The latest from TechCrunch
- Strange Days, Indeed
- BlueStacks Now Lets You Run Android Apps On Your Mac
- Qualcomm Extends Vuforia Augmented Reality Platform To The Cloud (Video)
- A Polyglot Path: Mobile Sharing App Adds 7 New Languages Including Traditional Chinese, UK English
- Project Glass Is The Future Of Google
- Blue Jeans Puts Another $25M In Its Pocket To Attack Video Conferencing Giants
- Infographics That Don't Suck: FindTheBest's Comparison Charts Are Now Embeddable
- [Updated] Yahoo's Media Vision Comes Into Focus: Three Hires, More Music And Video Partnerships (And Acquisitions?)
- Google's First Foray Into Hardware Is All About The Ecosystem
- Facebook Now Lets You "Follow" Someone In Any App, Get Their Updates In News Feed Where The Ads Are
- Targeting Power Moms, VolunteerSpot Secures $1.5M In Series A From ff Venture Capital And More
- Welcome To The Google Glass Freak Show
- Google+ History: The New API That Powers Its More Private Version Of Facebook Timeline
- Google's New 3D Imagery Comes to Google Earth For Android, iOS Coming Soon
- Exclusive: Foodspotting Teams With The Melting Pot To Allow People To Take Pictures Of Cheese
- Hands-On With Sergey Brin's Personal Set Of Google Glass
- Google's Play Store Now Lets Users Remotely Update And Uninstall Android Apps
- OrangeScape Launches Kissflow, A Workflow-Builder For Google Apps
- Hands-On With The Google Nexus 7
- The Facebook Ecosystem CrunchUp + Our 7th Annual August Capital Party: Aug 3rd In Silicon Valley
Strange Days, Indeed | Top |
In 1995, long before Tom Cruise was waving his hands around in now eerily true-to-life vision of the future that was "Minority Report," another science fiction drama was also painting a picture of the darker side of technology. In director Kathryn Bigelow's "Strange Days," (written by James Cameron and Jay Cocks), people and the technology they used to record their lives had practically merged. | |
BlueStacks Now Lets You Run Android Apps On Your Mac | Top |
There's no love lost between Android and Apple users, or at least among the fanboys and fangirls. The flamewar between the passionate adopters of the top two mobile operating systems has persisted for awhile now, even in spite of our pleas for a detente. Luckily, one startup is on a mission to bridge the gap between the Open and Walled Gardens, so that we can all join hands and walk off into the sunset. At Google I/O today, BlueStacks staged a mock wedding between Android and Apple as the backdrop for the launch of its Android App Player for Mac -- software that aims to bring 400K+ Android apps to iOS. | |
Qualcomm Extends Vuforia Augmented Reality Platform To The Cloud (Video) | Top |
Qualcomm announced an upgrade to their Vuforia Augmented Reality platform on Wednesday. Vuforia is a platform that focuses on using images as the "targets" to launch an AR experience, rather than requiring consumers to scan QR codes or other glyphs. So instead of scanning a barcode, you just scan a specific picture to start the AR experience on your mobile phone or tablet (it could launch a video, or a 3D model, etc.) There are many AR companies that employ this method of recognizing images. That is nothing new. The difference here is that the old version of Vuforia required the database of images that are the "targets" to be stored locally on the device running their software and therefore had a limited capacity of storage (around 80 images). This new system allows developers to continue using local app storage of image targets but they can also now implement programatic, API-based access to up to 1 million targets using a new cloud database system. | |
A Polyglot Path: Mobile Sharing App Adds 7 New Languages Including Traditional Chinese, UK English | Top |
In response to Facebook's ever-expanding social universe and the success of mobile-focused networks like Instagram, Dave Morin and company have turned Path into a more personal, mobile-centric social network. Most of the life-sharing that happens on Path takes place at home -- among family and close friends. And while some users may speak one language away from home or at work, they want to be able to converse with loved ones in their native tongue. As a result, Path has been on a mission to expand the number of languages it supports so that users can speak in whatever tongue they please. Tonight, via its blog, Path has announced that it has added seven new languages to its stable, including Dutch, Norwegian, Traditional Chinese, Thai, Bahasa Indonesian, Malay, and UK English. | |
Project Glass Is The Future Of Google | Top |
Over the last few years one could easily say that Google had lost their way. They were no longer known for search. Somehow they'd turned into a company that acquired a series of nonsensical entities, launched half baked products that eventually hit the dead pool or just got into some really weird shit. But last year that all started to change as the company announced that it would focus on its core products. Hindsight always being 20/20 it all makes sense. It's like anything else, really. Spitball as many ideas as you possibly can just to see what sticks. And so whether it was by design or not, Project Glass is the future of Google. Not as a product that will make them billions of dollars but what it means for Google as a company and its future. | |
Blue Jeans Puts Another $25M In Its Pocket To Attack Video Conferencing Giants | Top |
Blue Jeans Network, a video conferencing company founded by a serial entrepreneur who has sold two companies to Cisco, is adding another $25 million to its coffers from NEA, Accel and Norwest Venture Partners. Interestingly enough, quite of bit of that capital will be going toward a marketing campaign meant to woo enterprise customers away from other video conferencing providers. The company's already got a billboard in San Francisco (pictured above) and the goal is to get more companies to switch from pure audio conferencing to video conferencing. | |
Infographics That Don't Suck: FindTheBest's Comparison Charts Are Now Embeddable | Top |
FindTheBest, the startup led by DoubleClick founder Kevin O'Connor, has built charts comparing everything from financial advisors to dog breeds to smartphones. And now that those charts can be embedded in blog posts, you might start seeing them a lot more often. O'Connor's aim, as he's explained to me in the past, is to create the site where you can find the data you need to make a decision, presented in structured, easily understandable format. (FindTheBest is also trying to use that data to improve classified ads.) The company says it has created comparison widgets for more than 800 products and services. | |
[Updated] Yahoo's Media Vision Comes Into Focus: Three Hires, More Music And Video Partnerships (And Acquisitions?) | Top |
Yesterday the WSJ outlined how Yahoo's new, interim CEO Ross Levinsohn is taking the company back to its earlier roots of focusing on advertising around its media properties, which collectively see 167 million monthly online users. The last 24 hours indicates that Yahoo is trying to move fast on that idea. Today the company announced three executive media hires, and TechCrunch has had a look in on a new interactive mobile TV service its using to enhance its video offerings. And there is more. The news comes less than a day after Yahoo announced a global deal with Spotify for music content, which will see the company integrate Spotify music across its media properties and create content for the Spotify platform, but also move away from offering a music platform of its own. Update: after this article was posted last night, Yahoo added another music partner to the mix: Clear Channel and its online radio service I Heart Radio. | |
Google's First Foray Into Hardware Is All About The Ecosystem | Top |
It's Day One of Google I/O, and the company set out to prove that it's not just about software and algorithms and whatnot, introducing a neat set of hardware devices that are available -- or will be soon -- to take advantage of its Android mobile operating system. But while Google is historically a software provider, it was its hardware that stole the show. Take a close look at the Nexus Q, its first piece of hardware, and you realize that the device pretty useless for doing anything as a standalone device. It is entirely dependent on the user to control it with an Android phone or tablet, and to be connected to Google Play to stream content from the cloud. The Nexus Q, in short, is positioned right in the center of a broader Google ecosystem, bridging the divide between Google's software and cloud services and the hardware that depends on its Android OS. | |
Facebook Now Lets You "Follow" Someone In Any App, Get Their Updates In News Feed Where The Ads Are | Top |
Ads, not payments, are the future of Facebook monetizing mobile, but it needs content to show them beside. The new Follow action announced today could deliver that content by letting you follow someone in a mobile app, and then sending the updates you'd normally see in that app back to your ad-laden news feed. More content -> more engagement and return visits -> more ad impressions, more money, and more reason for investors to buy. It will send referral traffic to developers, and it's actually convenient for users too. Why trapse from site to site and app to app when you can see everything your friends are doing everywhere, all from your news feed? You won't. You'll sit right there where Facebook can advertise to you. | |
Targeting Power Moms, VolunteerSpot Secures $1.5M In Series A From ff Venture Capital And More | Top |
By simply owning small humans that are ultra-dependent and oftentimes unruly, moms have an incredibly tough job. But after you pile on all the little things — soccer practices, ballet recitals, doctors appointments, etc. — being a parent becomes damn near impossible. But to that end, a company called VolunteerSpot has just raised $1.5 million in Series A funding ff from Venture Capital here in New York, with participation from various angels in the Central TX Angel Network, Nebraska Angel Network, Angel List, and Baylor Angel Network. | |
Welcome To The Google Glass Freak Show | Top |
In the land of tech, we bloggers rarely if ever have to step in front of the camera. But now that Google has launched Google Glass into the world, the camera has turned on us in a fit of rage. Welcome ladies and gentlemen, to the freak show that is Google Glass. | |
Google+ History: The New API That Powers Its More Private Version Of Facebook Timeline | Top |
While people were skydiving into I/O, Google quietly made a massively important announcement about a new feature called Google+ History, which gives apps an API to auto-share content to a private holding tank on your G+ profile, which you can then choose to share from. Developers who integrate History will score added discovery and referral traffic from the 75 million daily Google+ users the search giant announced today. Testing begins now and Google admits it will be bumpy. But it has the potential to popular Google+ with desperately needed content and make it a destination people actually want to visit. | |
Google's New 3D Imagery Comes to Google Earth For Android, iOS Coming Soon | Top |
A few weeks ago, Google hosted a last-minute press conference in San Francisco to announce its new, highly detailed 3D maps. While many of us expected the company to actually launch the maps then, Google never announced actual launch date. Today, the wait is over, as the new version of Google Earth for Android (version 7.0) now offers access to the new 3D imagery. You can download the updated Google Earth for Android app from the Play store now. | |
Exclusive: Foodspotting Teams With The Melting Pot To Allow People To Take Pictures Of Cheese | Top |
At TechCrunch we like to get the rest of the story. That's why we go in-depth, hard-hitting, and close to the ground. Nowhere is that clearer than in this hardcore, hardball, and soft cheese interview with the folks from the Melting Pot, a popular fondue (from the French "What do we do with this old cheese? Melt it?") restaurant that may or may not be in your general vicinity. The Melting Pot has teamed up with Foodspotting.com, a popular site for spotting food, and, like a tempest-tossed couple engulfed by a sea of hot broth, both companies are clawing their way back into the public consciousness by offering a $100 gift card to lucky foodspotters who deign to spot their fondue. I'm not exactly sure how the contest works (presumably you take pictures of whatever fell into your gruyere) but $100 is nothing to sneeze at nor would you want to because sneezing into fondue can make quite a nasty sort of conglomerate. | |
Hands-On With Sergey Brin's Personal Set Of Google Glass | Top |
Outside of approved Googlers, a handful of folks have just been given a canned demo of Google Glass, including myself. I'm living in the future and the future is now! | |
Google's Play Store Now Lets Users Remotely Update And Uninstall Android Apps | Top |
All Googled out yet? I can't blame you if you are, but it seems that the company has been even busier than their two hour press conference let on. In addition to pushing the Android version of their Chrome browser out of beta, Google has also added some new app controls to the "My Android Apps" section of the Google Play Store. | |
OrangeScape Launches Kissflow, A Workflow-Builder For Google Apps | Top |
Businesses using Google Apps should have an easier time managing complex tasks starting today with the launch of Kissflow from startup OrangeScape — it's supposedly the first workflow-creator that's "deeply integrated" with Apps. OrangeScape is pitching this as an alternative to using email and spreadsheets to track approvals and other tasks, which can turn into a headache as the company grows and tasks get more complex. With Kissflow, businesses should be able to create workflows for things like expense reporting in five relatively easy steps: Naming the process, designing the form, defining the workflow, configure the permissions, then publish. | |
Hands-On With The Google Nexus 7 | Top |
If at first you don't succeed, try, try again. Built specifically for Google Play consumption, the Nexus 7 tablet built by Asus seems to be Google's answer to both the iPad and Kindle Fire. So how does it stack up and just how buttery smooth is Jelly Bean? | |
The Facebook Ecosystem CrunchUp + Our 7th Annual August Capital Party: Aug 3rd In Silicon Valley | Top |
TechCrunch has been throwing an annual summer party at August Capital since 2006, the point at which Michael Arrington realized it had gotten too big for his Atherton back yard. And this year we're doing it again, on the same big sunny Sand Hill balcony at the venture firm's headquarters. The party starts at 5:30 p.m. and goes til 9:00 p.m. And, we'll also be back with our fourth-ever CrunchUp earlier that day, at Fox Theater in Redwood City -- with a new, more specific theme. TechCrunch has looked at The Mobile Web Wars, The Real-Time Stream, Social Currency and Mobile First in previous years. Now lots of developers and investors in Silicon Valley are focused on a big and newly-public company: Facebook. | |
CREATE MORE ALERTS:
Auctions - Find out when new auctions are posted
Horoscopes - Receive your daily horoscope
Music - Get the newest Album Releases, Playlists and more
News - Only the news you want, delivered!
Stocks - Stay connected to the market with price quotes and more
Weather - Get today's weather conditions
You received this email because you subscribed to Yahoo! Alerts. Use this link to unsubscribe from this alert. To change your communications preferences for other Yahoo! business lines, please visit your Marketing Preferences. To learn more about Yahoo!'s use of personal information, including the use of web beacons in HTML-based email, please read our Privacy Policy. Yahoo! is located at 701 First Avenue, Sunnyvale, CA 94089. |
No comments:
Post a Comment