The latest from TechCrunch
- 'Small Cell' Maker ip.access Raises $15M From Intel, Qualcomm And Others
- ccLoop Failed To Fix Email, Shuts Down To Re-emerge As Pipewise
- One App Developer's Humorous Take On How To Build A Successful App For iOS
- From The Infinity Ventures Summit In Kyoto/Japan: 13 Demos From Japanese Startups
- Stop Telling Women Not To Do Startups
- Gadgets Week in Review: New Toys
- ADTRAN Buys Nokia Siemens Networks' Fixed Line Broadband Access Business (400 People)
- Social Censorship in India: Much Ado About Nothing
- The $99 TouchPad Sale Overwhelms Ebay As Consumers Snatch Up The Discontinued Tablet
- Sean Parker And Shervin Pishevar At Le Web: "If You Don't Fail, You Haven't Tried Hard Enough" (Video)
- Navarrow Wright: There Is A Diversity Problem In Silicon Valley
- comScore: U.S. Online Holiday Spending Surges 15 Percent To A Record $25 Billion
- Y Combinator Vs TechStars: Whose Companies Are Bringing In More Funding?
- (Founder Stories) Turntable.fm's Billy Chasen On Closing Stickybits: "None Of Us Used The App"
- Google's 3 Top Executives Have 8 Private Jets
- Stop Telling Women To Do Startups
- How Can Local Businesses Avoid The Horror And Structure More Effective Daily Deals?
- Backed By Tandem, UpOut Launches A 'Realtime Yelp' For Spontaneous Local Event Discovery
- Louis CK Sells Latest Film, DRM-Free, For $5 Per Download
- A Modest Proposal For Immigration: The $100,000 Green Card
| 'Small Cell' Maker ip.access Raises $15M From Intel, Qualcomm And Others | Top |
Cambridge, UK-based ip.access, which offers femtocell and picocell solutions to mobile operators worldwide, has raised $15 million in new funding from some of its previous investors. The financing round comes from Intel Capital, Cisco, Qualcomm, Amadeus Capital Partners, Rothschild & Cie Gestion, Scottish Equity Partners and TE Connectivity. | |
| ccLoop Failed To Fix Email, Shuts Down To Re-emerge As Pipewise | Top |
Can ccLoop Rid Us Of Our Collective Email Woes? - I asked in a headline when the startup made its formal debut at TechCrunch Disrupt earlier this year. The answer, sadly, is a resounding no. Founded by serial entrepreneur Michael Wolfe, the company will shutter the service by January 9, 2012, and will henceforth focus on trying to solve user relationship management as Pipewise. | |
| One App Developer's Humorous Take On How To Build A Successful App For iOS | Top |
These days, it seems that everyone wants to be an app developer. Thankfully, technology has lowered the barriers to entry, and young and somewhat old are teaching themselves the basics of coding and app development. Thousands upon thousands of new developers are entering the game, seemingly on a daily basis. Our fertile new app economy gives us inspiring stories like this one, though, of course, it also gives us frustrations like this, and plagiarism problems like this. Over the last three years, app development has come a long way, for better and for worse. Some developers have been there for the whole ride, and have some interesting thoughts to share as a result. Herein one developer has created a flow chart that provides a humorous and somewhat insightful look at the process of building a "successful" iOS app, informed by the "pain" and "joy" of dealing with the bumps along the way. | |
| From The Infinity Ventures Summit In Kyoto/Japan: 13 Demos From Japanese Startups | Top |
| Stop Telling Women Not To Do Startups | Top |
Ever want to punch a blog post in the face? Well, that's how I feel every time I see a headline that attempts to crystallize some universal truth about iffy "in tech" topics like women in tech, African Americans in tech, teens in tech, etc. Because nothing says link bait like "taking on a controversial topic" stupidly using gross generalizations. The latest in this series is a post by Penelope Trunk, who is either a master at extrapolation or seems to have seriously conflated the word "women" with "Penelope Trunk." I remember being a young TechCruncher reading her first post, "Women Don't Want To Run Startups Because They'd Rather Have Children" and thinking, "Wow, this seems deliberate." | |
| Gadgets Week in Review: New Toys | Top |
Here are some highlights from the past week on TechCrunch Gadgets: TechCrunch Gift Guide 2011: Best Toys 2011 Gift Guide: 6 Hot PC Accessories To Keep You And Yours Warm This Holiday New Apple Patent Describes Kinect-Style Control System KOBOT: Japanese Company Shows Transformable, Smartphone-Controlled E-Cars (Video) ZINK Raises $35 Million, Aims To Popularize Ink-Free Printing Roboden: Japanese Company Develops World's First Elastic Electrical Cable (Video) | |
| ADTRAN Buys Nokia Siemens Networks' Fixed Line Broadband Access Business (400 People) | Top |
ADTRAN this morning announced that it is to acquire Nokia Siemens Networks' fixed line Broadband Access business, all associated services and network management solutions, intellectual properties, technologies and the established customer base. Financial terms of the acquisition were not disclosed. The news comes right after Nokia Siemens Networks announced that it would be laying off 17,000 people worldwide before the end of 2013. At the time, the company outlined plans to focus on mobile broadband and services, and that it would be actively divesting, selling or putting in maintenance mode business units that it considers non-core to this new 'strategy'. | |
| Social Censorship in India: Much Ado About Nothing | Top |
Another year, another attack on the Internet. Lately, though, it's not a loose collective of individual hackers sitting in dark rooms trying to wreak havoc. This time, stronger forces and vested interests are stepping into the game. In a matter of a few weeks, the world's most powerful democracy and the world's largest democracy engaged in their own specific battles over the future of how information can be monitored and circulated online. Whereas in the U.S. the fight centers around freedom of expression (through sharing) and copyright, the suggestion made by India's Minister of Communications and Information Technology, Kapil Sabil tugged at the core of self-expression itself, monitoring potentially disruptive comments generated by social media in the name of preserving the peace within an extremely diverse democratic society. | |
| The $99 TouchPad Sale Overwhelms Ebay As Consumers Snatch Up The Discontinued Tablet | Top |
And like that they're gone. $99 TouchPads hit ebay right on schedule and were gone within minutes. But that's to be expected, really. It's not often that a solid piece of hardware like the TouchPad is available for so cheap. And thanks to HP's recent moves, the tablet's operating system, webOS, will be around at least in some capacity for as long as there's a demand (and developers). The sale started at 7pm EST on HP's ebay store like the memo we leaked indicated. Both the 16GB and 32GB models were available for $99 and $149, respectively. I watched the 16GB model disappear from ebay within 10 minutes. As of this post's writing, 2 hours after the sale began, only one SKU of the $150 32GB TouchPads are still available although those will likely be gone soon as well. But good luck as ebay is still flaky hours after the sale started. Twitter and forums sites quickly relayed the troubles of many buyers shortly after 7. Ebay was crashing. PayPal was lagging. The whole thing was a mess. For a short moment in time, HP's tablet was anything but an unwanted iPad clone. | |
| Sean Parker And Shervin Pishevar At Le Web: "If You Don't Fail, You Haven't Tried Hard Enough" (Video) | Top |
| Last week at Le Web, Alexia interviewed Sean Parker and Shervin Pishevar onstage in what turned out to be one of the most-buzzed about sessions. Here is the full video for your weekend watching pleasure. It's a great discussion that ranges across the state of startups, venture capital, music, and politics . Parker bemoans the surplus of venture capital for its effect of diluting the talent in the tech industry, a point he's made before. "It prevents the aggregation of talent around great ideas," he says. He emphasizes the need for a great team from the get-go. "People are the greatest asset class," Pishevar agrees. The conversation quickly turns to Gowalla, which recently was acquired by Facebook, and why it failed to take on Foursquare. "If you don't fail, you haven't tried hard enough," says Pishevar. | |
| Navarrow Wright: There Is A Diversity Problem In Silicon Valley | Top |
| Navarrow Wright, the co-founder of Global Grind and current CTO of InteractIve One, which operates BlackPlanet.com and other sites, came into the TCTV studio to have "the race conversation" with me. "It is a meritocracy at some level," Wright acknowledges. "I think the challenge is how do you get involved in that ecosystem." One of the biggest barriers for black tech entrepreneurs is a "perception problem in the minority community," says Wright, that "it is easier to become a celebrity or athlete than an entrepreneur." Watch the video. | |
| comScore: U.S. Online Holiday Spending Surges 15 Percent To A Record $25 Billion | Top |
comScore just released its U.S. online holiday spending numbers for the season to-date, and as predicted, consumers continued to spend online in record amounts. For the first 39 days of the November to December 2011 holiday season, $24.6 billion has been spent online, which is a 15 percent increase compared to the same days last year. The most recent week ending Dec. 9 reached $5.9 billion in spending, up 15 percent with 3 days surpassing $1 billion in spending. For the holiday season-to-date, six individual days have surpassed the billion dollar threshold, led by Cyber Monday at $1.25 billion. | |
| Y Combinator Vs TechStars: Whose Companies Are Bringing In More Funding? | Top |
[Here's a look at how startups backed by Y Combinator or TechStars compare in terms of funding, based on the data available in CrunchBase. It's written by Edmar Ferreira, a data scientist and founder of a data analysis startup called EverWrite. He writes about making data work on makeandthink.com.] Y Combinator and TechStars are two of the first seed-stage venture funds, and they've each had some successful companies. But how can we analyze how they're doing so far? One way is acquisitions, but there's not always complete information about who sold or for how much (and anyway, most of them haven't sold yet). Another metric would be valuations -- are companies becoming more valuable over time? -- but we also don't have good access to that. What we can do is look at the amount of money raised by the companies that participated in these programs. This is not a perfect metric of success, but it's an interesting enough signal because most of these companies need funding during their early stages as they build their products and find markets. If they are making enough progress, investors will put in more money. | |
| (Founder Stories) Turntable.fm's Billy Chasen On Closing Stickybits: "None Of Us Used The App" | Top |
When we first invited Billy Chasen to join us on Founder Stories he was working hard to make his startup, Stickybits a success. Turns out it never took off. But like many founders, Chasen bounced back and found better luck elsewhere. In this case it's with Turntable.fm - a platform where people play DJ online and share music with others in virtual rooms. Having recently raised $7-million from investors that include Union Square Ventures and First Round Capital, we thought it would be interesting to catch-up with Chasen and hear how it all went down. | |
| Google's 3 Top Executives Have 8 Private Jets | Top |
A surprising piece of news was buried in an article this week. Friday, The Mercury News reported the three top executives at Google, Larry Page, Sergey Brin and Eric Schmidt, are offering to pay $33 million to finish the restoration of the historic airship hangar at Moffett Field. The giant structure, built in the 1930s and called Hangar One, sits a few miles from the Googleplex and it's well known the Google executives have special permission from NASA to park their jets at Moffett. | |
| Stop Telling Women To Do Startups | Top |
We need to get more guys who are running tech startups instead decide to be stay-at-home dads. What do you think of that? Stupid, right? That's what it sounds like when anyone suggests that we need to get more women doing startups. If you are worried that women don't feel capable of doing whatever they want, you can stop worrying. Women outperform men in school at such a huge rate that it's easier to get into college as a male than a female. And women take that to the bank by earning more than men in their 20s. Women would probably continue out-earning men except that when men and women have kids, women choose to downshift way more often than men do. | |
| How Can Local Businesses Avoid The Horror And Structure More Effective Daily Deals? | Top |
Couponing has been around forever, but the popularity of digital offers, daily deals, and group buying is fairly new. We've gone through the honeymoon period, watched the meteoric rise of Groupon, its overvaluation, IPO -- and thankfully, through it all, we've seen increasing scrutiny on the space, especially over just how profitable daily deals actually are for local businesses. The debate has raged over the daily deal model's clever repackaging of old ideas and just how valuable the Groupon model is as an advertising mechanism for local merchants. Rocky was probably a little overzealous in saying that Groupon is poised for collapse, but there is no doubt that there are holes in its business model, just as there is no doubt that there are upsides to the model as a whole, both as an advertising channel and a tool for customer acquisition and retention. | |
| Backed By Tandem, UpOut Launches A 'Realtime Yelp' For Spontaneous Local Event Discovery | Top |
This summer, Tandem Entrepreneurs raised a $40 million fund to continue investing in its incubator and capital fund, both focused exclusively on startups building solutions for the mobile space. One of the four companies (which includes JungleApps, GimmieWorld, and Flit) funded in Tandem's most recent batch is coming out of private beta today to get young people off the couch and into the fray. UpOut, as its name implies, is an online event discovery service that wants to get you involved in fun activities that are happening right now, in realtime. Founded by two young Babson College entrepreneurs, Martin Shen and William King, UpOut is intending to do for local events what Yelp has done for the local restaurant market, showing what's nearby, what's inexpensive, and what people like you are recommending. | |
| Louis CK Sells Latest Film, DRM-Free, For $5 Per Download | Top |
Following Radiohead into the wild world of micropayments, comedian Louis CK is offering his latest concert film, Live At The Beacon Theatre, as a DRM-free download or stream for $5. Once payment is tendered, downloaders can both stream and download the movie twice. Once those four chances are used up you have to pay again, although because the MP4 file is DRM-free there is nothing stopping you from watching again and again, projecting it on a building across the street, or making a tiny flip book of Louis CK excerpts. However, Louis does ask that you not "torrent" his film: | |
| A Modest Proposal For Immigration: The $100,000 Green Card | Top |
Permanent residence in the USA is a valuable asset that is enjoyed by most of you reading this article. Many potential immigrants from around the world want to acquire that asset and become valuable members of American society alongside us. Why don't we let more of them join us? There are two common objections: they will drive down wages, or they will be a drain on tax-funded programs. Some existing immigration paths, like the H1B visa-to-green card route, are based on the idea that for some immigrants, the benefits will outweigh these potential costs. But the H1B path is a bureaucratic nightmare. Small startups don't even bother with it. And for the immigrant, the H1B path puts them in the awkward position of having their visa status tied to their job until their green card is approved. You think having to leave your health insurance plan when you lose your job is bad? Try having to leave the country. | |
CREATE MORE ALERTS:
Auctions - Find out when new auctions are posted
Horoscopes - Receive your daily horoscope
Music - Get the newest Album Releases, Playlists and more
News - Only the news you want, delivered!
Stocks - Stay connected to the market with price quotes and more
Weather - Get today's weather conditions
| You received this email because you subscribed to Yahoo! Alerts. Use this link to unsubscribe from this alert. To change your communications preferences for other Yahoo! business lines, please visit your Marketing Preferences. To learn more about Yahoo!'s use of personal information, including the use of web beacons in HTML-based email, please read our Privacy Policy. Yahoo! is located at 701 First Avenue, Sunnyvale, CA 94089. |
Cambridge, UK-based
Can
These days, it seems that everyone wants to be an app developer. Thankfully, technology has lowered the barriers to entry, and young and somewhat old are teaching themselves the basics of coding and app development. Thousands upon thousands of new developers are entering the game, seemingly on a daily basis. Our fertile new app economy gives us inspiring
Ever want to punch a blog post in the face? Well, that's how I feel every time I see a headline that attempts to crystallize some universal truth about iffy "in tech" topics like women in tech, African Americans in tech, teens in tech, etc. Because nothing says link bait like "taking on a controversial topic" stupidly using gross generalizations. The latest in this series is
Here are some highlights from the past week on TechCrunch Gadgets: TechCrunch Gift Guide 2011: Best Toys 2011 Gift Guide: 6 Hot PC Accessories To Keep You And Yours Warm This Holiday New Apple Patent Describes Kinect-Style Control System KOBOT: Japanese Company Shows Transformable, Smartphone-Controlled E-Cars (Video) ZINK Raises $35 Million, Aims To Popularize Ink-Free Printing Roboden: Japanese Company Develops World's First Elastic Electrical Cable (Video)
Another year, another attack on the Internet. Lately, though, it's not a loose collective of individual hackers sitting in dark rooms trying to wreak havoc. This time, stronger forces and vested interests are stepping into the game. In a matter of a few weeks, the world's most powerful democracy and the world's largest democracy engaged in their own specific battles over the future of how information can be monitored and circulated online. Whereas in the U.S. the fight centers around freedom of expression (through sharing) and copyright, the suggestion made by India's Minister of Communications and Information Technology,
And like that they're gone. $99 TouchPads hit ebay right on schedule and were gone within minutes. But that's to be expected, really. It's not often that a solid piece of hardware like the TouchPad is available for so cheap. And thanks to
comScore just
[Here's a look at how startups backed by Y Combinator or TechStars compare in terms of funding, based on the data available in CrunchBase. It's written by Edmar Ferreira, a data scientist and founder of a data analysis startup called
When we first invited
A surprising piece of news was buried in an article this week. Friday,
We need to get more guys who are running tech startups instead decide to be stay-at-home dads. What do you think of that? Stupid, right? That's what it sounds like when anyone suggests that we need to get more women doing startups. If you are worried that women don't feel capable of doing whatever they want, you can stop worrying. Women outperform men in school at such a huge rate that it's easier to get into college as a male than a female. And women take that to the bank by
Couponing has been around forever, but the popularity of digital offers, daily deals, and group buying is fairly new. We've gone through the honeymoon period, watched the meteoric rise of Groupon, its overvaluation, IPO -- and thankfully, through it all, we've seen increasing scrutiny on the space, especially over just how profitable daily deals actually are for local businesses. The debate has raged over the daily deal model's clever repackaging of old ideas and just how valuable the Groupon model is as an advertising mechanism for local merchants. Rocky was probably a little overzealous in saying that
This summer,
Following
Permanent residence in the USA is a valuable asset that is enjoyed by most of you reading this article. Many potential immigrants from around the world want to acquire that asset and become valuable members of American society alongside us. Why don't we let more of them join us? There are two common objections: they will drive down wages, or they will be a drain on tax-funded programs. Some existing immigration paths, like the H1B visa-to-green card route, are based on the idea that for some immigrants, the benefits will outweigh these potential costs. But the H1B path is a bureaucratic nightmare. Small startups don't even bother with it. And for the immigrant, the H1B path puts them in the awkward position of having their visa status tied to their job until their green card is approved. You think having to leave your health insurance plan when you lose your job is bad? Try having to leave the country.
No comments:
Post a Comment