, but still in their original QWERTY positions. Check out the video inside. → Read More

January 26th, 2011

Quora + CrunchBase + LinkedIn = Best Extension Ever?

A month ago, Polaris Ventures principal Ryan Spoon wrote up a quick blog post looking for a developer with Chrome extension/app experience. He had a pretty simple idea for something to help him with his job. Matt Basta saw the post and created the extension Spoon was looking for almost instantly. Now they’re opening it up for all to use and calling it Polaris Insights.

The straightforward app is very, very slick. You simply visit the website of a company you’re interested in, hit the extension button, and you get an overlay of the CrunchBase, LinkedIn, and Quora data for the company. The CrunchBase column shows you the funding information, the LinkedIn column shows you your connections within the company, and the Quora column shows you some of the Q&A conversations going on about about company. → Read More

January 26th, 2011

"Ultrasonic" Klang Speaker Concept Only Produces Sound Where Your Head Is

I’m not quite sure I buy the physics behind these speakers entirely. The idea is that instead of simply vibrating a driver at the correct frequencies and projecting those vibrations out into the room, you use ultrasonic waves to vibrate only the air molecules along a path, and things outside of that path won’t hear the sound. → Read More

January 26th, 2011

YC Co-Founder Jessica Livingston On The Dearth Of Women In Tech (And Some Steps To Fix It)

Last August our own Michael Arrington wrote a post addressing a topic that’s as important as it is sensitive: the lack of women who are running startups. In short, his point was that there simply aren’t enough women who are setting out to become entrepreneurs — and it’s not because the issue is being swept under the rug or because the industry is heavily weighted against them.

Now Y Combinator co-founder Jessica Livingston has written an insightful article discussing her own experience with this. Livingston is as qualified as anyone to analyze the problem — she wrote Founders at Work and has also interviewed hundreds (perhaps thousands) of founders for Y Combinator. And her conclusion is similar to Michael’s:

So why don’t women want to start startups? I wonder if it’s not that not enough women want to start startups, but that not enough women even consider it as an option.

→ Read More

January 26th, 2011

AT&T Offering Would-Be Deserters Unlimited iPhone Data Plans?

Oh, Verizon iPhone; you’re not even on the shelves yet, and you’re already stirring up drama.

Just yesterday, Verizon COO Lowell McAdams disclosed that they’d be offering $30 Unlimited Data plans to iPhone users at launch (though, as he later clarified, that offer won’t last forever.) That may very well be enough to convince a chunk of AT&T’s iPhone-toting crowd to jump ship, given that AT&T’s $30 Unlimited Plan was killed off months ago in favor of the new $15/200MB and $25/2GB plans.

It looks like AT&T’s $30 Unlimited Plan might not be totally dead, though. → Read More

January 26th, 2011

Nintendo UK: "Heyday Of Piracy" May Be Over

Although the headline oversimplifies Nintendo UK’s James Honeywell’s comments on piracy (what are headlines for?), it’s more or less what he said, and Nintendo seems to actually think that its steps to curb piracy are going to be effective. To be fair, Honeywell also described crowing about piracy countermeasures as being “like a red rag to a bull,” which mirrors my own thoughts. → Read More

January 26th, 2011

Musicmetric updated – aggregates traditional radio play with P2P filesharing activity

Semetric, the startup behind the Musicmetric analytics service, has released version 3 of its “music data aggregation and analysis software”. It now offers a more 360 degree view, if you will, of activity across P2P filesharing networks, social media, as well as the ability to import and compare this to data based on sales and traditional radio play. The paid-for service is designed to provide enough data to enable users to better make decisions like which social networks to advertise on or where an artist or band should tour. → Read More

January 26th, 2011

Today, A Ban On Headphones While Crossing The Street; Tomorrow, A Ban On Chewing Gum While Walking

In the wake of the sensible legislation banning on texting while driving and requiring of hands-free in cars, it seems that lawmakers are setting their sights a little too high — or low, depending on your perspective. Some nascent proposals in New York aim to make it a crime to cross the street while using an electronic device. I don’t often cry “nanny state,” but this situation really is verging on requiring that term.

And yet there clearly is some need to address the fact that pedestrians in urban areas are more distracted than ever, and increasingly tend to throw themselves in front of cars, if the most recent accident statistics are any indication. But surely such a unilateral ban is not the answer. Is it even a starting place for a discussion? → Read More

January 26th, 2011

LinkedIn Buys Business Card Converter CardMunch, Will Offer Its Services For Free

In perhaps one of the most like-minded and forward-thinking acquisitions I’ve ever seen, career-driven social network LinkedIn has bought CardMunch, a Shoeboxed-like startup that scans your business cards and accurately converts them into phone contacts using Mechanical Turk. The price of the acquisition was not disclosed. → Read More

January 26th, 2011

Browser-Powered Desktop Notifications Are Coming To Gmail

Now this is nice. If you’re a heavy Gmail user you’ve probably installed some kind of desktop notification system — be it a browser extension, a separate Gmail app like Mailplane and/or Growl. But now, hot on the heels of launching a dynamic unread count in browser tabs, Gmail is launching something that doesn’t require any downloads: built-in desktop notifications.

A small banner on Gmail just prompted me to enable the feature, which works for both inbound chat and email messages (you can opt to receive notifications for all new emails, or just ‘Important’ ones as deemed by your Priority Inbox). Google is probably rolling this out gradually (there’s no blog post yet), but I’m seeing it in both of my accounts. → Read More

January 26th, 2011

Ask a VC: Andreessen Horowitz’s John O’Farrell Answers your Questions

This week our guest on Ask a VC is John O’Farrell of Andreessen Horowitz. O’Farrell is yet another Opsware alum filling out the firm’s partnership ranks, and he follows the firm’s strategy of hiring partners with specific company building expertise. At Opsware, he headed up the company’s business development and leading Opsware’s partnerships, acquisitions and eventual purchase by HP for $1.65 billion. He had a similar role at hot cleantech startup Silver Spring Networks before jumping to Andreessen Horowitz last year.

So those startups or would-be entrepreneurs out there with burning questions about deal making? This is the perfect week to send your questions to AskaVC(at)techcrunch(dot)com. → Read More

January 26th, 2011

Teardown Of Nikon D7000 Shows Off The Well-Packed Interior Of A Modern DSLR

I wouldn’t say this teardown of a D7000 is of particular interest over, say, a Canon or Pentax, but you don’t often get to see brand-new DSLRs cracked open like this. When you think about it, there really is quite a lot of computing power packed into these guys. Being able to process and write thirty 16-megapixel RAW or JPEG images at five or six per second is a serious task. Go ahead, open 30 right now in your favorite image editor. Like lightning, right? No, not so much. → Read More

January 26th, 2011

Now Bambuser live streaming mobile video of protests is blocked by Egypt

Well, so far the authoritarian regime in Egypt has taken steps to crack down on the uprising of its population by shutting down first Twitter and now Facebook, and thus useful parts of the movement’s ability to organise itself. No-one is suggesting that these this are essential to the people in the ground, but they certainly can’t hurt.

Now the government is taking steps to shut down web video services, and one of them is the live mobile video startup Bambuser. The company has now confirmed in a blog post that the service was shut down yesterday. → Read More

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Crunchbase

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
CrunchBase