The latest from TechCrunch
- Sony Shares Holiday Sales Numbers For The PlayStation
- Daily Crunch: Showtime
- Former Facebook Engineer Impressively Logs A Bunch Of Facebook Bugs
- Takeaway.com Picks Up €13 Million In Funding
- Formspring Hits 4 Billion Answers; Transforms Into Content Curator With "Smile Sort"
- Basis Unveils Web Interface For Sensor-Laden Fitness Band
- Ready For More On-The-Fly Fun? We're Live At The Pre-CES Press Event, Pepcom
- The $60 Ooma HD2 Uses Facebook, Google And Yahoo For Picture Caller-ID
- Eyes On: The Tagg Pet Tracker
- TaskRabbit Acquires Service Provider Directory SkillSlate
- Eyes On: The Delightfully Retro Samsung DA-E75 Speaker Dock
- Kinect Comes To Windows On February 1st
- Microsoft Brings In The Tweet Choir To Soulify Its Last Keynote
- Microsoft's "Picture Password": A Breath Of Fresh Air On The Lock Screen, Of All Places
- Intuit GoPayment Goes International With Canada Launch; Redesigns Mobile Credit Card Reader
- MOG Partners With JVC & Aha, Is Coming To Subaru Vehicles
- The Surprising Path Of Artificial Intelligence
- Sony Keeps Concepts Alive At CES 2012
- Exclusive: ThreatMetrix Acquires TrustDefender To Protect Cloud From Fraud
- The Lenovo Yoga Twists And Turns For Some Win8 Hotness
| Sony Shares Holiday Sales Numbers For The PlayStation | Top |
Sony Computer Entertainment reported some solid sales numbers for its various PlayStation systems for the past holiday season today. Sony says that they moved a total of 6.5 million PlayStation 2/3/PSP/Vita units worldwide (Sony defines "holiday season" as between November 21 and January 5 in Asia, November 21 through December 31 in America, and November 18 through December 31 in Europe). | |
| Daily Crunch: Showtime | Top |
Here are some highlights from yesterday’s post on TechCrunch Gadgets: Live Coverage of CES 2012 Eyes On: The Delightfully Retro Samsung DA-E75 Speaker Dock New Pocket Projectors From 3M Pump Up The Lumens MakerBot Announces Their Latest 3D Printer, The Replicator Vizio Breaks Into PC Market With Five New Models Monster Wins CES With Feathers And Spikes | |
| Former Facebook Engineer Impressively Logs A Bunch Of Facebook Bugs | Top |
About two weeks ago, I couldn't update my status on Facebook, like it just wouldn't let me, showing me "Invalid Request" error messages even though my requests are totally valid DAMMIT. And then just like that the fail stopped and I could update, inexplicably. In my humble experience, I've come across so many Facebook bugs I've given up on getting frustrated and now just hope they'll eventually go away. I regularly just straight up don't receive Messages and can we just talk about how the Like button just doesn't work. Can we? | |
| Takeaway.com Picks Up €13 Million In Funding | Top |
Some interesting news from The Netherlands: online food ordering and delivery service Takeaway.com has been delivered 13 million euros - roughly $16.6 million - by Dutch VC Prime Ventures. With the additional capital, the Dutch company behind the food ordering service aims to continue its international expansion, after starting local websites in a number of European countries (including Belgium, Austria, the UK and Germany). | |
| Formspring Hits 4 Billion Answers; Transforms Into Content Curator With "Smile Sort" | Top |
As Sarah wrote in November, social Q&A service Formspring has been making an effort to slowly build out the connections between its users by offering "who made you smile" and "who you responded to" categories to user profiles, but it is also going up against Facebook by becoming a "network built around users' interests." Of course, the site has to contend with the billions of "Likes" accumulated on Facebook, which compose its own interest graph, and it has done so with "Smiles," Formspring's equivalent of "Likes." Today, the service is adding another feature to its functionality, a tool called "Smile Sort" that aims to transform the service into a content curator. | |
| Basis Unveils Web Interface For Sensor-Laden Fitness Band | Top |
The makers of the Basis fitness band were at Pepcom's Digital Experience event showing off their namesake accessory, but that's not all that they wanted to reveal. They also demoed their new web interface, which is meant to take all of data the Basis can collect and it turn into a meaningful way for users to track their activity levels. | |
| Ready For More On-The-Fly Fun? We're Live At The Pre-CES Press Event, Pepcom | Top |
| After a day full of press conferences and jamming around Vegas like we were running for our lives, we're streaming live from the last pre-CES press gathering of the year: Pepcom. I'm not sure how much longer we'll be on the air (we've already been roaming for quite a while), but tune in for a quick sneak peek of everything new and noteworthy that all of the big guns brought out to the show. | |
| The $60 Ooma HD2 Uses Facebook, Google And Yahoo For Picture Caller-ID | Top |
Home phones are dumb phones defined. At best they feature a backlit four-line display. At worst they suck. Well, Ooma just introduced the HD2, which not only pairs pefectly with the company's VoIP service but offers a bunch of functions standard to feature phones. A 2-inch color LCD features picture caller-ID with the images garnered from the owner's Facebook, Google and Yahoo friends. This can be managed either from on the handset or through the My Ooma web portal. But wait! There is more. | |
| Eyes On: The Tagg Pet Tracker | Top |
Qualcomm subsidiary Snaptracs was on hand at Pepcom's Digital Experience event to demo their Tagg pet tracker, and really -- what better way to do it than with a large stuffed dog? | |
| TaskRabbit Acquires Service Provider Directory SkillSlate | Top |
Collaborative consumption startup TaskRabbit has acquired SkillSlate, according to this press release I just received. This will be TaskRabbit's, which has a total of $24.7 million in financing, first acquisition. Even a cursory glance will tell you that the services are a good fit. TaskRabbit is a platform that allows people to pay other people to complete tasks. SkillSlate allows people to search for local businesses that provide the services they want. | |
| Eyes On: The Delightfully Retro Samsung DA-E75 Speaker Dock | Top |
There's just something about the Samsung DA-E750 that makes me want to own one immediately. Maybe it's the fact that it plays just as well with Apple products as it does with Samsung's own Galaxy devices, or it could have to do with the old-school wood design and its use of a vacuum tube amplifier. | |
| Kinect Comes To Windows On February 1st | Top |
We knew that Microsoft's hit motion-control accessory for the Xbox 360, Kinect, was coming to Windows eventually. They've been hinting at it, people have been hacking it, and they even released an SDK a little while back. But one of the last things Ballmer said tonight at his keynote was a definite date for when Kinect would be coming to Windows: February 1st. That's really all there is to it. If you're interested in contributing, check out the SDK, or if you just want to see what people have put together (there has really been some mind-blowing stuff over the last year), scroll through our Kinect tag. | |
| Microsoft Brings In The Tweet Choir To Soulify Its Last Keynote | Top |
Microsoft must have feared that the annual "airing of the modest success" they bring to CES every year might not be exciting enough to satisfy the many CES attendees who were expecting something major for what may very well be their last keynote (at least for a while). So they brought out the Tweet Chorus. What is the Tweet Chorus? It's exactly what you think. Unless you think it's a bunch of birds. | |
| Microsoft's "Picture Password": A Breath Of Fresh Air On The Lock Screen, Of All Places | Top |
Remember that feeling you got back when Steve Jobs was unveiling the iPhone, and he did the "slide to unlock" gesture for the first time? I remember the way he said it - "You like that? Want to see it again?" Since then I haven't seen a lock screen interface that has made me feel that same "how obvious, how elegant!" feeling - until today at the NVIDIA press conference, and later at the Microsoft keynote here at CES. It sounds a little silly, sure, making such a big deal of such a small feature, but it's just nice to see a genuinely natural and new way of doing something we've all done thousands upon thousands of times over the last few years. | |
| Intuit GoPayment Goes International With Canada Launch; Redesigns Mobile Credit Card Reader | Top |
Intuit is announcing major news this evening around its mobile credit card swiping device and Square-competitor GoPayment reader. Intuit is one of the first major U.S. mobile payments readers to go international, with a launch in Canada. And Intuit is debuting a newly, redesigned sleek version of its reader. Launched two years ago, GoPayment offers a complimentary app and credit card reader to allow small businesses to conduct charges via their smartphones. GoPayment is available for iOS, Android and Blackberry phones and similar to Square's device, the card reader simply plugs into the audio jack of a phone or tablet. The credit card data is also encrypted, (and never stored on the phone). | |
| MOG Partners With JVC & Aha, Is Coming To Subaru Vehicles | Top |
Music streaming service MOG is today announcing partnerships with mobile, audio and video equipment manufacturer JVC as well as with Aha by HARMAN, an interactive platform that brings web content to the automobile. The companies will begin using MOG's APIs to integrate the music service into their platforms and products. The first result of the new partnerships is MOG's launch on Subaru vehicles. | |
| The Surprising Path Of Artificial Intelligence | Top |
Artificial intelligence touches our lives in the form of chess computers that are better than most humans, computers beating the best humans at Jeopardy, intelligent ad targeting, Microsoft Kinect recognizing human motion and even amazingly, Google's self-driving car that drove itself from San Francisco to Los Angeles. Intelligent systems can even do transactions involving judgment like investing on Wall Street (a former MIT mathematician is now a hero on Wall Street with one of the best performing investment funds for many years in this judgment-based domain) and of course Siri's conversational interface that does what you ask (mostly—think of Gen 1.0 as a high-IQ three-year old getting better with each passing year). Computer Jeopardy champions, self-driving cars and Siri-like conversational interfaces would have seemed very hard a few years ago. Rather than the brute force logic-based development that was envisioned with Commander Data, successful systems have been built from examples rather than logical rules. We essentially let the computer "figure it out" using lots of past problems and solutions that include probability assessment systems beyond any hard-coded rules. Reasoning under uncertain conditions underlies a major area of recent progress. | |
| Sony Keeps Concepts Alive At CES 2012 | Top |
Today at Sony's CES 2012 press conference, the company unveiled several PC concepts that are, well, just concepts. Kazuo Hirai took to the massive Sony stage deep within the Las Vegas Convention center and talked about the convergence of TV and computers. But no one cares about that marketing nonsense. It was the concepts they flashed on the screen that got everyone excited. But don't expect these products to hit the market. Companies are not supposed to sell concepts. They're concepts, not products. | |
| Exclusive: ThreatMetrix Acquires TrustDefender To Protect Cloud From Fraud | Top |
As companies move their data out from behind firewalls into the cloud and employees use self-provisioned mobile devices, infosecurity must change. That's why cybercrime prevention provider ThreatMetrix will announce tomorrow its acquisition of TrustDefender, which detects malware-based attacks. ThreatMetrix can now offer an integrated fraud protection solution that verifies the identity and integrity of any device trying to access secure data. If an endpoint has been compromised through malware or identity theft: access denied. | |
| The Lenovo Yoga Twists And Turns For Some Win8 Hotness | Top |
Have you ever wanted to break your laptop in half at the hinge? Lenovo’s Yoga 13 lets you do just that – sort of. This laptop has a large touchscreen that bends over the keyboard allowing you to prop up the laptop like a tent or show the display to another person in front of you. It’s very similar to the old-fashioned convertible laptop except the screen doesn’t quite twist. It runs Windows 8. When the keyboard is face-down it is disabled and an on-screen keyboard appears. Why you would want to do this is beyond the scope of this post but it looks pretty cool. It will be available in the “second half of 2012″ in limited areas. | |
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Sony Computer Entertainment
Here are some highlights from yesterday’s post on TechCrunch Gadgets: Live Coverage of CES 2012 Eyes On: The Delightfully Retro Samsung DA-E75 Speaker Dock New Pocket Projectors From 3M Pump Up The Lumens MakerBot Announces Their Latest 3D Printer, The Replicator Vizio Breaks Into PC Market With Five New Models Monster Wins CES With Feathers And Spikes
About two weeks ago, I couldn't update my status on Facebook, like it just wouldn't let me, showing me "Invalid Request" error messages even though my requests are totally valid DAMMIT. And then just like that the fail stopped and I could update, inexplicably. In my humble experience, I've come across so many Facebook bugs I've given up on getting frustrated and now just hope they'll eventually go away. I regularly just straight up don't receive Messages and can we just talk about how the Like button just doesn't work. Can we?
Some interesting news from The Netherlands: online food ordering and delivery service
As
The makers of the Basis fitness band were at Pepcom's Digital Experience event showing off their namesake accessory, but that's not all that they wanted to reveal. They also demoed their new web interface, which is meant to take all of data the Basis can collect and it turn into a meaningful way for users to track their activity levels.
Home phones are dumb phones defined. At best they feature a backlit four-line display. At worst they suck. Well, Ooma just introduced the HD2, which not only pairs pefectly with the company's VoIP service but offers a bunch of functions standard to feature phones. A 2-inch color LCD features picture caller-ID with the images garnered from the owner's Facebook, Google and Yahoo friends. This can be managed either from on the handset or through the My Ooma web portal. But wait! There is more.
Qualcomm subsidiary Snaptracs was on hand at Pepcom's Digital Experience event to demo their Tagg pet tracker, and really -- what better way to do it than with a large stuffed dog?
Collaborative consumption startup
There's just something about the Samsung DA-E750 that makes me want to own one immediately. Maybe it's the fact that it plays just as well with Apple products as it does with Samsung's own Galaxy devices, or it could have to do with the old-school wood design and its use of a vacuum tube amplifier.
We knew that Microsoft's hit motion-control accessory for the Xbox 360, Kinect, was coming to Windows eventually. They've been hinting at it, people have been hacking it, and they even
Microsoft must have feared that the annual "airing of the modest success" they bring to CES every year might not be exciting enough to satisfy the many CES attendees who were expecting something major for what may very well be their last keynote (at least for a while). So they brought out the Tweet Chorus. What is the Tweet Chorus? It's exactly what you think. Unless you think it's a bunch of birds.
Remember that feeling you got back when Steve Jobs was unveiling the iPhone, and he did the "slide to unlock" gesture for the first time? I remember the way he said it - "You like that? Want to see it again?" Since then I haven't seen a lock screen interface that has made me feel that same "how obvious, how elegant!" feeling - until today at the NVIDIA press conference, and later at the Microsoft keynote here at CES. It sounds a little silly, sure, making such a big deal of such a small feature, but it's just nice to see a genuinely natural and new way of doing something we've all done thousands upon thousands of times over the last few years.
Intuit is announcing major news this evening around its mobile credit card swiping device and Square-competitor
Music streaming service
Artificial intelligence touches our lives in the form of chess computers that are better than most humans, computers beating the best humans at Jeopardy, intelligent ad targeting, Microsoft Kinect recognizing human motion and even amazingly, Google's self-driving car that drove itself from San Francisco to Los Angeles. Intelligent systems can even do transactions involving judgment like investing on Wall Street (a former MIT mathematician is now a hero on Wall Street with one of the best performing investment funds for many years in this judgment-based domain) and of course Siri's conversational interface that does what you ask (mostly—think of Gen 1.0 as a high-IQ three-year old getting better with each passing year). Computer Jeopardy champions, self-driving cars and Siri-like conversational interfaces would have seemed very hard a few years ago. Rather than the brute force logic-based development that was envisioned with Commander Data, successful systems have been built from examples rather than logical rules. We essentially let the computer "figure it out" using lots of past problems and solutions that include probability assessment systems beyond any hard-coded rules. Reasoning under uncertain conditions underlies a major area of recent progress.
Today at Sony's CES 2012 press conference, the company unveiled several PC concepts that are, well, just concepts. Kazuo Hirai took to the massive Sony stage deep within the Las Vegas Convention center and talked about the convergence of TV and computers. But no one cares about that marketing nonsense. It was the concepts they flashed on the screen that got everyone excited. But don't expect these products to hit the market. Companies are not supposed to sell concepts. They're concepts, not products.
As companies move their data out from behind firewalls into the cloud and employees use self-provisioned mobile devices, infosecurity must change. That's why cybercrime prevention provider
Have you ever wanted to break your laptop in half at the hinge? Lenovo’s Yoga 13 lets you do just that – sort of. This laptop has a large touchscreen that bends over the keyboard allowing you to prop up the laptop like a tent or show the display to another person in front of you. It’s very similar to the old-fashioned convertible laptop except the screen doesn’t quite twist. It runs Windows 8. When the keyboard is face-down it is disabled and an on-screen keyboard appears. Why you would want to do this is beyond the scope of this post but it looks pretty cool. It will be available in the “second half of 2012″ in limited areas.
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