June 10th, 2010

Hello Kitty camcorder

Japanese camera maker Exemode announced [JP] the Hello Kitty DV520KT today, a simple 5MP CMOS camcorder that only has one thing going for it: it features mega-popular cartoon cat Hello Kitty saying “Hi” on the hardware. That’s what it probably makes perfect for young girls though. → Read More

May 24th, 2010

TV viewers now refusing to watch SD content?

There’s a handy option in the DirecTV menu guide for “HDTV Channels.” On the rare occasion when I’m actually sitting in front of the TV looking to “channel surf” (more like “menu surf” nowadays), it’s only “HDTV channels” I’m concerned with. Nearly halfway through 2010, it has come to the point where, unless I absolutely have no other choice, I simply won’t watch a network unless the program is in HD. Has it come really come to that? That, unless a show is in HD, you’ll simply skip it? → Read More

February 10th, 2010

JVC's HD media player box supports SD cards only

No DVD, no Blu-ray and no HDD: JVC Japan is keeping it extra-simple with the CU-VS100, a media player box that supports nothing but SD cards. Announced [JP] yesterday for the Japanese market, the device is targeted at people who just want to conveniently view HD content stored on SD/SDHC on their TV. → Read More

January 6th, 2010

Who needs Blu-ray? Japan gets "This Is It" on SD card and USB stick

The special Michael Jackson PS3 bundle (PS3 plus “This Is It”, a documentary–concert film, on Blu-ray ) unveiled today by Sony Japan wasn’t the only relevant product announcement for Japanese Jacko fans today. Nagoya-based Hagiwara-Sys Com is to release the film on two very unique media [JP], namely on a USB flash memory and an SD card. → Read More

June 10th, 2009

Eye-Fi announces the Eye-Fi Pro (Ad Hoc support!) and Selective Transfer

I think I speak for every camera nerd out there when I say, Hallelujah!!! It’s about damn time Eye-Fi released an Ad Hoc enabled SDHC card. Live blogging will now be 100x easier.

The 4GB Eye-Fi Pro now supports RAW files on top of pre-existing support for JPEG and video files. Geotagging and Hotspot access are available on the Pro model as well. The Eye-Fi Pro is available now on Amazon and Eye-Fi for $149. → Read More

March 3rd, 2009

Eye Fi ups storage, enables video uploading

My favorite little at-home gadget is getting a shake up today. Eye-Fi’s Wi-Fi SD cards not only upload images, but now video to YouTube and Flickr. The Share Video and Explore Video cards are now 4GB standard and the existing line of 2GB Eye Fi cards received a price drop. → Read More

November 13th, 2008

Sanyo unveils three super-advanced IC recorders

→ Read More

November 12th, 2008

Eye-Fi wireless SD card gets bumped up to 4GB

Everyone’s favorite wireless memory card is now available with four gigabytes of storage. The Eye-Fi Anniversary Edition has just been announced to commemorate one year of wireless photo slinging from the Mountain View, California-based company. The card is selling with an MSRP of $129.99 but Costco members can get it for $99 on Costco.com – not too bad for a 4GB SDHC card with a built-in wireless chip that automatically transfers photos to your computer and 25+ online photo sharing services. You can also add automatic geotagging and/or Wayport wireless hotspot access for $14.99 per year, per service. → Read More

October 10th, 2008

CrunchDeal: Crucial 8GB SD card for $9.99 shipped

Note: this Newegg deal is while supplies last so when it goes live at 11:00 EST or 8:00 PST, jump on it fast. An 8GB SD card for 10 bucks is a hell of a deal, especially with free shipping. via GearDiary → Read More

September 17th, 2008

Canon PowerShot SD990 IS and SD880 IS: Point and shoot cams for the masses

→ Read More

September 11th, 2008

Now SD cards will come built-in; and why wasn't this done years ago?

I’ve always kind of wondered why more phones and media players didn’t have more built-in storage. SD is cheap, and fast enough for most low-demand data uses — mp3s, small videos, any kind of office doc — yet while my phone has a MicroSD slot, I believe its internal storage (the default for pictures, music and so on) is a whopping 16 megabytes. You’d think they’d at least have updated with the times as successive generations of easy storage got cheaper. Well, I guess someone finally asked the right person, because the SD Card Association is announcing embedded SD functionality, something which seems like it would have been a no-brainer back in 2000. For whatever reason, it’s happening now, so you can expect storage in low-end phones to jump. Am I missing something here? All it would take to embed SD would be a controller and an interface hard-wired to a decapitated SD card. I’m guessing the capabilities have been there for years but there were licensing agreements or some such. → Read More

February 13th, 2008

SD card readers for gauche Japanese girls make me want to vom

[photopress:AD_MRCMR_1.jpg,full,center] ADTEC have lost their collective mind, releasing new SD card readers that can be customized — no, Bedazzled — by fingernail artists to make personalized works of electronic, tacky art. They’re big in Japan, but you know this kind of crap is going to make it across the Pacific sooner rather than later. Pimpable MicroSD Card Reader [Akihabara!] → Read More

February 13th, 2008

Panasonic's 32GB SDHC memory card coming in April

These SD cards just get bigger and fatter all the time — and by bigger and fatter, I mean internally. After all, it’s what’s on the inside that counts. This one from Panasonic, available in April, is a 32-gigabyte card. Granted, it’s $700 but it does work rather speedily with a 20mb/sec transfer speed. There’s a SanDisk 32-gigabyte card that’ll also be out in April. At $350, it’ll be half the price of this Panasonic card but it runs a tad slower at 15mb/sec. That might not sound like a big deal but it very well could be for the kinds of people who have $350 to $700 to drop on an SD card. Other 32-gigabyte cards should be available soon from various other manufacturers in various other formats, which should help to drop prices over the coming months. Panasonic offers big and fast SD card–for $700 [CNET] → Read More

February 1st, 2008

Eye-Fi to get 'Smart Boost', inks deal with Ritz Camera

  Eye-Fi has announced that its Wi-Fi SD cards will get a “Smart Boost” update on February 12th. With Smart Boost, your card will be able to tell whether or not your computer is on and in range of your camera and, if it is, photos will be offloaded from your camera to your computer over your home network and then your computer will handle the heavy lifting of uploading the photos to your online photo-sharing site. If your computer isn’t on, your camera will upload your photos directly to the web-based Eye-Fi service, which will then shoot the photos to your favorite photo-sharing site AND shoot them back down to your computer when it’s turned back on. Rad, no? → Read More

October 31st, 2007

2GB SD card does Wi-Fi in digital cameras

Hey, now THAT’S a good idea. This $99 2GB SD memory card has built in wireless. You pop it in your camera, take some photos, and it automatically uploads (via your Wi-Fi connection) those photos to one of 17 online photo websites including Shutterfly, Snapfish, Photobucket, Facebook, Picasa, and, of course, Flickr. Best of all, it works in any digital camera that supports SD cards. I don’t know how they crammed all that into a tiny card but, hey, I’m just a guy with a keyboard. It’s available now at a variety of stores. Hot damn, I’m getting one. Eye-Fi [Company Website] via Wireless-Watch.com → Read More

July 2nd, 2007

Great Outdoors: Have Video, Will Travel

Why are you watching videos again? Summer is currently in full effect. It’s hot as hell outside, the sky is beautiful, the water is warm – you need to get out there. So bring your family or some good buddies and hit the trails, slope, or beaches. Find something to do. Just remember to be equipped with the best video gear possible. Because between the 14-hour car ride to your destination and Bob falling into a patch of poison ivy, you’ll want the memories to last forever. → Read More

June 12th, 2007

Storage Problems Arise On The Wii

You thought your Wii was truly a special console, didn’t you? Sure it doesn’t play DVDs and it lacks a hard drive, but that’s ok, ’cause the Wii has a remote for a controller! Now Wii owners are finding out the hard way that not having a hard drive sucks. Jake over at 8BitJoystick.com downloaded one too many VC games and realized that his Wii channels were full and his internal storage was almost at its 512MB limit. Ouch. It’s not like Jake went nuts and downloaded every game on Nintendo’s Virtual Console either. He just downloaded a normal amount of games like any other gamer would. The problem lies in the way Nintendo is distributing older titles. Each VC game not only includes the proper ROM file for the game to work, but it also contains an emulator as well. So when each game you download also has a program coming with it, storage is going to run out quickly. Nintendo needs to find a new storage solution and fast if it has any hope of not pissing gamers off when they go to download new games, only to find their Wii is fresh out of room to hold them. Sure you can backup to SD cards, but that isn’t practical and it’s also expensive. Perhaps a massive USB storage solution is in the works? My Wii is Full [8BitJoystick] → Read More

June 12th, 2007

WiFi Equipped SD Cards

A company called Eye-Fi is looking to bring WiFi-embedded SD cards to your digital camera. Rather than spending a ton of money on a WiFi-enabled digital camera, you’ll be able to purchase an SD card that can go in almost any digital camera and will allow a WiFi connection from multiple devices. With capacities of up to 2GB, Eye-Fi certainly has a chance of creating a new device the market will jump on. I personally would love to have one of my Casio Exilim cameras WiFi-enabled. Expect to pay $100 for a 2GB model, which is a pretty pricey for an SD card. But remember, you’re getting the joy of WiFi! Eye-fi brings the internet to your camera [BGR] → Read More

May 10th, 2007

Motorola To Unveil 30 FPS Phone, Shooter

Big Daddy over at Motorola Ed Zander said that next week, his company will show off a new phone capable of playing movies at 30 frames per second in very high quality video. Then every American sighed in disappointment as he revealed that the phone would be launching in Europe. Oh well. It’s nice to dream. Zander said that users will be able to load movies onto the phone via SD cards and that the quality of the films will be “unbelievable”. Sucks for us. Eddie also dropped some quirky facts about how 32 cellphones are sold each second, but by then everyone not living in Europe had left the conference room. Motorola To Unveil Phone With 30-Frame Per Second Video; Movies On SD Cards [Barrons] → Read More

March 29th, 2007

Casio Exilim EX-Z75: The Review

For the past year, I’ve spent time with numerous Casio digital cameras. The Exilim series has proven to be an excellent blend of both value and performance. A fantastic camera at a low price if you will. But camera after camera, Casio didn’t really do much to change the design of each model. At one point, the difference between a 10.1-megapixel camera and a 6-megapixel camera was virtually undetectable (well, except for the megapixel thing). But with the release of the EX-Z75, Casio has tried something new. The unit I received has a new design, a bright blue paint job, and a new UI to play with. Has Casio finally taken a step forward? Maybe. Read on to find out the entire story. → Read More

Real-Time
Crunchbase

Media Armor — Received $1.53M in Series A funding from iNovia Capital and Greycroft Partners
2.10.2012
MyAutoZap.com — Company added to CrunchBase
2.12.2012
iNovia Capital — Invested in Media Armor.
2.10.2012
Cidade Internet — Acquired by Populis.
2.1.2012
Jive Software — Went public with stock symbol NASDAQ:JIVE.
2.3.2012
Cidade Internet — Acquired by Populis.
2.1.2012
2.1.2012
2.9.2012
LetsBuy.com — Acquired by Flipkart.
2.9.2012
Cocoafish — Acquired by Appcelerator.
2.9.2012
Media Armor — Received $1.53M in Series A funding from iNovia Capital and Greycroft Partners
2.10.2012
rollApp — Received $243k in Series A funding from TMT Investments
2.7.2012
GCI Com — Received £10M in Unattributed funding from Business Growth Fund
2.9.2012
Stripe — Received $18M in Unattributed funding from Sequoia Capital
2.9.2012
BoardProspects — Received $650k in Seed funding from Mike Verrochi
2.9.2012
iNovia Capital — Invested in Media Armor.
2.10.2012
Greycroft Partners — Invested in Media Armor.
2.10.2012
TMT Investments — Invested in rollApp.
2.7.2012
Business Growth Fund — Invested in GCI Com.
2.9.2012
Sequoia Capital — Invested in Stripe.
2.9.2012
Jive Software — Went public with stock symbol NASDAQ:JIVE.
2.3.2012
MyAutoZap.com — Company added to CrunchBase
2.12.2012
Repairhub — Company added to CrunchBase
2.12.2012
WineMob — Company added to CrunchBase
2.12.2012
Alcoa Inc — Company added to CrunchBase
2.12.2012
Media Strike — Company added to CrunchBase
2.12.2012
2.12.2012
Metier HR - Cloud Based HR Process Automation Suite — Product added to CrunchBase
2.12.2012
TweepsMap — Product added to CrunchBase
2.12.2012
Wupbox account — Product added to CrunchBase
2.11.2012
Pocketbook (Mobile app, coming soon) — Product added to CrunchBase
2.11.2012
CrunchBase