July 15th, 2006

Earthlink Rolls out New Photo and Storage Service

Last week Earthlink released a free online RSS reader, and a social bookmarking site. Recently, word has leaked (Earthlink actually quietly announced this on their blog in June) that a much more ambitious project, called WebLife, is now live as well. WebLife is a combination of two services: photo management and sharing, and online storage/backup. The basic service allows 1 GB of storge and is free to Earthlink ISP customers. Others can access it for $3/month. Additional storage is available for $1 per month per GB. The service requires a 10 MB download. Earthlink customer service confirmed that Weblife has a Mac version of the software, but only a Windows version is available on the site. As an aside, this is absolutely terrible customer service. I had to pay for the service (and agree to a recurring monthly fee) before I could access the download area and see that there is no Mac version. Earthlink customer service is just as horrible as it was in the days that I fought them to terminate my ISP account. God knows how I’ll be able to kill this monthly fee without terminating my credit card. WebLife Photo The service is similar to Google’s new Picasa software, with desktop software for managing and editing photos plus the ability to publish select photos to the web. Now-standard services such as photo printing are also included. WebLife Backup and Weblife Disk WebLife Backup and WebLife Disk are fairly advanced tools for storing data online. The Backup service allows automatic backups of the entire hard drive, select folders or certain file types (MP3, etc.). Files can also optionally be encrypted. The Disk product is a simple online storage tool, similar to many we’ve profiled in the past. Summary My impression is that these are a useful set of services that may appeal to the millions of existing Earthlink customers. The pricing is high relative to some of the online storage competitors and the new standard that was set by Amazon S3, but the tie in to the desktop client for easy photo management and data storage administration is excellent. They need to clean up their customer service train wreck, though, and release a Mac version of the software. → Read More

Real-Time
Crunchbase

Durham Graphene Science — Received £1.2M in Seed funding from IP Group Plc
2.13.2012
OpenLabel — Company added to CrunchBase
2.13.2012
2.13.2012
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
Durham Graphene Science — Received £1.2M in Seed funding from IP Group Plc
2.13.2012
ClevrU — Received $550k in Unattributed funding
2.10.2012
OpenLabel — Received $80k in Seed funding from Peter Kirwan, Tim Drees, and Doug Taylor
2.10.2012
sneakpeeq — Received $2.67M in Unattributed funding from Bain Capital Ventures, Metamorphic Ventures, Keith Rabois, Tim Kendall, Mike Murphy, and Vikas Gupta
2.10.2012
Noble Biomaterials — Received $8M in Series B funding from Northwater Capital, TL Ventures, and DuPont Capital Management
2.10.2012
2.13.2012
Peter Kirwan — Invested in OpenLabel.
2.10.2012
Doug Taylor — Invested in OpenLabel.
2.10.2012
Tim Drees — Invested in OpenLabel.
2.10.2012
Metamorphic Ventures — Invested in sneakpeeq.
2.10.2012
Jive Software — Went public with stock symbol NASDAQ:JIVE.
2.3.2012
OpenLabel — Company added to CrunchBase
2.13.2012
Bookt — Company added to CrunchBase
2.12.2012
Kigo.Net — Company added to CrunchBase
2.12.2012
LiveRez — Company added to CrunchBase
2.12.2012
Preference Digital — 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