The latest from TechCrunch
- TechCrunch Readers Love Slides (And Other Stats From SlideShare)
- Do We Need A "GarageBand For Books?"
- Yes, Google Will Protest SOPA on its Homepage
- Try-Before-You-Buy Gadget Site YBUY Launches With $750K In Funding
- An Interview With DECE/UltraViolet President Mitch Singer Goes Horribly Right
- Study: Facebook Pages Shouldn't Post More Than 1x Every 3 hours
- Trigger Gets $1M From SV Angel, Paul Graham And Others To Make Cross-Platform Mobile Development Effortless
- DreamIt Ventures Launches First Israel-U.S. Accelerator
- Aviary Launches Major Upgrade To SDK, Now Powering 10 Million Photo Edits Per Month
- Bionic Panda Builds A Social Gaming Business On Android, Raises Funding From Top Investors
- HTC And Sprint Working On Software Updates That Remove Carrier IQ
- Science Data Sharing Site figshare Relaunches, Adds Features
- With Focus On International Expansion, Airbnb Comes To Android And Revamps Mobile Web Offerings
- comScore Publishes December 2011 U.S. Online Video Rankings; Facebook Slips
- Cálmate: Put Down Your Smartphone To Feel Better
- Reuters Launches Web TV Channel, Bringing 10 New & Original Shows To YouTube
- LA-Based Incubator Amplify Debuts Five New Startups
- ZTE Plans Huge Smartphone Push Into China, U.S.
- BMW DesignworksUSA, Thermaltake Team Up For The Level 10 M Mouse
- InMobi: Smartphone Ad Impressions Up 488% In 2011, Tablets Up 771%
| TechCrunch Readers Love Slides (And Other Stats From SlideShare) | Top |
Okay, it's official. TechCrunch readers love slides. We occasionally embed slideshows from SlideShare like the one below (which is filled with its 2011 zeitgeist stats). In 2011, TechCrunch generated more slideshow traffic for SlideShare than any other tech blog—a dubious honor, but we'll take it. Since you all love slides so much, here are a few more facts from SlideShare. | |
| Do We Need A "GarageBand For Books?" | Top |
My Dad used to take me to Long's Bookstore on the OSU campus when I was young - I'd say this was during the 1980s and very early 1990s although in my mind these afternoons spent on campus are tinged with a 1970s wash out of color, as if I were remembering my time in Kansas before Oz. We'd rumble through the stacks, picking out used titles from the basement that were beaten and worn by years of the students' buy/read/return-for-a-pittance cycle so common at universities. Most of the books there were, obviously, but Long's stocked quite a bit of ephemera including my favorite Mad Magazine digests and sci-fi. Long's is now a Barnes & Noble, its handsome neon sign taken down during a massive restructuring of OSU's student core. Most of the old book stores are gone. The local head shop, Monkey's Retreat, turned into a Taoist center. Long's and its competitor, the University Book Exchange, are gone. Even Larry's, where I went to poetry readings as a petulant high-schooler is gone. To paraphrase Joni Mitchell, they paved paradise and put up a Quizno's. | |
| Yes, Google Will Protest SOPA on its Homepage | Top |
Tomorrow, Google's US homepage will include a link declaring its opposition to the Stop Online Privacy Act and the Protect IP Act. The news was reported on CNET and confirmed by Google in a statement emailed to TechCrunch. | |
| Try-Before-You-Buy Gadget Site YBUY Launches With $750K In Funding | Top |
Good news, gadget hounds! The new "try before you buy" subscription service called YBUY is exiting its public beta, backed by $750,000 in seed funding. The concept is simple, and should have major appeal for the gadget-obsessed: for just $24.95 per month, you can test drive the latest electronics, home and kitchen gadgets for 30 days before deciding to purchase or return the items. At launch, the site is serving up highly sought-after gadgets like the iPad 2, Dyson heaters, Jawbone headsets, iRobot Roombas and more. | |
| An Interview With DECE/UltraViolet President Mitch Singer Goes Horribly Right | Top |
Our readers are probably familiar in passing with UltraViolet, a new content rights management system that is supposed to unify the rights architecture on the web, allowing cross-platform sharing and authentication of movies and TV. But for such a major effort by so many device makers and content producers, very little has been heard or said about it. Probably because it's still in its infancy: only 19 titles with UV compatibility were released in 2011, and the first signups occurred in October. Yet despite its tender age and low profile, the most common sentiment has been one of preemptive rejection. And why shouldn't that be the case? Consumers have been treated like thieves by content companies for years, experimented on with DRM schemes, ripped off with faulty authentication systems, and generally disappointed in the efforts to meet consumer demands. This feeling is premature, however: 2012 will be the year UltraViolet makes its real debut, and it is in 2012 that it will prove itself or fail. It was with this in mind that we spoke to Mitch Singer, President of DECE (UltraViolet's creator and controller) and CTO of Sony Pictures, at CES. And believe it or not, he convinced us that UltraViolet may in fact be the beginning of a very good thing. | |
| Study: Facebook Pages Shouldn't Post More Than 1x Every 3 hours | Top |
The average news feed post by a Facebook Page receives Likes and comments for 3 hours after being published. To maximize the engagement, impressions, and traffic driven by the news feed, Facebook Page owners should wait at least 3 hours between posts. This new finding from a study by Facebook Page analytics company EdgeRank Checker could help Page owners avoid cutting short the lifetimes of their posts and overshadowing them with new content. | |
| Trigger Gets $1M From SV Angel, Paul Graham And Others To Make Cross-Platform Mobile Development Effortless | Top |
| DreamIt Ventures Launches First Israel-U.S. Accelerator | Top |
Startup incubator DreamIt Ventures is announcing the first Israel-U.S. accelerator, which will help up to five Israeli startups expand into the U.S. market through DreamIt's NYC 2012 program. The new program, called DreamIt Israel, will take place over four months, with the first month in Israel followed by three months in New York. The startups will also participate in two Demo Day events - one in the U.S. and the other back home with local investors. | |
| Aviary Launches Major Upgrade To SDK, Now Powering 10 Million Photo Edits Per Month | Top |
Aviary, the company that makes it easy for mobile developers to integrate image editing into their apps, has a major launch today: they're introducing an overhauled version of their mobile SDK that's both more powerful and significantly better looking than the previous one, which launched in September. You may associate Aviary with the startup's advanced suite of web-based image editing apps, which is what it focused on for years. But last year it shifted toward this developer-facing mobile SDK, which allows third-party developers to quickly integrate photo editing, filters, virtual stickers, and other related features into their applications. It's essentially a drop-in photo editor, and given how popular image sharing apps like Instagram are these days, it's no surprise that plenty of mobile developers are baking it into their apps. | |
| Bionic Panda Builds A Social Gaming Business On Android, Raises Funding From Top Investors | Top |
If you're trying to build a mobile game for the hardcore crowd, you're going to want things like at least moderately elaborate graphics... you'll probably choose to build on iOS first. But if you're trying to build a casual-style game that anyone can play easily, that reaches as many people as possible, Android is looking better and better. That's at least the thesis behind Bionic Panda, the Android-focused gaming company from veteran entrepreneur Charles Hudson. The company is today announcing some growth numbers and a founding round -- in other words, its strategy seems to be working out so far. | |
| HTC And Sprint Working On Software Updates That Remove Carrier IQ | Top |
Most of the furor surrounding the Carrier IQ diagnostic software has wound down by now, but that doesn't mean that the companies involved have already forgotten. HTC has confirmed to The Verge that they were working with Sprint to push out maintenance updates that would remove the Carrier IQ software from affected devices. | |
| Science Data Sharing Site figshare Relaunches, Adds Features | Top |
figshare, originally launched in January 2011, is re-launching today with some new features. figshare aims to be a repository for scientific figures, raw datasets, videos and more. The retooled service offers AWS storage, version control, and unlimited public storage capacity. All uploaded data is made available with easy-to-use citation links (and a QR code) and is licensed under CreativeCommons terms to encourage re-use. In addition to faster uploads and an easier-to-navigate interface, figshare is also working on desktop clients. According to their FAQ, "We are a data sharing platform where you can add figures that might otherwise go unpublished – complete with the raw data tables." All data is organized by categorgy and tags and is readily searchable, making it easy for researchers to find the data they need. Visitors can comment on the works, too. | |
| With Focus On International Expansion, Airbnb Comes To Android And Revamps Mobile Web Offerings | Top |
After about a year of being iPhone only, the Airbnb app comes to Android this morning alongside a complete revamp of the Airbnb mobile features. With over 500K downloads and 125k active users on iOS, and over 10% of its traffic coming through mobile, Airbnb mobile web genius Andrew Vilcsak tells me that the move to Android was inevitable, "The biggest complaint was that it wasn't on Android, which currently holds 48% of the entire world's market share." | |
| comScore Publishes December 2011 U.S. Online Video Rankings; Facebook Slips | Top |
Audience measurement firm comScore has just released its U.S. online video rankings for December 2011. There are few surprises: Google's YouTube is still king of the hill, while VEVO remains firmly in second place with roughly a third of Google Sites' audience. In total, comScore says 182 million U.S. users watched online video content in December 2011 for an average of 23.2 hours per viewer. The total U.S. Internet audience viewed 43.5 billion videos. What caught my eye, however, was that Facebook dropped from third place in November 2011 to fifth place, trailing Yahoo and Viacom properties again, in a single month. | |
| Cálmate: Put Down Your Smartphone To Feel Better | Top |
A study by the British Psychological Society found a link between stress levels and the number of times a person picks up their smartphone to check messages and mails. As an addict, I can completely agree with this finding. In short, the more you do it, the worse you feel. Oddly, the study found that less stress was induced when checking work e-mail rather than other online interactions. The group conducted a survey of 100 Britons in different lines of work. | |
| Reuters Launches Web TV Channel, Bringing 10 New & Original Shows To YouTube | Top |
The move to bring original programming to the web continues to heat up this week, with today's announcement of Reuters TV, a new YouTube channel featuring ten new commentary and analysis shows from the news and media division of Thomson Reuters. The new channel joins nearly 100 other media partners on YouTube who are delivering original content, including a few big names like eHow, Motor Trend, Pitchfork TV, TED, The Onion, WSJ, WWE and more. | |
| LA-Based Incubator Amplify Debuts Five New Startups | Top |
Amplify, a recently launched LA-based startup accelerator is announcing its first set of startups today. As we reported in December, the accelerator, which is being managed by Paul Bricault and Richard Wolpert, will be incubating and investing in companies at the intersection of technology and entertainment. Amplify will provide portfolio companies with four months of intense collaboration and mentorship with each startup receiving up to $50,000 in seed capital, office space, weekly mentor meetings with entrepreneurs and a 3-year hiatus on city taxes. | |
| ZTE Plans Huge Smartphone Push Into China, U.S. | Top |
We often forget about ZTE here in the states since the company does most of its operations outside of our home turf. Still, we shouldn't forget that the company ranks fourth in the world in terms of handset makers, largely due to its focus on budget handsets. The first half of last year brought about a loss of three percentage points in terms of profit, and ZTE is now ready to come back guns blazing. And where else is better to stage an attack than in two of the most mobile hungry countries on the planet: China and the United States. | |
| BMW DesignworksUSA, Thermaltake Team Up For The Level 10 M Mouse | Top |
The Level 10 brand is back with the M Mouse. BMW Designworks and Thermaltake joined forces again for another unconventional PC peripheral. The two teamed up previously for the spectacular (and expensive) Level 10 case. Hopefully the Level 10 M Mouse will be a bit more accessible. Not everyone can afford a $800 case. | |
| InMobi: Smartphone Ad Impressions Up 488% In 2011, Tablets Up 771% | Top |
Independent mobile ad network InMobi has released its Mobile Market 2011 Review report today, finding significant growth in mobile advertising over the past year, with global smartphone impressions up by 488%. The company also saw 251% growth in mobile impressions on its network, which includes tablet devices and smartphones combined. Tablet impressions alone grew by an incredible 771% year-over-year, up to 1.2 billion. And the market is growing still, led by, of course, Apple's iPad. | |
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Okay, it's official. TechCrunch readers love slides. We occasionally embed slideshows from SlideShare like the one below (which is filled with its
My Dad used to take me to Long's Bookstore on the OSU campus when I was young - I'd say this was during the 1980s and very early 1990s although in my mind these afternoons spent on campus are tinged with a 1970s wash out of color, as if I were remembering my time in Kansas before Oz. We'd rumble through the stacks, picking out used titles from the basement that were beaten and worn by years of the students' buy/read/return-for-a-pittance cycle so common at universities. Most of the books there were, obviously, but Long's stocked quite a bit of ephemera including my favorite Mad Magazine digests and sci-fi. Long's is now a Barnes & Noble, its handsome neon sign taken down during a massive restructuring of OSU's student core. Most of the old book stores are gone. The local head shop, Monkey's Retreat, turned into a Taoist center. Long's and its competitor, the University Book Exchange, are gone. Even Larry's, where I went to poetry readings as a petulant high-schooler is gone. To paraphrase Joni Mitchell, they paved paradise and put up a Quizno's.
Tomorrow, Google's US homepage will include a link declaring its opposition to the Stop Online Privacy Act and the Protect IP Act. The news was reported on CNET and confirmed by Google in a statement emailed to TechCrunch.
Good news, gadget hounds! The new "try before you buy" subscription service called
Our readers are probably familiar in passing with UltraViolet, a new content rights management system that is supposed to unify the rights architecture on the web, allowing cross-platform sharing and authentication of movies and TV. But for such a major effort by so many device makers and content producers, very little has been heard or said about it. Probably because it's still in its infancy: only 19 titles with UV compatibility were released in 2011, and the
The average news feed post by a Facebook Page receives Likes and comments for 3 hours after being published. To maximize the engagement, impressions, and traffic driven by the news feed, Facebook Page owners should wait at least 3 hours between posts. This new finding from a study by Facebook Page analytics company
Startup incubator 
If you're trying to build a mobile game for the hardcore crowd, you're going to want things like
Most of the furor surrounding the Carrier IQ diagnostic software has wound down by now, but that doesn't mean that the companies involved have already forgotten. HTC has confirmed to
figshare, originally launched in January 2011, is re-launching today with some new features. figshare aims to be a repository for scientific figures, raw datasets, videos and more. The retooled service offers AWS storage, version control, and unlimited public storage capacity. All uploaded data is made available with easy-to-use citation links (and a QR code) and is licensed under CreativeCommons terms to encourage re-use. In addition to faster uploads and an easier-to-navigate interface, figshare is also working on desktop clients. According to their FAQ, "We are a data sharing platform where you can add figures that might otherwise go unpublished – complete with the raw data tables." All data is organized by categorgy and tags and is readily searchable, making it easy for researchers to find the data they need. Visitors can comment on the works, too.
After about a year of being iPhone only, the
Audience measurement firm
A study by the British Psychological Society found a link between stress levels and the number of times a person picks up their smartphone to check messages and mails. As an addict, I can completely agree with this finding. In short, the more you do it, the worse you feel. Oddly, the study found that less stress was induced when checking work e-mail rather than other online interactions. The group
The move to bring original programming to the web continues to heat up this week, with today's announcement of 
We often forget about ZTE here in the states since the company does most of its operations outside of our home turf. Still, we shouldn't forget that the company ranks fourth in the world in terms of handset makers, largely due to its focus on budget handsets. The first half of last year brought about a loss of three percentage points in terms of profit, and ZTE is now ready to come back guns blazing. And where else is better to stage an attack than in two of the most mobile hungry countries on the planet: China and the United States.
The Level 10 brand is back with the M Mouse. BMW Designworks and Thermaltake joined forces again for another unconventional PC peripheral. The two teamed up previously for the spectacular (and expensive)
Independent mobile ad network
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