Facebook Ecosystem CrunchUp & August Capital Party, Aug 3rd in Silicon Valley. Tickets on sale.
posted 26 mins ago

Steve Would Be Proud: How Apple Won The War Against Flash

steve-jobs-ipad

Late Thursday, an extraordinary thing happened: Adobe announced in a blog post that it would not provide Flash Player support for devices running Android 4.1, and that it was pulling the plugin from the Google Play store on August 15. The retreat comes five years after the introduction of the iPhone, the device which led to Flash’s mobile ambitions, almost even before they began.

That Adobe would make such an announcement nearly five years to the day that the first iPhone was sold is kind of funny. I’d like to think that the Flash team has a sense of humor and was well aware of the timing when it posted the blog entry, but I could also see the entry as unintentionally ironic. Either way, it caps off a five-year battle to win the mobile landscape — one which for Adobe ended in defeat. → Read More

posted 2 hours ago

Where Are All The iPad Shopping Apps?

gilt

For a tech company founder in San Francisco, I’m a terribly late adopter of new technology. My buddy in med school had a smart phone before I did. The iPhone was out for a year before I bought the 3G. The iPad? I’m embarrassed to admit, I got my first one a month ago.

I held out on the iPad because I didn’t get it. It didn’t have retina display, and comparing the screen after looking at the iPhone 4, it just seemed… pixelated. My friends who had the original version bought them as a novelty, which quickly seemed to wear off. I didn’t know what I would do with one once I had one.

So, when I finally buckled and got the iPad 3, I came to the realization that the rest of the world had over 2 years ago: the iPad is an amazing consumption device. You don’t need a keyboard, because if you’re doing any work at all it will be to send iPhone length one-liner emails. Most of what you’ll be doing on the iPad is playing games, watching videos and shopping. → Read More

Sponsored Ads

posted 4 hours ago

NFC Is Great, But Mobile Payments Solve A Problem That Doesn’t Exist

Screen shot 2012-06-30 at 1.52.37 PM

For the past few years, we’ve been told over and over again that NFC will eventually replace the common wallet. And yes, NFC is a great technology. Parts of Europe and China are using it for public transport transactions, and the sharing of content between devices is incredibly cool (just check out this commercial). And moreover, the ability to ditch all of your loyalty cards and combine them in one place (potentially) PassBook-style would be highly convenient. But where mobile payments are concerned, there is no problem to be solved. → Read More

posted 5 hours ago

#waywire, Cory Booker’s Personalized News Startup, Uses Video To Give Youth A Voice

Waywire Cory Booker

“There’s an oligarchy in the media and that needs to be broken up” Newark, NJ mayor Cory Booker tells me. So he’s building #waywire, a news site that features original and syndicated video content, but that also lets viewers record and share their responses.

“Traditional news sources aren’t in any way talking to millennials” Booker says, so #waywire is designed to deliver them content from their perspective. It’s now taking registrations for its upcoming private beta.

#waywire’s got big name investors including Eric Schmidt and Oprah, some serious digital expertise, and a mission to disrupt both traditional news outlets and the social networks that surface them. → Read More

posted 6 hours ago

HackerRank: A Social Site For Hackers, Complete With Challenging Launch Page

hackerrank

If you’re a startup aficionado, you may be getting tired of the same old launch pages. You know, the ones with a big, splashy image, a message about how something awesome is coming soon, and a box where you can enter your email address. If that’s the case, then you’ll probably get a kick out of the sign-up process at HackerRank.

The team behind the site plans to start sending out beta invites next week for “a fun social platform for hackers to solve interesting puzzles, build quick hacks, code game bots and collaborate to solve real-world challenges.” In the meantime, it’s doing something a little different with the launch page — the page features an interactive terminal, where, yes, you enter your name and email address, but then you’re invited to participate in a sample challenge, facing off with the computer in a candy-grabbing game. → Read More

posted 8 hours ago

Could Instagram And Other Sites Avoid Going Down With Amazon’s Ship?

ship storm

When we heard about Instagram (and other sites) going down when Amazon Web Services’ North Virginia hub was hit by a storm — not the first time AWS has gone down (April 2011 was another notable outage) we couldn’t help but wonder: could  it have been avoided?

Mike Krieger, one of the founders of Instagram, once presented a great slideshow describing how Instagram was able to scale up so well. “The cleanest solution with the fewest moving parts as possible,” has been one of the guiding principles for the photo-sharing app, bought by Facebook in a billion-dollar deal earlier this year. Could that too-simple architecture have played a role here?

We’ve reached out to Twitterverse and beyond to get some thoughts on that.
→ Read More

posted 8 hours ago

So What Do I Do With My Food Now? Eat It? [Instagram Is Still Down, Bad Jokes On Twitter Ensue]

Screen shot 2012-06-30 at 17.52.12

Oh yes, the social media food humor is rolling in — eat it up, people. According to Twitter’s real-time search, Instagram being down, as a result of an Amazon Web Services storm-related incident, is unleashing a cornucopia of Instagram-related food jokes, at a rate of about one every couple of seconds.

They’re a little cheesy (sorry!) but do underscore just how much the photo-sharing app is used (or, least how much it’s used by the kind of folks who also take to Twitter when they have an issue with the world). And how much it’s become a part of life’s everyday small events, perhaps more than any other social media app.
→ Read More

posted 8 hours ago

Gillmor Gang: Over the Freaky Line

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The Gillmor Gang — Robert Scoble, Kevin Marks, Keith Teare, John Taschek, and Steve Gillmor — watched in amazement and not a little fear as Mike Arrington baited @Scobleizer from the Friendfeed chatroom. What started as a Mr. Greenjeans-like pulling of various Google I/O tablets and weird music balls from out of his pants suddenly went south in a hurry when @jtaschek noticed Arrington in the chat.

Normally we don’t call this out, but Robert’s Rant starts at somewhere around the 36 minute mark. Arrington wanted us to make him a clip and a ringtone out of this, but it’s late and I barely have enough energy to write this. Maybe tomorrow. Feel free to download the file on iTunes and cut Mike a version. Enjoy at your peril: Not safe for work or anything else for that matter. → Read More

Sponsored Ads

posted 10 hours ago

A Framework For The $10B+ Native Advertising Market

Cowboybebop_snapshot_luckys

Over the past ten years, publishers have continued to monetize their sites with banners and pre-roll ads, and advertisers have continued to pump billions into these formats, in spite of tanking performance and near- universal disdain. While click-through rates on display ads started out at around 9% in 2000, they now hover around 0.2% – which means 99.8% of banner ads are completely ignored. Meanwhile, led by YouTube and Hulu, the pre-roll ad market is only shifting in one direction: towards “skippable prerolls,” not forced interruption. And preroll skip rates are only moving in one direction (hint: when you give users the ability to skip annoying ads, they usually do). → Read More

posted 12 hours ago

Whither, Hollywood, Wither?

the_player_poster

Last week I wrote about television; this week I’ve been thinking about Hollywood. Not least because a screenwriter with a pretty good track record recently attached himself to my squirrel book1 and is hoping to adapt it into a big animated movie. But it often takes five years or more to go from script to screen, so I can’t help wondering–will Hollywood as we know it still be around by then?

Internet hero Cory Doctorow doesn’t think so. A few years ago he wrote an essay predicting the death of big-budget movies: “The specific, rarefied animal that is the gigantic film spectacle demands a technological reality that has ceased to exist: just enough technology to distribute the films everywhere, but not so much technology that the audience gets to overrule your distribution decisions.”

So far, perhaps surprisingly, he’s been dead wrong. Theater attendance is down 20% in the USA over the last decade, but actual box-office income is flat, thanks to higher ticket prices. Home-entertainment spending–DVDs, rentals, Netflix, etc–is overall down almost 30% in constant dollars since 2005, but that’s counteracted by the huge rise in ‘foreign’ box office over the same period. Hollywood seems to be fighting the Internet to a standstill.

But does anyone out there really think that can last? → Read More

posted 18 hours ago

There Goes The Weekend! Pinterest, Instagram And Netflix Down Due To AWS Outage [Updated]

photo

Are you out at a Friday night dinner somewhere, trying to take a filtered picture of some fancypants dessert and post it to Instagram to no avail? Are you currently making futile efforts to pin said dessert to your “Fancy Dessert” board on Pinterest but failing?

Well you’re out of luck, digital hipsters! Because of storms in North Virginia, power outages have impaired Amazon Web Services data centers in the region tonight, which means no Pinterest, Instagram, Netflix, Heroku and other sundry AWS-dependent services for you.
→ Read More

posted 18 hours ago

Why Students Should Gain Entrepreneurship Experience Before Graduating

Animal House

More and more students are realizing that they can’t pass their degree in for a job upon graduation anymore. The old promise made by our education system was that if you worked really hard in school, you would be almost guaranteed a job as a reward for your efforts. Furthermore, corporations used to hire most of their interns into full-time positions. Both of these promises have been broken due to economic constraints and global competition. Based on a recent report by my company, we found that employers expect students to have at least one internship, yet only half of them are bringing on new interns and few have hired them into full-time positions. The normal path to growing your career is non-existent. In today’s world, you can’t rely on anything or anyone to make you successful – you have to be accountable for your own career and create your own path.
→ Read More

posted yesterday

Twitter’s All Like “We Don’t Need You LinkedIn,” But Still Bends Over Backwards For Facebook

Screen shot 2012-06-29 at 6.21.38 PM

Nothing is more fascinating than the tech platform API wars because they are so, so similar to high school, once a company feels it’s too cool for another company, it starts shutting off parts of its API to that company, like what happened here with Facebook and Google. It’s basically one of those big, swinging dick types of things, that I, as a female, don’t entirely understand. → Read More

posted yesterday

Unmetric Scores The Virality Of Brands’ YouTube Campaigns

unmetric logo

Social benchmarking startup Unmetric just expanded its tools to include YouTube, giving brands a new way to measure the effectiveness of their video campaigns.

Of course, companies can already see plenty of stats about their videos — views, likes, and more. But Unmetric tries to synthesize all that data into a single score, and then shows how that score stacks up against competitors. → Read More

posted yesterday

Alexia’s Headphones: How We Used CrowdTilt’s Group-Funding Platform To Replace Stolen Property

Screen shot 2012-06-29 at 9.51.53 AM

On the 25th of June, our dearest Alexia Tsotsis had an incredibly rough day.

First, her car was looted by very bad people in San Francisco, who stole her laptop and a pair of excellent Bose headphones that were near and dear to her heart. And as if that wasn’t enough, her car then got smashed by someone running a red light, totaling her vehicle and leaving her in quite a bit of pain.

When fellow TechCrunch sharks heard the news, we knew we had to do something to help out one of our fearless leaders, and so our very own Ryan Lawler stepped up to the plate with a suggestion to buy some new headphones for Alexia. “Knowing that we can’t replace the sentimental value, I was thinking we could maybe (at least) help replace the item that was taken.”

After a little back and forth, the team settled on an app to help us accomplish the task at hand (we at TC need an app for everything), and that’s where CrowdTilt enters the mix. → Read More

posted yesterday

Paul Oakenfold On The Intersection Of Technology And Music [TCTV]

Paul Oakenfold, the world-renowned electronic music producer and DJ, has seen a lot of change in the industry since his career began more than 25 years ago. And perhaps the biggest shifts have come from technology — from the way music is made, to how it’s distributed, to where and how people listen to it, to how artists become known and signed to labels, to the tools DJs use in clubs to spin records.

So it was really amazing to have Oakenfold swing by the TechCrunch TV studios while he was in San Francisco this week… → Read More

posted yesterday

TechCrunch Giveaway: Another Free Ticket To Disrupt SF! #TCDisrupt

disrupt_sf_2012_logo

TechCrunch Disrupt SF is back and everything is shaping up nicely behind the scenes. Actually, I was in a Disrupt meeting all day and that’s why this post is going out so late. So, you will have an extra day to enter. Congratulations to last week’s winner, Samer Karam. We asked everyone who entered to tell us who they would like to see at Disrupt, and Samer’s choice was Instagram’s Kevin Systrom. We’ve reached out and will let you know. Also, remember to keep your eyes out for announcement posts; we have some exciting news about Disrupt SF coming up. → Read More

posted yesterday

Fashion-Focused Blog Aggregator Bloglovin Raises $1M From Betaworks And Others

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Bloglovin, a startup that has been compared to Tumblr and RSS, has just raised a $1 million Series A.

The company bills itself as a fun, simple way to follow all the fashion blogs that interest you. Like RSS, you can sign up to read updates from any blog (not just the ones on a single platform or content management system), and like Tumblr, there’s an emphasis on high-quality visuals and community. Bloglovin even held a fashion awards ceremony in New York earlier this year. → Read More

posted yesterday

Facebook’s First Public Earnings, Q2 2012, Scheduled For July 26th

Screen shot 2012-06-29 at 2.05.53 PM

Facebook will give investors and the world their first official look at its post-IPO earning for Q2 2012 at 2pm PST on July 26th, according to a brief note posted to its investor relations page just now. There’s been no indication of whether CEO Mark Zuckerberg will participate in an earnings call or if more business focused execs COO Sheryl Sandberg and CFO David Ebersman will be the ones fielding questions.

The company pulled in $1.058 billion in Q1 2012 revenue with a net income of $205 million. Critics will want to see both of those increase and will likely focus on its mobile revenue. Facebook only began showing ads on mobile at the end of February, but monetizing the medium is believed to be the linchpin of Facebook’s future success. → Read More

posted yesterday

AgLocal Raises $1 Million From Andreessen Horowitz & Others To Enable Sustainable Meat Production

aglocal

AgLocal, a startup that’s using the power of the Internet to disrupt how animal farmers connect with meat buyers and distributors, has just scored $1 million in funding from Andreessen Horowitz, Midwest VC firm OpenAir Equity Partners and other angels including John Fohr (Partner at Lux Capital), Thad Langford (former CEO of Zave Networks), Dan Carroll (founder of Leap2 and AdPredictive), Andy O’Hara (Partner at Tradebot Ventures), and Matt Watson (Founder of Vin Solutions and Stackify).

The additional funding will help the company build out its technology platform, hire additional engineers, and establish relationships with potential partners in advance of its late summer/fall launch planned for later this year. → Read More

Real-Time
Crunchbase

Craftsvilla — Received $1.5M in Series A funding from Lightspeed Venture Partners and Nexus Venture Partners
6.29.2012
Lead I.T. Consulting — Company added to CrunchBase
6.29.2012
6.29.2012
Stone Crossing Solutions — Acquired by Level7 for $12M.
8.1.2012
Stone Crossing Solutions — Acquired by Level7 for $12M.
8.1.2012
Derivix — Acquired by FlexTrade Systems.
6.28.2012
NEPTCO — Acquired by Chase Corporation.
6.27.2012
MediaConcepts — Acquired by Catalyst.
6.27.2012
FuseSource — Acquired by Red Hat.
6.27.2012
Craftsvilla — Received $1.5M in Series A funding from Lightspeed Venture Partners and Nexus Venture Partners
6.29.2012
Next Step Living — Received $3.2M in Unattributed funding
6.29.2012
Awareness — Received $2M in Unattributed funding
6.29.2012
NanoViricides — Received $5M in Unattributed funding from Seaside 88
6.29.2012
IlluminOss Medical — Received $1.4M in Debt funding
6.29.2012
6.29.2012
6.29.2012
Seaside 88 — Invested in NanoViricides.
6.29.2012
OPENAIR Equity Partners — Invested in AgLocal.
6.29.2012
Andreessen Horowitz — Invested in AgLocal.
6.29.2012
Lead I.T. Consulting — Company added to CrunchBase
6.29.2012
LedgerPal Inc. — Company added to CrunchBase
6.29.2012
PlusClouds — Company added to CrunchBase
6.29.2012
Datanyze — Company added to CrunchBase
6.29.2012
SIP, Stevens Interactive Productions — Company added to CrunchBase
6.29.2012
Retirement Plan Advice — Product added to CrunchBase
6.29.2012
LoveBucks — Product added to CrunchBase
6.29.2012
Kazoo — Product added to CrunchBase
6.29.2012
Fever — Product added to CrunchBase
6.29.2012
Property Tax Appeal Report — Product added to CrunchBase
6.29.2012
CrunchBase