The latest from TechCrunch
- Showyou Adds Olympics Content To Its Apps, Now Has More Than 28,000 Video Clips (And Counting!)
- Startup Claims 80% Of Its Facebook Ad Clicks Are Coming From Bots
- Critic Of NBC Olympics Coverage Has Twitter Account Suspended for Posting Exec's Email
- No More Calls From Strangers: Amicus Uses Facebook To Recruit Political Volunteers
- Facebook Timeline Photos Redesign Lets You Blow Up Favorites 4X Larger, Shows Tagged Shots First
- Mozilla Confirms It Will Join Berlin's New 'Factory' Campus
- Keen On… Dan Wagner: Why American Entrepreneurs Are "Slightly Parochial" [TCTV]
- The Best Gym For Startups: CrossFit
- Hey Google! I Don't Care About Hangouts, I Just Want To Read My Email
- T-Mobile To Launch $249 Ice Cream Sandwich-Powered Galaxy Note On August 8
- Google Replaces Gmail Video Chats With Google+ Hangouts
- Netflix Open Sources Chaos Monkey – A Tool Designed To Cause Failure So You Can Make A Stronger Cloud
- The New Digg Is Launching On Wednesday: Will Be "Beautiful, Image-Friendly, And Ad-Free"
- Analyst: Twitter Passed 500M Users In June 2012, 140M Of Them In US; Jakarta 'Biggest Tweeting' City
- Retro-Inspired GameDock Turns Your iDevice Into A Game Console, Hits $50K Funding Goal
- It's High Time There Was A Tech IPO Market In London – Let's Do This.
- Daisey Cutter: The Ultimate Apple Fanboy, Mike Daisey, Is Back With A Slightly More Realistic Show
- Apple's "Purple" Concept For iPhone Gets Sony-Inspired Designs Thrown Out Of Patent Trial
- The Weather Channel Releases Lumia-Only Windows Phone App: Augmented Reality, Social Weather Alerts, And More
- Android's US Market Share Declined By 5% In Q2, 'Approaching A Peak': Strategy Analytics
Showyou Adds Olympics Content To Its Apps, Now Has More Than 28,000 Video Clips (And Counting!) | Top |
One problem with 2012 Olympics coverage is that there's so much of it. If you're in the U.S., you can turn to NBCOlympics.com for full video coverage of the Summer Games, including clips, highlights, and full-length video of competitions as they happen. But with all that content, it's difficult to sort through and find what you're looking for. Want a better way to find and discover what's happening at the Olympics? Showyou is trying to solve that problem, by automatically highlighting the Olympics content that its users are sharing with each other in the app and on other social networks. | |
Startup Claims 80% Of Its Facebook Ad Clicks Are Coming From Bots | Top |
A lot of people like to complain about their experiences on major web platforms such as Facebook, but most of them stick around as users, feeling that the pros outweigh the cons. But Limited Run, a startup that makes a software platform for musicians and labels to sell physical products like vinyl records, says that it has had the final straw with its experience as a small business advertising on Facebook -- and as a result is completely withdrawing its presence on the social networking platform. | |
Critic Of NBC Olympics Coverage Has Twitter Account Suspended for Posting Exec's Email | Top |
Twitter shut down Independent reporter Guy Adams after he tweeted a top NBC executive's email address. Adams has been a staunch critic of NBC's Olympics coverage, tweeting up a storm about NBC's factual inaccuracies and other broadcast shortcomings. Adams tweeted the corporate email address of Gary Zenkel, President of the NBC Olympics. | |
No More Calls From Strangers: Amicus Uses Facebook To Recruit Political Volunteers | Top |
The process of recruiting volunteers is a pain felt by the entire American electorate: citizens are quick to hang up on complete strangers begging for their time and campaign organizations, as a result, are perpetually short staffed. Amicus, a political action platform, may have found a clever way to ensure that citizens are only contacted by trusted friends. Amicus scours public and private databases and matches names up with their volunteers' facebook friends, assigning volunteer outreach only to those who have a personal bond between the caller. "Amicus' friend-to-friend connections enhance our traditional outreach program and make it easier to mobilize our supporters online," said Jared Schwartz, Director of Digital strategies, AFL-CIO, the largest federation of unions in the US. The heart of Amicus is an online dashboard that presents volunteers with a ready made list of friends that need to be contacted, complete with a leaderboard, badges, and other gaming elements to incentivize the thankless job of political outreach. | |
Facebook Timeline Photos Redesign Lets You Blow Up Favorites 4X Larger, Shows Tagged Shots First | Top |
Facebook is taking photo curation to next level. You can now favorite your own photos to make them appear 4X larger in a revamped Photos section of your profile. The redesign also sees a much better navigation system that first brings you to "photos of you" or whoever's profile you're on, instead of a list of albums. The update doesn't automatically feature the most beloved photos on your Timeline based on Likes and comments, the way Google+ now does in its news feed on tablet. Still, it digitizes a natural behavior of how we interact with photos in the physical world -- making big prints of our favorites. | |
Mozilla Confirms It Will Join Berlin's New 'Factory' Campus | Top |
We've covered them since before they existed, but now "Factory", Berlin's new, vast tech campus, is taking shape. As builders adapt old factory buildings (an area which will cover 107,000 square feet or 10,000 square meters), the privately-funded initiative has announced that Mozilla will become an anchor resident in the facility, which plans to house a number of startups large and small. Jim Cook, CFO of Mozilla also confirmed that Mozilla will be hiring in Berlin. Confirmed so far are the startups startups 6Wunderkinder, Four Sektor, Toast, Urge iO, Views, and local tech blog Silicon Allee. But the expanding SoundCloud team will take on a large swathe of the vast amount of space available, which will feature a basketball court, gallery, conference area, cafe and - last we heard - a swimming pool. | |
Keen On… Dan Wagner: Why American Entrepreneurs Are "Slightly Parochial" [TCTV] | Top |
While the eyes of the world are focused on the global competition in London at the moment, it's still quite rare to hear of English start-up entrepreneurs able to successfully compete globally with the Yanks. But one London based entrepreneur who might buck this trend is Dan Wagner, the founder of the successful publishing platform M.A.I.D and the current chairman of Bright Station Ventures. Indeed, his latest ecommerce venture, mPowa, has been in the news recently because of accusations from Jack Dorsey's Square that Wagner's mPowa has been copying Square's images in their promotional material. But when I sat down with Wagner in his central London office, he not only rejected the idea that mPowa had borrowed anything from Square but he told me that American entrepreneurs are "slightly parochial" in their approach to the increasingly global Internet marketplace. | |
The Best Gym For Startups: CrossFit | Top |
It's surreal to see an entire startup engineering team that could double as a troupe of volunteer firefighters. Yet, for the growing list of startups that are sending their workforce to the Navy Seal-friendly gym phenomenon, CrossFit, having an entire team of buff employees is surprisingly realistic. "We carry so much more energy throughout the the day after a work out," says Neverware co-founder Joshua Hefter, whose entire team regularly treks down to the Black Box Crossfit Gym in New York. The startup life has "a strong culture around group activity and intensity, and we found that those two things really describe the Crossfit experience." | |
Hey Google! I Don't Care About Hangouts, I Just Want To Read My Email | Top |
Marissa Mayer, please build us all a better Gmail over at Yahoo. Gmail is a disaster. That's right, I said it. There's an undercurrent of frustration surrounding Google's webmail service, which is still growing like crazy (likely due to Android activations), but is now widely known to be "painfully slow." The more you use it, the worse it gets. Even Y Combinator co-founder Paul Graham called out Gmail as painfully slow in a recent essay detailing ambitious startup ideas, saying that if someone were to build a service that was only as good as Gmail, but fast, that alone would allow them to pull away users from Google's service. Despite this, what does Google do? It keeps adding bells and whistles to Gmail. Video hangouts? I don't want video hangouts in my Gmail. I want to read my email messages. Or rather, feel free to add video hangouts to Gmail, after you fix the damned thing. | |
T-Mobile To Launch $249 Ice Cream Sandwich-Powered Galaxy Note On August 8 | Top |
T-Mobile's Galaxy Note has been one of the worst-kept handset secrets in recent memory but the one thing the carrier managed to keep close to its proverbial chest is when its customers could actually go and get their hands on one. According to CNET, T-Mobile will begin selling its version of Samsung's 5.3-inch phablet on August 8, for a cool $249 with a two-year contract. Of course, whether or not you should buy one is another story entirely. Sure, there's nothing wrong with the T-Mobile version per se -- it's nearly identical to the AT&T model, save for its lack of an LTE radio and the fact that it ships loaded with Ice Cream Sandwich. What really makes things dicey is the launch window that T-Mobile and Samsung have come up with. | |
Google Replaces Gmail Video Chats With Google+ Hangouts | Top |
This was probably inevitable: Google today announced that it is replacing video chats in Gmail with Google+ Hangouts. The company first brought video chat to Gmail in 2008, but ever since the launch of Google+, it was only a matter of time before the company decided to replace its old video chat feature with Google+'s marquee group video chat tool. Hangouts, Google says, "utilize the power of Google's network to deliver higher reliability and enhanced quality" and will allow Gmail users to also reach people not only when they are using Gmail, but also "if they are on Google+ in the browser or on their Android or iOS devices." | |
Netflix Open Sources Chaos Monkey – A Tool Designed To Cause Failure So You Can Make A Stronger Cloud | Top |
Netflix has become a model for the cloud, developing new tools for managing apps on a cloud infrastructure. Today the company has open sourced "chaos monkey," its tool designed to purposely cause failure in order to increase the resiliency of an application in Amazon Web Services (AWS.) It's a timely move. AWS has had its fair share of outages. With tools like Chaos Monkey, companies can be better prepared when a cloud infrastructure has a failure. | |
The New Digg Is Launching On Wednesday: Will Be "Beautiful, Image-Friendly, And Ad-Free" | Top |
After its new owners decided to go back to the drawing board and figure out what to do with the former Web 2.0 darling, Digg is relaunching on Wednesday. Today, a week after its new owner Betaworks explained why it bought the site and announced the August 1 relaunch, the company has published the first mockups and screenshots of the new Digg v1 and explained what the user experience on the site will look like. According to this announcement, the new Digg will be a "beautiful, image-friendly, and ad-free experience." | |
Analyst: Twitter Passed 500M Users In June 2012, 140M Of Them In US; Jakarta 'Biggest Tweeting' City | Top |
A milestone for Twitter today, according to the Paris-based analyst group Semiocast. The social network has now passed the half-billion account mark -- specifically 517 million accounts as of July 1, 2012, with 141.8 million of those users in the U.S., still about half as many users as Facebook has but positioning it as the second-biggest social networking site. And just as most of Twitter's users are coming from outside the U.S., so are the tweets: the top three cities in terms of tweets, it says, are Jakarta, Tokyo and London. | |
Retro-Inspired GameDock Turns Your iDevice Into A Game Console, Hits $50K Funding Goal | Top |
There's no question about it -- as fun as mobile gaming can be, sometimes furiously pecking at a touchscreen just doesn't cut it. For those of you who long for the halcyon days of gripping hard, uncomfortable controllers while a conceptually-simple game runs on your television, the GameDock may be just what the doctor ordered. | |
It's High Time There Was A Tech IPO Market In London – Let's Do This. | Top |
The recent results of Zygna, Groupon, and even the mighty Facebook on the public markets in the U.S. have served to highlight a couple of major issues for European startups. One is a little jealously: there remain few viable IPO markets in Europe for tech stocks, hence why you see so many moving to the US - usually NASDAQ - when they get big, as happened with Yandex and Qlik Technologies. The second is annoyance: many solid European tech companies are now at a point where they have solid, revenue generating businesses, built on a lot more than hype and user numbers alone. And in the last year we've seen these companies start to look for ways to break-out. For example, there are rumours that both the incredibly successful Wonga and King.com are considering floating on New York's NASDAQ exchange, while Mind Candy is also alleged to be considering a float for its Moshi Monsters game. And the latest symptom of this is another rallying cry by entrepreneurs and VCs for a tech IPO market in London, the natural home for European startups to float in a global setting. | |
Daisey Cutter: The Ultimate Apple Fanboy, Mike Daisey, Is Back With A Slightly More Realistic Show | Top |
Mike Daisey, noted fabulist, is back at his original theatre in DC, The Woolly Mammoth where he is holding encore presentations of his debunked - and now slightly rewritten - show about working conditions at Foxconn. Gone are the guards with guns, the fake crippled man who touched the totemic iPad, and the real/fake translator named Cathy. Daisey replaced those stock characters with a bit of self deprecating humor and, as far as I can tell, a few, clearer facts. | |
Apple's "Purple" Concept For iPhone Gets Sony-Inspired Designs Thrown Out Of Patent Trial | Top |
Jury selection is starting today for the patent trial between Apple and Samsung that has already resulted in the release of tons of early Apple iPhone and iPad prototypes designs. But one design holds particular interest: an iPhone concept called "Purple." The phone isn't actually purple (it's white), but the big news is not the color - it's the date of the creation. To counter Samsung's charge that Apple copied Sony's smartphone and Walkman designs when it created the iPhone, Apple filed a motion with the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California which shows the Purple concept was from 2005 - before Sony's Nishibori Design, developed in March 2006. | |
The Weather Channel Releases Lumia-Only Windows Phone App: Augmented Reality, Social Weather Alerts, And More | Top |
The Weather Channel has been working hard to improve its mobile experience, with a new iPad app, a revamped iPhone app, and now a brand new Windows Phone app for Lumia devices. The WP app for Lumia will have features exclusive to Lumia owners for the next three to six months, at which point the same features will be ported over to the old Windows Phone app, available to all. Along with support for seven languages, the app will offer improved alert functionality and a new augmented reality feature. The Augmented reality feature allows you to check out the weather through your camera using photos submitted by users in your area. So, for example, if you pointed your phone's camera at the Empire State Building, and someone had just posted a photo of it in the rain, your screen would show that user's photo and the accompanying weather in your display. | |
Android's US Market Share Declined By 5% In Q2, 'Approaching A Peak': Strategy Analytics | Top |
Have we reached a state of "peak Android" in the same way that the energy industry can reach "peak oil"? This is an idea being floated today by Strategy Analytics. Last week the firm noted that Android partner Samsung was the world's leading smartphone seller last quarter, taking just over 50% of the market. Today, it's broken out what's happening in the key U.S. market: Android sales actually declined by 5% over last year -- and SA says Android may be "approaching a peak" in its market share. The analysts noted that in Q2, which ended June 30, U.S. smartphone sales trends reflected the slowdown that it has been seeing globally. Total shipments in the U.S. stood at 23.8 million units, which was (like Android itself) a drop of 5% on the same period a year ago. Android, at 56% of all sales, remains the most dominant in the U.S. but Apple, the analysts noted, gained at Google's expense and was the only OS to have grown over last year. | |
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