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	<title>TechCrunch &#187; SimpleStar</title>
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		<title>PhotoShow Goes Social With New Version</title>
		<link>http://techcrunch.com/2007/02/18/photoshow-goes-social-with-new-version/</link>
		<comments>http://techcrunch.com/2007/02/18/photoshow-goes-social-with-new-version/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 18 Feb 2007 18:43:00 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[TC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[PhotoShow]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SimpleStar]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The company SimpleStar released a new version of its PhotoShow product Friday and brought the popular photo and video sharing service up to speed with a number of developments pioneered by early adopters you&#8217;re more likely to have read about here on TechCrunch.  The service now supports the social sharing and online categorization that&#8217;s typical of other media sharing services; the change is comparable to what Yahoo! Photos did last summer when it changed for a largely private service into a much more Flickr inspired phenomenon. Photoshow combines sharing online with a desktop application for managing your media. The most notable thing about SimpleStar, though, is the company&#8217;s incredible acumen in business development.    The company reports an amazing 20,000 new installations of its desktop software every day, thanks to partnerships with companies like Comcast, Walgreen&#8217;s and Wolf Camera.  SimpleStar received $6 million in funding from Venrock a year and a half ago. There&#8217;s a certain flavor to PhotoShow, consisting of the product&#8217;s price point ($40), Windows-only desktop application, being in bed with big cable companies and ISPs and the photos of software in a cardboard box all over its website despite being available primarily by download.  That particular flavor makes me want to turn my snobbish Web 2.0 nose up at the company &#8211; but the fact of the matter is, they know how do get the job done.   PhotoShow monetizes the initial product, an inexplicable upgrade for $20 that apparently consists of a number of graphic themes for your photos (&#8220;Kids, Love and Patriotic Theme Packs&#8221; etc.), DVDs of your media and anything else it can think to charge users for.   SimpleStar says its PhotoShow service appeals not to early adopters but the the last 2/3 of the adoption curve.  It appears to be successful so far in reaching out to that market; though Alexa does indicate that the humble Photoblog.com gets 4 times as much traffic as PhotoShow.com &#8211; that&#8217;s probably less relevant because of PhotoShow&#8217;s reliance on desktop software.   I personally find the service patronizing and obnoxious, but perhaps that says more about me than it does PhotoShow.  There&#8217;s no doubt that the company deserves recognition for its large partnerships and decision to add more social features to the service with this newest upgrade.  It may be a prime example of the strategy many people recommend &#8211; focus on making money, let the early adopters take the biggest risks and implement what sticks]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.photoshow.com"></a>The company <a href="http://www.simplestar.com">SimpleStar</a> released a new version of its <a href="http://photoshow.com">PhotoShow</a> product Friday and brought the popular photo and video sharing service up to speed with a number of developments pioneered by early adopters you&#8217;re more likely to have read about here on TechCrunch.  The service now supports the social sharing and online categorization that&#8217;s typical of other media sharing services; the change is comparable to <a href="http://www.techcrunch.com/2006/08/17/yahoo-photos-to-leave-beta-today-api-finally-coming/">what Yahoo! Photos did last summer</a> when it changed for a largely private service into a much more Flickr inspired phenomenon.  Photoshow combines sharing online with a desktop application for managing your media.</p>
<p>The most notable thing about SimpleStar, though, is the company&#8217;s incredible acumen in business development.    The company reports an amazing 20,000 new installations of its desktop software every day, thanks to partnerships with companies like Comcast, Walgreen&#8217;s and Wolf Camera.   SimpleStar received $6 million in funding from Venrock a year and a half ago.</p>
<p>There&#8217;s a certain flavor to PhotoShow, consisting of the product&#8217;s price point ($40), Windows-only desktop application, being in bed with big cable companies and ISPs and the photos of software in a cardboard box all over its website despite being available primarily by download.  That particular flavor makes me want to turn my snobbish Web 2.0 nose up at the company &#8211; but the fact of the matter is, they know how do get the job done.  </p>
<p>PhotoShow monetizes the initial product, an inexplicable upgrade for $20 that apparently consists of a number of graphic themes for your photos (&#8220;Kids, Love and Patriotic Theme Packs&#8221; etc.), DVDs of your media and anything else it can think to charge users for.  </p>
<p>SimpleStar says its PhotoShow service appeals not to early adopters but the the last 2/3 of the adoption curve.  It appears to be successful so far in reaching out to that market; though Alexa does indicate that the humble Photoblog.com gets 4 times as much traffic as PhotoShow.com &#8211; that&#8217;s probably less relevant because of PhotoShow&#8217;s reliance on desktop software.  </p>
<p>I personally find the service patronizing and obnoxious, but perhaps that says more about me than it does PhotoShow.  There&#8217;s no doubt that the company deserves recognition for its large partnerships and decision to add more social features to the service with this newest upgrade.  It may be a prime example of the strategy many people recommend &#8211; focus on making money, let the early adopters take the biggest risks and implement what sticks with the market later.</p>
<p><em>Marshall Kirkpatrick is the Director of Content at <a href="http://splashcastmedia.com">SplashCast</a> and will be assisting with TechCrunch while Michael Arrington travels.</em></p>
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