The latest from TechCrunch
- Kickstart A Needy Kid's Education With Conway-Backed Wishbone.org
- Keen On… Ted Morgan: Why Skyhook Has Become A Harvard Business School Case Study [TCTV]
- Microsoft Asks Windows Phone Developers To Keep The Quality Up And The Sex Down
- RIM To Developers: We'll Make Sure Your App Earns At Least $10K In Its First Year
- Facebook Engineer Behind 'Presence' Is Turning The Concept Into A Standalone Company
- Did Scalado Invent RIM's Time-Defying BB10 Camera Tech?
- Samsung Is The New King Of Mobile
- eVr1 Turns The High Points Of Human Knowledge Into A Portable Codex
- Flickr Adds Pinterest Buttons To Photo Sharing; All Images Will Be Pinned With Attributions
- Google Graduates Automatic Email Translation Feature From Gmail Labs, Expels Old Snakey And Others
- Doc Searls Would Like You To Join Him In The Intention Economy
- ComScore: Samsung Widens Lead As Top Mobile Brand In U.S., Android 51% Of All Smartphones
- Scoople Lets You "Ask Your Friends" About The News
- Meet MillionShort: The Google Hack That Could Be The Antidote To Search Engine Spam
- Facebook Wants Us To Save Lives Through Organ Donation, Will We Follow Through?
- Twitter Improves Discover Tab To Surface More Interesting Content, Promises To Make It "Magical"
- Help! The TechCrunch Not-So-Mini NYC Meet-Up Needs Some Volunteers!
- CareZone, A Service For Caregivers, Raises $13M From NEA, Catamount And Jonathan Schwartz
- Fly Or Die: HTC Titan II
- Following Strategic Investment, Enterprise Software Maker Socialtext Joins Up With Peoplefluent
| Kickstart A Needy Kid's Education With Conway-Backed Wishbone.org | Top |
It's too common a story: smart, low-income kid can't find their academic passion, so they drop out of school. But now you can rewrite this tragic tale with the help of Wishbone.org, a philanthropy website launching today where you can crowdfund high-potential youngsters so they can afford inspiring after- and summer-school programs. Wishbone only accepts seriously motivated students and produces its own polished video interviews with them, so it's easy to find someone who'll really benefit from your donation. Started by an LA teacher who saw the problem first-hand, and backed by Ron Conway and the Kaufman Foundation for entrepreneurship, Wishbone has a high-leverage, accomplishable mission. It's not trying to start education programs, but rather bridge the gap between existing ones and the kids that need them. Years down the line it could be organizations like Wishbone that save tech from the talent crunch. | |
| Keen On… Ted Morgan: Why Skyhook Has Become A Harvard Business School Case Study [TCTV] | Top |
It was 6.30 on Sunday morning, August 9th, 2007 when Ted Morgan, the Boston based CEO of a little location technology start-up called Skyhook Wireless, got a totally unexpected call from an absolute stranger in California. Who calls a complete stranger at 6.30 am on a Sunday morning - especially from California, where it was 3.30 am? | |
| Microsoft Asks Windows Phone Developers To Keep The Quality Up And The Sex Down | Top |
Microsoft is trying to clean up the Windows Phone Marketplace and as part of this effort, the company just clarified some of its guidelines for developers who want to sell their apps in Microsoft's app store. Among other things, Microsoft has decided to move to "a more stringent interpretation and enforcement of our existing content policy" for apps that are "'racy' or sexual in nature." This is a problem we pointed out early last month. As Matt Burns put it, Windows Phone has a nasty porn addiction. Microsoft clearly agrees and is thankfully trying to kick the habit. Microsoft, just like most of its competitors, doesn't allow apps that contain "sexually suggestive or provocative" images or content. Swimsuits are fine. The company says that it will now pay "more attention to the icons, titles, and content of these apps and expects them to be more subtle and modest in the imagery and terms used." | |
| RIM To Developers: We'll Make Sure Your App Earns At Least $10K In Its First Year | Top |
With the release of their BlackBerry 10 beta development tools and Dev Alpha devices earlier today, RIM has made it very clear that they want to build up as much developer love as possible before BlackBerry 10 officially launches. Well, as it turns out, that's not the only thing they're doing to attract devs. Alec Saunders, RIM's VP of Developer Relations, revealed at BlackBerry World that RIM will guarantee developers of quality apps a minimum of $10,000 in annual earnings -- if developers come in under the $10K mark during their first year, RIM will actually pay them the difference. | |
| Facebook Engineer Behind 'Presence' Is Turning The Concept Into A Standalone Company | Top |
One of the geeky, cute contraptions of the early Facebook days was a web-enabled beer keg at company headquarters. Whenever an employee swiped their RFID badge on it, a camera would snap a photo of them pouring a beer and post a status update to Facebook. Whenever it ran low on beer, the keg would post pictures of BevMo to Facebook as a desperate refill reminder. Even though Facebook's beer keg world domination plans never played out, the technology behind the keg, called Presence, may still show up in the wild. That's because one of the engineers behind Presence, John Stockdale, is starting a company around the concept. It's aptly named Presence. | |
| Did Scalado Invent RIM's Time-Defying BB10 Camera Tech? | Top |
Remember that retro time-defying camera app that RIM unveiled alongside a few other BB10 features? You should — it happened this morning. Well, it would seem that the ability to search back through frames captured before the actual moment you pushed the shutter button has already been done. Nope, not by Apple. Not by Motorola, HTC, Samsung, or Nokia either. It's been done by Scalado, an imaging technology company known for their Remove and Rewind tech, among other things. | |
| Samsung Is The New King Of Mobile | Top |
Sammy is now the big kahuna of cell phones. Today's Juniper Research and comScore reports indicated that Samsung kicked Apple from the top spot in regards to smartphones. IDC also released a report today indicating the same thing while noting that Samsung kicked Nokia from the top of total phone shipments. This comes just days after another analyst firm questioned Nokia's current title as reigning king. Samsung happened to be at the right place at the right time -- but only because the company positioned itself properly. | |
| eVr1 Turns The High Points Of Human Knowledge Into A Portable Codex | Top |
A new startup launching today called eVr1 sits at the intersection between the digital and physical worlds. In the words of co-founder Brandon Peele, eVr1 has tried to answer the question, "What does it mean to be human being in the context of 16 gigs?" So the team selected what it saw as the most important aspects of human knowledge and literature — the entirety of Wikipedia, the CIA World Factbook, and a literary canon that includes authors like Plato, William Shakespeare, and James Joyce (to name just a few — you can see the full list here). That's supplemented with instruction manuals and documents from personal development website Trans4mind. Everything gets copied onto a 16 gigabyte Micro SDHC card, which is then wrapped in several layers of protective tape, then packaged in a leather container with a key ring. The leather also comes with a hand-stitched image of your choice — you can choose from things like the double helix and the infinity symbol. | |
| Flickr Adds Pinterest Buttons To Photo Sharing; All Images Will Be Pinned With Attributions | Top |
Yahoo-owned Flickr is one of the largest content sources for Pinterest, with users posting Flickr images on the pinboard sharing site in droves. But in order to Pin a Flickr photo on Pinterest, you had to use Pinterest's own Pin button, and you couldn't Pin photos to pinboards directly from Flickr. Until today. Flickr, which just debuted a new HTML5 photo uploader last week, is announcing a partnership with Pinterest to add Pin It buttons to sharing options on the photo sharing platform. Flickr also assures that all pinned images will be properly attributed, regardless where they are pinned from. As Flickr's head of product, Markus Spiering, explains to us, the photos sharing site wanted to make sharing to Pinterest a one to two click process, for both content owners and for people who discover interesting photos on Flickr to be pinned. Now, you'll see a Pin It button on Flickr image pages where you see Twitter, email, Facebook and Tumblr share buttons. You'll be able to share photo pages, favorites, and groups. If you pin a lot, the share menu will prioritize the Pin It button, showing it as one of the two shortcuts on the photo page. | |
| Google Graduates Automatic Email Translation Feature From Gmail Labs, Expels Old Snakey And Others | Top |
In 2009, Google brought its translation features to Gmail as a Gmail Labs experiment. Today, almost exactly two years after it first launched, this features is finally graduating from Gmail Labs. Starting in the next few days, you will see an option to "Translate message" in the header at the top of every message that is written in a foreign language. | |
| Doc Searls Would Like You To Join Him In The Intention Economy | Top |
Every day companies are spending gobs of money to earn and keep your attention. Advertisers are collecting heaps of information about you in the hopes of presenting you with more targeted advertisements: advertisements on which you'll want to click. Yet despite all of this information, advertising still pretty much sucks. It doesn't have to be this way. While marketers and advertising agencies strive to command your decisions in the "attention economy", long-time open source advocate Doc Searls puts forward a better idea in his new book, The Intention Economy. Rather than continue to allow vendors to blindly guess as to what we want, we should all be moving toward a new market equilibrium in which we consciously and directly signal our intentions to the market. Companies that respond to our intentions will reap larger profit, waste less money on dubious advertising initiatives, and enjoy real customer loyalty. | |
| ComScore: Samsung Widens Lead As Top Mobile Brand In U.S., Android 51% Of All Smartphones | Top |
Samsung doesn't break out actual unit sales figures for its mobile handset business, but among analyst houses, many are estimating that it is the brand to beat anyway. The latest comes from ComScore, which today released the results of a poll of 30,000 U.S. consumers. It found that Samsung accounted for 26 percent of all handsets -- smartphone or otherwise -- used in the U.S. in the last three months. LG came in second position at 19.3 percent. And smartphone use continues to grow: there are now 106 million smartphones in use in the U.S., a nine percent increase over the previous quarter, and so do the services associated with them: a full 50 percent of consumers have now downloaded and used mobile apps. | |
| Scoople Lets You "Ask Your Friends" About The News | Top |
I recently wrote about news gamification app Scoople, and today, the company is releasing a new version with improved social interaction. When you use Scoople, you read news stories (usually aggregated by Scoople from multiple articles) then fill out an associated poll. You can enter your own opinion and also predict the opinion of the larger community — people who do the best are recognized on Scoople's leaderboard. (Currently you need to be accurate 70 percent of the time to get on the leaderboard.) The model seems to be really addictive for some people — the company says the average Scoople user has now filled out 45 surveys. However, with a new "Ask Your Friends" feature, the company is hoping to broaden its reach beyond the serious news junkies. | |
| Meet MillionShort: The Google Hack That Could Be The Antidote To Search Engine Spam | Top |
Recently I tried to do a Google search for a wine to pair with swordfish, and it was pretty much a disaster (first world problems, I know, but still.) The problem is, web search results for certain topics are just overloaded with "search engine optimized" (SEO) content, which is very often just spam meant to attract people to dummy websites overloaded with ads. Of course, search engines work overtime to stay one step ahead of the SEO spammers, but sometimes the bad guys just win out. That's what a neat hack called MillionShort aims to help with. The website is a search engine that lets you remove the top million (or 100,000, or 10,000, or whatever) hits from the results list. | |
| Facebook Wants Us To Save Lives Through Organ Donation, Will We Follow Through? | Top |
This morning, Facebook announced a new feature which lets users post to their Facebook timeline that they've chosen to be an organ donor. The idea is that friends will choose to share the story of their decision with friends, hopefully tapping into Facebook's natural virality to encourage others to do the same. (Hey, it's worth a shot.) Facebook is also helpfully linking to state and national organ donation registries, where appropriate. While obviously a move worthy of mention given Facebook's size and scale, the story has been overhyped by Facebook and media as a new feature that "will save lives." That's going a bit far. It is one thing to post on Facebook, it's quite another to actually impact change. | |
| Twitter Improves Discover Tab To Surface More Interesting Content, Promises To Make It "Magical" | Top |
One of the core features of Twitter's redesign last year was the addition of the Discover tab in the web and mobile interface. Today, the company is launching the first major update to this feature. The new and improved Discover tab, says Twitter, will now begin to surface more personalized content. Starting today, the algorithm that populates this feature with stories will now also look at which tweets are popular among the people you follow and their friends. This should make for a more personalized experience and highlight content that is more relevant to the individual user. | |
| Help! The TechCrunch Not-So-Mini NYC Meet-Up Needs Some Volunteers! | Top |
When John and I first chatted out the idea of an NYC-based TC meet-up, we expected around 500 attendees. Last week we hit the 700 mark, and today we've surpassed 1,000 RSVPs. Luckily, our fine sponsors have made sure that there'll be enough beer and pizza for everyone. But, we're still going to need a little help. | |
| CareZone, A Service For Caregivers, Raises $13M From NEA, Catamount And Jonathan Schwartz | Top |
![]() CareZone has been busy discovering a few key markets since launching in February, chief executive Jonathan Schwartz tells me. And the results are good enough to warrant a big round of funding: nearly $13 million from New Enterprise Associates, Catamount Ventures, and Schwartz himself. Founded as an intranet for people who are taking care of aging parents, children, or anyone else in need of special attention, it has connected with communities around autism, Parkinson's disease, and other illnesses. | |
| Fly Or Die: HTC Titan II | Top |
The HTC Titan II is a symbol for an excellent partnership. I love HTC hardware and I love Windows Phone. It should be a match made in heaven, but unfortunately it's not. John and I sat down in the studio yesterday with the giant 4.7-inch hunk of glass and plastic, and we came away with pretty negative sentiments toward the device. | |
| Following Strategic Investment, Enterprise Software Maker Socialtext Joins Up With Peoplefluent | Top |
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It's too common a story: smart, low-income kid can't find their academic passion, so they drop out of school. But now you can rewrite this tragic tale with the help of
It was 6.30 on Sunday morning, August 9th, 2007 when
Microsoft is trying to clean up the Windows Phone Marketplace and as part of this effort, the company just
With the release of their BlackBerry 10 beta development tools and Dev Alpha devices earlier today, RIM has made it very clear that they want to build up as much developer love as possible before BlackBerry 10 officially launches. Well, as it turns out, that's not the only thing they're doing to attract devs. Alec Saunders, RIM's VP of Developer Relations, revealed at BlackBerry World that RIM will guarantee developers of quality apps a minimum of
One of the geeky, cute contraptions of the early Facebook days was a
Remember that
Sammy is now the big kahuna of cell phones. Today's
A new startup launching today called
Yahoo-owned Flickr is one of the largest content sources for
In 2009, Google
Every day companies are spending gobs of money to earn and keep your attention. Advertisers are collecting heaps of information about you in the hopes of presenting you with more targeted advertisements: advertisements on which you'll want to click. Yet despite all of this information, advertising still pretty much sucks. It doesn't have to be this way. While marketers and advertising agencies strive to command your decisions in the "attention economy", long-time open source advocate Doc Searls puts forward a better idea in his new book, The Intention Economy. Rather than continue to allow vendors to blindly guess as to what we want, we should all be moving toward a new market equilibrium in which we consciously and directly signal our intentions to the market. Companies that respond to our intentions will reap larger profit, waste less money on dubious advertising initiatives, and enjoy real customer loyalty.
Samsung
I recently
Recently I tried to do a Google search for a wine to pair with swordfish, and it was pretty much a disaster (
This morning,
One of the core features of Twitter's redesign last year was the
When John and I first chatted out the idea of an NYC-based TC meet-up, we expected around 500 attendees. Last week we hit the 700 mark, and today we've surpassed 1,000 RSVPs. Luckily, our fine sponsors have made sure that there'll be enough beer and pizza for everyone. But, we're still going to need a little help. 
The
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