The latest from TechCrunch
- On The Heels Of Hiring Skype's Former Strategy Boss, Urban Airship Hits 10 Billion Notifications Pushed
- GrubWithUs Goes Mobile With A (Really Pretty) iPhone App
- 10 Things All Entrepreneurs Fail At
- OnLive Viewer Hits Google TV, Full Gaming Capability Potentially On The Way
- Why Samsung Is The Next Apple
- Appifier Launches New Service That Turns WordPress Sites Into Mobile Apps
- Riding The Bull At CES 2012
- Apple Announces Education Event On January 19 In NYC
- Eric Schmidt: Android Is Differentiated, Not Fragmented
- Google+ Search = A Way To Call The Feds In On IPO-Bound Facebook (?)
- Watch Us Live From The CES 2012 Floor!
- TC/Gadgets Interview: Up Close With The Lytro
- Shazam Launches New App Focused On Lyric Play: Shazam Player
- Microsoft Bing Search Queries Overtake Yahoo For The First Time In December
- Social Entertainment Network GetGlue Raises $12 Million In New Financing
- Why Apple Bought Anobit
- Personal Search Service CloudMagic Arrives On Mobile For Fast Gmail, Docs & Twitter Search
- Panasonic Shows Cloud-Based "Smart Vegetable Garden" Device For Home Use
- Ngmoco Partners With Glu Mobile To Bring Gun Bros To Mobage
- TiVo Research Claims Only 38 Percent Of Users Watch Live TV
| On The Heels Of Hiring Skype's Former Strategy Boss, Urban Airship Hits 10 Billion Notifications Pushed | Top |
Urban Airship has been working pretty hard of late to plant itself firmly on the "Startups to Watch" list. The Portland and San Francisco-based startup, a platform provider that gives developers a simple way to build in-app purchases and push notifications into their mobile apps, grabbed some media attention when it acquired SimpleGeo back in October for $3 million. As SimpleGeo provided location-based services and data to mobile developers, the acquisition made a lot of sense for Urban Airship, providing a complement to its push notifications focus; and given the early hype around SimpleGeo, it was a bargain. (Plus, there was the added benefit of getting the founders as advisors.) | |
| GrubWithUs Goes Mobile With A (Really Pretty) iPhone App | Top |
"So I pay... to eat with strangers? And I don't even pick my food? ...Why would I do this?" The idea behind GrubWithUs can seem strange at first — but once you've had your first meal with them, everything just sort of clicks. You pay, you sit, you eat, you meet people, and you leave. They handle all of the annoying bits (the check splitting, the tipping, the ... finding people for you to eat with) and you handle the eating. Easy. | |
| 10 Things All Entrepreneurs Fail At | Top |
I was on the phone with Tony Conrad at True Ventures pitching a business idea I had in early 2009. The site was built and we even had people registered for it and I had about a half million dollars already committed but I wanted a VC firm on my side as well. I don't know why. Maybe I thought it would give me some credibility and I desperately craved it after the divorce I had been going through. Tony asked a question I thought was very smart. And now I forget exactly what it was. But I'm going to paraphrase what I think he said. He asked, "What have you failed at already in this business and how have you learned from it?" | |
| OnLive Viewer Hits Google TV, Full Gaming Capability Potentially On The Way | Top |
Google TV needs content. Onlive has content. The match is perfect. Starting today, the Onlive Viewer app is available for downloading via Google TV's Android Market. This app allows anyone to view gamers hacking away at OnLive games. Note, the app doesn't bring gaming capabilities to Google TV, but OnLive expects to add that functionality later down the road. | |
| Why Samsung Is The Next Apple | Top |
For most of the ten years I've been coming to CES, every presentation, every booth, has had one goal: to create an ecosystem in order to encourage consumer lock in. Year after year, presentation after presentation, someone has come out to show how the phone will connect to the fridge which, in turn, will connect to the TV. And year after year, they failed. Until now. Samsung, and to some extent the other vendors, have finally cracked it. For most of the past few years they've watched as Apple ran circles around them in terms of media sharing and remote control. Obviously Apple's systems have been limited to iPod/iTunes/iPad/Mac but Samsung, a major player in both the white goods and the mobile markets, can now have it all. | |
| Appifier Launches New Service That Turns WordPress Sites Into Mobile Apps | Top |
Appifier is a new service, previously in beta, that turns WordPress sites into mobile apps. That's not mobile websites, mind you, but actual mobile applications complete with push notifications, offline access, Twitter and Facebook sharing, plus a native look, feel and speed. Unlike many DIY app creators (and there are many), Appifier isn't doing a freemium offering. You can test out your app for free, but if you want to publish it in the app store, there are fees involved. | |
| Riding The Bull At CES 2012 | Top |
| Jordan was wrong. Oh how she was wrong. She though that being a native Texan she could beat me, a manly man on a mechanical bull. Neither of us had ever rode one of these fictitious creatures so we hoped on one while browsing the wares at Pepcom's Digital Experience. These mini tradeshows are popular at CES. They bring together just venders and press where CES mixes in salesmen, marketing types and general weirdoes. But you have to entertain the press. We tend to have short attention spans hence gimmicks like the cowboy them and mechanical bulls. I like it. And I won. | |
| Apple Announces Education Event On January 19 In NYC | Top |
Apple has always been bullish when it came to supporting education, and that trend continues with the announcement of an education event on January 19 at New York's famous Guggenheim Museum. | |
| Eric Schmidt: Android Is Differentiated, Not Fragmented | Top |
We've spent the better part of yesterday cruising around the Central Hall on a quest to highlight the coolest tech at CES, but Google executive chairman Eric Schmidt was on hand to talk about the "next big thing in consumer electronics." While doing so, he (perhaps unsurprisingly) made it clear that he isn't a fan of the word "fragmentation" when it comes to Google's Android OS. | |
| Google+ Search = A Way To Call The Feds In On IPO-Bound Facebook (?) | Top |
Like everyone else, I've been trying to get my head around why Google has force-integrated its Google+ social network into its main search feed at the expense of leading social services like Facebook and Twitter. The situation seems like an antitrust case waiting to happen, because Google could easily choose to feature the publicly available, searchable content from its social rivals in the same way it is showing its own product within its market-dominating search engine. It just hasn't. You'd think that Google has an intimate awareness of what it can and can't get away with, given how often it has been scrutinized for antitrust issues already. So, actually, yeah, let's assume it does... that it has predicted this criticism, and even an investigation by the US Department of Justice. What's the plan? I suspect that there's a master strategy for provoking the US government to investigate the market shares of search and social products as a single issue, in a way that puts Facebook on the defensive, especially as it looks to go public. | |
| Watch Us Live From The CES 2012 Floor! | Top |
| Yesterday was awesome. We hit up LG, Samsung, and Sony to name a few and had a helluva good time doing it. But today is a different day, a different hall and a bevy of new companies and booths. So grab some popcorn — seriously, go now because you only have a few minutes before we're on — and get ready to come on a crazy journey with us. Oh, and if you want to ask us some questions or participate in any way, just tweet to @TechCrunch using the #CEScrunch hash tag. We'll try to answer any questions you have in real-time, and if you want to see more of a certain thing or booth we're totally open to suggestions. | |
| TC/Gadgets Interview: Up Close With The Lytro | Top |
Yesterday we had the opportunity to play with the world's first mass-market light-field camera, the Lytro. VP of Marketing Kira Wampler ran us through its paces as we learned how the camera grabs not only the color and intensity but the direction of light coming in from a scene. | |
| Shazam Launches New App Focused On Lyric Play: Shazam Player | Top |
iTunes is great and everything, but it's still just a standard music player. The most exciting feature of the whole program is Genius, at least in my opinion, and even that can be off from time to time. But Shazam wants you to ingest your music a bit differently from here on out, and has launched the Shazam Player app to give users a better chance to leverage its new feature, Lyric Play. Lyric Play is already available in the premium version of Shazam, Shazam Encore, and allows users to see lyrics playing in time with the music, as the song is being discovered. This technology is clearly nothing short of impressive, but the 20 seconds spent tagging a song isn't really the ideal platform for this feature to be shown off. That said, the Shazam Player app lets you get your Lyric Play on throughout the entirety of songs. However, there will be a small fee. | |
| Microsoft Bing Search Queries Overtake Yahoo For The First Time In December | Top |
comScore has released its search data for December 2011, and Google continues to dominate in terms of share, with 65.9%, compared with 65.4% in November 2011 and 66.6% in December 2010. Year-over-year, queries increased 9.7% in December. Yahoo queries came in with 14.5% share, compared with 15.1% in November 2011 and 16.0% in December 2010. Microsoft's Bing's share of searches in December was 15.1%, compared with 15% in November 2011 and 12.0% in December 2010. Since Bing powers Yahoo search, combined the two search engine's share of searches was 29.6%, compared with 30.1% in November 2011. AOL queries declined 8% in December with 1.6% share. | |
| Social Entertainment Network GetGlue Raises $12 Million In New Financing | Top |
Social entertainment network GetGlue has just raised a significant round of $12 million in new financing, led by new investor Rho Ventures. The company's existing investors, TimeWarner, RRE Ventures and Union Square Ventures, also participated in this round. The company had previously raised $6 million in November 2010. | |
| Why Apple Bought Anobit | Top |
Apple finally confirmed earlier reports that it bought Israeli semiconductor startup Anobit Technologies. Apple did not confirm the price, which is believed to be between $400 million and $500 million. Apple bought Anobit for two reasons: its flash memory controllers are a key component of all Apple's leading products (from iPads and iPhones to MacBook Airs), and in one fell swoop it just added a large team of chip engineers to payroll. Do not underestimate how important those chip engineers are. Apple had at least 1,000 chip engineers. Roughly 160 of Anobit's 200 employees are also engineers, thus they instantly represent more than 10 percent of the total number of chip engineers at Apple. | |
| Personal Search Service CloudMagic Arrives On Mobile For Fast Gmail, Docs & Twitter Search | Top |
CloudMagic, the personal search service that indexes your Gmail, documents, contacts, calendar and Twitter updates, is now available as a mobile app. The release follows a major update for the service this past fall, which added the ability to search Twitter and a move to host your personal index in the cloud. This switch is what enables CloudMagic to work across multiple devices, including now, iPhone and Android smartphones. Using the new mobile app, CloudMagic is surprisingly fast - and far more useful than the phones' built-in search functions alone. | |
| Panasonic Shows Cloud-Based "Smart Vegetable Garden" Device For Home Use | Top |
Panasonic isn't just making TVs, phones, or cameras, they are also producing household appliances. One such appliance has recently been introduced by Japanese business daily The Nikkei, and it's probably the first cloud-based device for growing fruit and vegetables at home out there. Four leaf vegetables can be grown in one so-called "Smart Vegetable Garden" (which is sized at 100x50x30cm) at the same time, with Panasonic claiming that owners can expect to harvest them in about 40 days - 30% less than using conventional methods. Apart from saving time, the device also integrates a cloud-based management system to track growth, for example by automatically screening the level of water and nutrients, or the temperature. | |
| Ngmoco Partners With Glu Mobile To Bring Gun Bros To Mobage | Top |
Following its November partnership with TinyCo, social games outfit ngmoco (now a DeNA-owned company) is partnering with game publisher Glu Mobile, Inc. The deal will brings Glu's popular Gun Bros game to ngmoco's Mobage gaming platform for Android. No word yet on whether the rest of Glu's titles - many of which are more well-known than Gun Bros - will port over as well. | |
| TiVo Research Claims Only 38 Percent Of Users Watch Live TV | Top |
TiVo this morning said that internal research shows only 38 percent of their users watch live television, with nearly two thirds watching on-demand video or 'delayed' TV. Among TiVo viewers who use broadband connected service such as Netflix, YouTube and Hulu Plus, live TV viewership has even dropped to 27 percent, the company asserts. | |
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Urban Airship has been working pretty hard of late to plant itself firmly on the "Startups to Watch" list. The Portland and San Francisco-based startup, a platform provider that gives developers a simple way to build in-app purchases and push notifications into their mobile apps, grabbed some media attention when it acquired
"So I pay... to eat with strangers? And I don't even pick my food? ...Why would I do this?" The idea behind
I was on the phone with
Google TV needs content. Onlive has content. The match is perfect. Starting today, the Onlive Viewer app is available for downloading via Google TV's Android Market. This app allows anyone to view gamers hacking away at OnLive games. Note, the app doesn't bring gaming capabilities to Google TV, but OnLive expects to add that functionality later down the road.
For most of the ten years I've been coming to CES, every presentation, every booth, has had one goal: to create an ecosystem in order to encourage consumer lock in. Year after year, presentation after presentation, someone has come out to show how the phone will connect to the fridge which, in turn, will connect to the TV. And year after year, they failed. Until now. Samsung, and to some extent the other vendors, have finally cracked it. For most of the past few years they've watched as Apple ran circles around them in terms of media sharing and remote control. Obviously Apple's systems have been limited to iPod/iTunes/iPad/Mac but Samsung, a major player in both the white goods and the mobile markets, can now have it all.
Apple has always been bullish when it came to supporting education, and that trend continues with the announcement of an education event on January 19 at New York's famous Guggenheim Museum.
We've spent the better part of yesterday cruising around the Central Hall on a quest to highlight the coolest tech at CES, but Google executive chairman Eric Schmidt was on hand to talk about the "next big thing in consumer electronics." While doing so, he (perhaps unsurprisingly) made it clear that he isn't a fan of the word "fragmentation" when it comes to Google's Android OS.
Like
Yesterday we had the opportunity to play with the world's first mass-market light-field camera, the
iTunes is great and everything, but it's still just a standard music player. The most exciting feature of the whole program is Genius, at least in my opinion, and even that can be off from time to time. But Shazam wants you to ingest your music a bit differently from here on out, and has launched the Shazam Player app to give users a better chance to leverage its new feature, Lyric Play. Lyric Play is already available in the premium version of Shazam, Shazam Encore, and allows users to see lyrics playing in time with the music, as the song is being discovered. This technology is clearly nothing short of impressive, but the 20 seconds spent tagging a song isn't really the ideal platform for this feature to be shown off. That said, the Shazam Player app lets you get your Lyric Play on throughout the entirety of songs. However, there will be a small fee.
comScore has released its search data for December 2011, and Google continues to dominate in terms of share, with 65.9%, compared with 65.4% in November 2011 and 66.6% in December 2010. Year-over-year, queries increased 9.7% in December. Yahoo queries came in with 14.5% share, compared with 15.1% in November 2011 and 16.0% in December 2010. Microsoft's Bing's share of searches in December was 15.1%, compared with 15% in November 2011 and 12.0% in December 2010. Since Bing powers Yahoo search, combined the two search engine's share of searches was 29.6%, compared with 30.1% in November 2011. AOL queries declined 8% in December with 1.6% share.
Social entertainment network
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