The latest from TechCrunch
- Hate When Companies Don't Provide Feedback On Job Applications? StartWire Is For You.
- Fujitsu Japan Rolls Out 2 "Girls-Only" Cell Phones
- Daily Crunch: Make or Break
- Ron Conway, Mayor Lee And Heather Harde Launch sfCITI, Want To Keep SF At The Forefront Of Tech
- Anthony Ha Joins TechCrunch
- Pitch Now: Intel Awarding Young Entrepreneurs With $100K For Whizbang Business Ideas
- MySpace Isn't Dead In The US, It's Just Getting Closer To Zero Users… As Twitter, G+ Grow
- Survey: 80% Say Social Networks Had No Influence On Holiday Shopping Decisions
- Urban Airship To Shutter SimpleGeo Services In March, With Factual Picking Up The Slack
- CES: A Wonderful Example Of Not Knowing When To Stop
- The Last TechCrunch Gadgets Live CES Podcast Is Going Live At 4PM
- Eyes On: The Nokia Lumia 900
- It's 10pm And You Need A HDMI Cable – No Problem This Week in Vegas
- A Fireside Chat With Boxee's Avner Ronen On The State Of Boxee And Smart TVs
- Turntable.fm Founder Says He's Flattered By Facebook Listen With, But They're Different
- Compete Against Other Players Learning To Code With Treehouse's Code Race
- Zynga Scores Another EA Exec, Interactive Head Barry Cottle
- Hulu's 2011 Revenue Grew 60 Percent To $420M, Will Invest $500M In Content This Year
- Google Names VMware Cofounder Diane Greene To Its Board
- Hands-On With The Sony Ericsson Xperia S From CES
| Hate When Companies Don't Provide Feedback On Job Applications? StartWire Is For You. | Top |
If you've ever been on the job search, you know how frustrating and time consuming it is to manage the process. (If not, just ask one of the more than 13 million people in the U.S. currently there.) You spend untold hours filling out the right forms and fields, adding more action verbs to your resume, etc., and you fire off the application. Then comes the infuriation: Your prospective employer doesn't respond, so you send a follow-up. Nothing. And another follow-up. Still nothing. This is the primary pain point a young startup called StartWire is trying to solve -- with a little bit of automation, and a little bit of organization. | |
| Fujitsu Japan Rolls Out 2 "Girls-Only" Cell Phones | Top |
Do women need special cell phones? Certain companies, such as Deutsche Telekom or Samsung, seem to think so. Now Fujitsu Japan is ready to roll out [JP] not one but two handsets specifically designed "for girls", a feature phone and an Android model. The Android phone, the so-called F-03D Girls', has been developed in cooperation with popular teenage fashion magazine Popteen. | |
| Daily Crunch: Make or Break | Top |
Here are some recent posts from TechCrunch Gadgets: Bre Pettis Of Makerbot: "The Future Is Already Here" EV Mini Sport: Mini Electric Sports Car From Japan (Video) Eyes On: The Nokia Lumia 900 A Fireside Chat With Boxee's Avner Ronen On The State Of Boxee And Smart TVs Hands-On With The Sony Ericsson Xperia S From CES | |
| Ron Conway, Mayor Lee And Heather Harde Launch sfCITI, Want To Keep SF At The Forefront Of Tech | Top |
At a press conference tomorrow at San Francisco's Founders Den, newly elected Mayor Ed Lee will be announcing sfCITI (San Francisco Citizens Initiative for Technology & Innovation), a set of tech initiatives spearheaded by investor Ron Conway, Mayor Ed Lee and TechCrunch's beloved Heather Harde and contributed to by a series of tech industry partners, including TechCrunch. | |
| Anthony Ha Joins TechCrunch | Top |
Blogging is still a relatively young part of the media industry. But already there are a cadre of professional reporters who cut their teeth blogging, who are used to the pace and get an adrenaline rush from covering events as they unfold. Anthony Ha is one of them, and I am very pleased to announce that he will be joining the TechCrunch writing staff next week in San Francisco. Anthony (pictured here writing furiously at a conference) comes to us from AdWeek, where he is currently a staff technology writer. Before that was one of the most prolific bloggers at VentureBeat, which is where I first noticed him. (Another one of our recent hires, Eric Eldon, also hails from there). | |
| Pitch Now: Intel Awarding Young Entrepreneurs With $100K For Whizbang Business Ideas | Top |
Intel knows a thing or two about technology and innovation. Hey, that's why they hired Will.i.am as "director of creative innovation". (Wink.) Really, in the same way that it's catalyzed change in the computing industry (and helped bring modern microprocessing to life), in December Intel launched a platform designed to give young entrepreneurs the opportunity to bring their own innovative ideas to life. | |
| MySpace Isn't Dead In The US, It's Just Getting Closer To Zero Users… As Twitter, G+ Grow | Top |
If you look at just one month of data, you'll see that Myspace still has users. That's the good news for the aging social network. The bad news is that it has kept losing them through its many executive changes, various redesigns and the recent acquisition by Specific Media and Justin Timberlake. Maybe that new plan to do something with TV will turn things around? Anyway, the latest US numbers from comScore are out now, for December, and here's how MySpace stacks up against its many rivals. | |
| Survey: 80% Say Social Networks Had No Influence On Holiday Shopping Decisions | Top |
Social networks could one day revolutionize how we get shopping recommendations, but not yet. Instead, tablets are causing the biggest shakeup in ecommerce. 80.2% of 1000 holiday shoppers said no, personal connections on Facebook or another social networking site did not influence their shopping decisions. Other findings of Baynote's annual study include that 48.6% of tablet owners made a purchase through their big mobile device, and that email was the channel with the most useful promotions. | |
| Urban Airship To Shutter SimpleGeo Services In March, With Factual Picking Up The Slack | Top |
Urban Airship acquired SimpleGeo at the end of October for approximately $3.5 million. Considering that the two startups had some months before struck a strategic partnership, and both provide location-based services for mobile developers, the acquisition made sense, even if the price was lower than many had hoped. (And SimpleGeo Co-founder Joe Stump left the company post-acquisition, following Co-founder Matt Galligan.) At the time, it was unclear what Urban Airship would be doing with the terabyte-plus of SimpleGeo location data. Today, that became clear. Simply put, it looks like it's curtains for SimpleGeo's services. Urban Airship said this afternoon, after the requisite internal discussions, talks with customers, and hand-wringing, that it will "wind down the availability of the current versions of [SimpleGeo's] Places, Context, and Storage over the next few months". | |
| CES: A Wonderful Example Of Not Knowing When To Stop | Top |
From a great distance, a massive waterfall is a beautiful thing. From a lesser distance, it's deafening. Directly beneath it, it'll crush your bones to salt. Each year, we make our voyage through the waterfall that is CES. Each year, the noise gets a bit louder, the water a bit more torrential. This year is the first in which I've felt my bones begin to give. Enough metaphor? Fine: CES, which has long been the biggest consumer tech show in the world, has gotten too big for its own (or anyone else's) good. | |
| The Last TechCrunch Gadgets Live CES Podcast Is Going Live At 4PM | Top |
| Our coverage of CES is coming to a close, and we're finishing it off with a third and final video podcast from the show floor. We've got some really great stuff to give away, both for viewers and our audience here at the booth. After this, our live CES coverage is concluded and we'll be focusing on posting some of the highlights from it, as well as our lists and editorials relating to the show. Then, sadly, it's back to business as usual. The show starts at 4PM sharp! Read on for details on the giveaways. We're talking cameras and helicopters here. | |
| Eyes On: The Nokia Lumia 900 | Top |
| Ah, so close yet so far. Nokia's new flagship Lumia 900 handset was on display here at CES 2012, and though we couldn't quite get our hands on it, we did the next best thing -- we shot some video. | |
| It's 10pm And You Need A HDMI Cable – No Problem This Week in Vegas | Top |
TechCrunch TV is using a LiveU mobile pack provided by our partner Ustream for our live streaming coverage from CES. Our camera connects to the pack via a HDMI connector cable. But at the end of our evening Showstoppers coverage, the HDMI plug snapped and broke. At 10pm in Las Vegas, how do you find a replacement HDMI plug? Actually, of all the places in the world to have this happen, we were in the right place. | |
| A Fireside Chat With Boxee's Avner Ronen On The State Of Boxee And Smart TVs | Top |
| Boxee is one of the rare success stories of a software company making the leap to consumer electronics. The formula is simple: a clear message combined with a solid product. Having smart and passionate people help too. And as shown by this video shot at TechCrunch's CES booth, Boxee has both. | |
| Turntable.fm Founder Says He's Flattered By Facebook Listen With, But They're Different | Top |
"I'm flattered Facebook was inspired by turntable.fm and created a listen together feature" says co-founder Billy Chasen about Facebook's new synchronous music listening and chat feature Listen With. Chasen tells me "I look forward to seeing how they interpret what social music means as we seem to have different core philosophies about it (such as the importance of discovering new music from strangers and not just friends)." Chasen seems to think that only listening to what your friends enjoy won't provide discovery as adventurous as Turntable.fm's public rooms. | |
| Compete Against Other Players Learning To Code With Treehouse's Code Race | Top |
As part of the ongoing trend of coding literacy among a more mainstream audience, Treehouse, a startup that teaches people how to program online has developed Code Racer, a game that teaches people how to code by pitting them up against other people also learning how to code, building, appropriately enough, some kind of race car related website. | |
| Zynga Scores Another EA Exec, Interactive Head Barry Cottle | Top |
Zynga has already hired quite a few senior leaders out of rival Electronic Arts, and today the evisceration continues with one of its biggest hires yet: EA Interactive executive vice president Barry Cottle. Among a long list of other accomplishments, Cottle has been behind the acquisitions of social game developer Playfish, casual gaming leader PopCap, and mobile developer Chillingo. He'll be reporting to chief operating officer John Schappert, who previously held the same position at EA. | |
| Hulu's 2011 Revenue Grew 60 Percent To $420M, Will Invest $500M In Content This Year | Top |
Hulu CEO Jason Kilar just posted a recap of the online content business in 2011, and revealed that Hulu's revenue grew 60% from 2010 to approximately $420 million. While the growth is a good sign, this is less that the $500 million expected for the year. Kilar says that Hulu Plus now has more than 1.5 million paying subscribers and is attracting more than 2 times the number of subscribers each day when compared to this time last year. Hulu continues to expect that its subscription services will account for more than half of Hulu's overall business later this year. | |
| Google Names VMware Cofounder Diane Greene To Its Board | Top |
Google has just announced that it's named Diane B. Greene, a cofounder and longtime CEO of VMware, to its Board of Directors. Greene is also on Intuit's Board of Directors, where she serves on the Audit and Risk Committee and Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee as well. Greene was formerly President and CEO of VMware from 1998 through 2008, leading it to a $625 million acquisition by EMC in early 2004, and, in 2007, an IPO on the NYSE. | |
| Hands-On With The Sony Ericsson Xperia S From CES | Top |
| I've never been a huge fan of Sony Ericsson. The phones are fine, I guess, and I certainly commend the company's drive to differentiate. The Xperia Play is a great concept but it failed to really take off. Today, however, I was very impressed after taking a good hard look at the new Xperia S. It's not the thinnest phone at .4 inches, nor does it have the biggest screen, but it is something fresh which is more than I can say for most Android Gingerbread phones. | |
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If you've ever been on the job search, you know how frustrating and time consuming it is to manage the process. (If not, just ask one of the more than
Do women need special cell phones? Certain companies, such as
Here are some recent posts from TechCrunch Gadgets: Bre Pettis Of Makerbot: "The Future Is Already Here" EV Mini Sport: Mini Electric Sports Car From Japan (Video) Eyes On: The Nokia Lumia 900 A Fireside Chat With Boxee's Avner Ronen On The State Of Boxee And Smart TVs Hands-On With The Sony Ericsson Xperia S From CES
At a press conference tomorrow at San Francisco's
Blogging is still a relatively young part of the media industry. But already there are a cadre of professional reporters who cut their teeth blogging, who are used to the pace and get an adrenaline rush from covering events as they unfold.
Intel knows a thing or two about technology and innovation. Hey, that's why
If you look at
Social networks could one day revolutionize how we get shopping recommendations, but not yet. Instead, tablets are causing the biggest shakeup in ecommerce. 80.2% of 1000 holiday shoppers said no, personal connections on Facebook or another social networking site did not influence their shopping decisions. Other findings of
Urban Airship
From a great distance, a massive waterfall is a beautiful thing. From a lesser distance, it's deafening. Directly beneath it, it'll crush your bones to salt. Each year, we make our voyage through the waterfall that is CES. Each year, the noise gets a bit louder, the water a bit more torrential. This year is the first in which I've felt my bones begin to give. Enough metaphor? Fine: CES, which has long been the biggest consumer tech show in the world, has gotten too big for its own (or anyone else's) good.
TechCrunch TV is using a
"I'm flattered Facebook was inspired by
As part of the ongoing trend of coding literacy among a more mainstream audience, Treehouse, a startup that teaches people how to program online has developed Code Racer, a game that teaches people how to code by pitting them up against other people also learning how to code, building, appropriately enough, some kind of race car related website.
Zynga has already hired quite a few senior leaders out of rival Electronic Arts, and today the evisceration continues with one of its biggest hires yet: EA Interactive executive vice president Barry Cottle. Among a long list of other accomplishments, Cottle has been behind the acquisitions of social game developer Playfish, casual gaming leader PopCap, and mobile developer Chillingo. He'll be reporting to chief operating officer John Schappert, who previously held the same position at EA.
Hulu CEO Jason Kilar
Google has just announced that it's named Diane B. Greene, a cofounder and longtime CEO of VMware, to its Board of Directors. Greene is also on Intuit's Board of Directors, where she serves on the Audit and Risk Committee and Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee as well. Greene was formerly President and CEO of VMware from 1998 through 2008, leading it to a $625 million acquisition by EMC in early 2004, and, in 2007, an IPO on the NYSE.
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