The latest from TechCrunch
- Secure Your Retina MacBook With The MacLocks Lock Cable
- Mixpanel Is Tracking More Than Actions Now, Introduces User Analytics
- Hands-On With California Headphones: A Little Bit Country, A Little Bit Rock 'n' Roll
- I Was A Postmates Courier For A Day
- Leaked Windows Phone Keyboard: Curved For Your Typing Pleasure
- comScore: In U.S. Mobile Market, Samsung, Android Top The Charts; Apps Overtake Web Browsing
- Acunote: YC Alum Takes On Project Management With A Real-Time, Gmail-Like Interface
- Dark Clouds Be Gone: Apica Raises $5M From SEB, Others To Keep SaaS Services Running Without A Hitch
- Youappi Secures $1 Million To Address App Discovery And Distribution In A Chaotic Market
- 80% Of Americans Work "After Hours," Equaling An Extra Day Of Work Per Week
- TechCrunch Makers Episode One: Inside Brooklyn's Makerbot With Bre Pettis
- Japanese Retailer Rakuten To Launch The Kobo eReader, Localized Content
- Some Dissatisfied Wireless Customers Leave A Complaint, Others Do This…
- Amazon's Flow App Brings Barcode Scanning & Augmented Reality To Android Users
- Fly Or Die: Retina MacBook Pro
- Ogone Launches In-App Payment Library For iOS And Android
- CreativeWorx Launches TimeTracker, A Hands-Free Time Tracking Software For Creatives
- HTC's $149 Droid Incredible 4G LTE Coming To Verizon On July 5
- Dell Acquires Quest Software For $2.4 Billion
- Mobile Ad Network Jumptap Preps For IPO, Picks Up Another $27.5M From Keating, WPP And More While Waiting
| Secure Your Retina MacBook With The MacLocks Lock Cable | Top |
If you're the average Joe, you don't let your Retina MacBook out of your site. But what if you're an IT guy with a fleet of these things to secure on a client site? What to do? MacLocks has just launched a locking case for the Retina MacBook, allowing folks to snap down their laptops almost anywhere. The case actually envelops the MacBook and the looped cable then fits over a table leg or pillar. | |
| Mixpanel Is Tracking More Than Actions Now, Introduces User Analytics | Top |
Every time I talk to Mixpanel co-founder Suhail Doshi, he likes to update me on how many actions his analytics startup is tracking for its customers every month. (In case you're wondering: The latest number is more than 6 billion.) But Mixpanel isn't just tracking actions anymore — starting today, it's tracking people, too and providing a more "user-centric" view of its data. Specifically, when customers open up their Mixpanel dashboard, they'll see a new menu under the "actions" section called "people", where they can get data about all of their visitors, such as gender, age, and country, and then correlate that data with user activity, so that, for example, you can tell whether men or women are spending more time in your app. Doshi says these are the kinds of "really hard but very specific" questions that most companies have to build their own in-house analytics systems to answer. | |
| Hands-On With California Headphones: A Little Bit Country, A Little Bit Rock 'n' Roll | Top |
Stop pretending to be a rap star. That's the note on the front California Headphones website and the driving philosophy behind the company's Laredo and Silverado headphones. You see, these headphones, much like Beats By Dr. Dre, are targeting a specific demographic with clear marketing and unique styling. But these headphones are more than just looking the part. They're tuned to better match the musical style of rock and country, with less pounding bass and a heaver investment in mids and highs. California Headphones is onto something here and has turned to Kickstarter to help advance the cause. The lifestyle headphone market has long focused on the urban culture. Since these headphones are tuned to match rap and R&B's style, they often do not reproduce rock or country accurately. Sure, there are always the great standby options of Sennheiser, Shure and other traditional audio companies, but more often than not, the styling is anything but inspiring. There's nothing wrong with wanting good looking headphones. | |
| I Was A Postmates Courier For A Day | Top |
I've been a big fan of the PostMates Get It Now delivery service ever since it was launched more than a month ago, and use it every couple of weeks to order lunch whenever I'm feeling particularly lazy, when I'm jonesing for some food that's not within walking distance, or when I have a limited amount of time in between meetings. I've got much love for the PostMates couriers who bring me things that I wouldn't have gone out and gotten for myself. And so, when they asked if I wanted to spend an afternoon as a courier myself, of course I jumped at the opportunity. Which is how it came to pass that one Friday, I spent about 3.5 hours biking around, picking up mostly lunch orders and chocolates and delivering to various startups and tech-savvy customers in downtown San Francisco. So what was it like? Well let me tell you. | |
| Leaked Windows Phone Keyboard: Curved For Your Typing Pleasure | Top |
Microsoft is on a hot streak. The company has never been cooler, pushing out hot new start screens (both desktop and mobile), excluding early-adopters from major upgrades (pulling a Google), and snagging the up-and-coming Yammer enterprise social network for a cool $1.2 billion. But sometimes people can get carried away. So is the case with this image of an alleged future Windows Phone keyboard, which curves out of the bottom right-side of the phone into an arc for one-thumb typing. As you can see, the image doesn't look very well put-together. But WMPowerUser claims that this image was leaked from an internal presentation, so it's entirely possible that it's a render. | |
| comScore: In U.S. Mobile Market, Samsung, Android Top The Charts; Apps Overtake Web Browsing | Top |
| Acunote: YC Alum Takes On Project Management With A Real-Time, Gmail-Like Interface | Top |
"On time and under budget" is manna from heaven for project managers the world over, but unfortunately for most of them, those working on the projects and those commissioning them, it's not often the case. Now, a Y Combinator alum (Winter 2011 class) called Acunote is launching a new project management system that wants to change that -- by offering a platform to help people manage their tasks better. With real time updates and a simple interface that bears a loose resemblance to Google's Gmail, Acunote is making it a lot easier and quicker for people to update what is going on (and what is not) in a project. And it is setting its sights on taking that to the next level with features to make it much more collaborative. | |
| Dark Clouds Be Gone: Apica Raises $5M From SEB, Others To Keep SaaS Services Running Without A Hitch | Top |
Here's a timely funding announcement: Apica, a company that offers a solution enterprises can use to keep their cloud-based apps running smoothly -- even when there are problems in the clouds -- has just raised $5 million to continue expanding its services. The news coms after a weekend that saw several popular services like Instagram and Netflix collapse after a major storm knocked out one of Amazon's major data centers in North Virginia. The $5 million announced today will be used for product development, marketing and expanding particular services in the U.S. around server testing capacity for the company's cloud and mobile testing and monitoring services. It is a Series C round and was led by SEB Venture Capital, with existing investors Industrifonden, ALMI Invest, and KTH Chalmers Capital all participating. | |
| Youappi Secures $1 Million To Address App Discovery And Distribution In A Chaotic Market | Top |
Youappi, the cross-platform app distribution startup which competes with Fiksu, has secured $1 million in seed funding from undisclosed Angel investors. It's now launching its solution on Tappible, a monetization and engagement platform for mobile applications. Youappi, which is based between Israel and New York, was founded by CEO Moshe Vaknin who left to do Youappi from Todacell last month. Youappi is trying to address the challenge of app discovery. You know the score - it's tough to find great apps. Appsfire and others are working well on this issue, but there's plenty more work to be done. | |
| 80% Of Americans Work "After Hours," Equaling An Extra Day Of Work Per Week | Top |
Have you ever read news that sort of makes you want to cry? I have to warn you, that's what this new study from enterprise mobility company Good Technology might inspire. The company polled 1,000 U.S. workers to get a better understanding of their mobile work habits. The results are not surprising: the line between work and free time has become so blurred it's practically non-existent. 80% of people continue working after leaving the office (a figure which actually sounds low, if you ask me). Half of them do so because they feel they have "no choice." Connectedness means customers demand fast replies. There's no off switch. Half of respondents check their email in bed, starting at around 7:09 AM. 68% check email before 8 AM. And you wonder why people hate email so much? God forbid we get a cup of coffee in us before dealing with the latest work emergency. | |
| TechCrunch Makers Episode One: Inside Brooklyn's Makerbot With Bre Pettis | Top |
It's been months in the making, but here it is: the first episode of TechCrunch Makers, featuring Bre Pettis of Makerbot. We visited Bre's downtown Brooklyn factory where he and the rest of team design, build, and ship hundreds of Makerbots a week. | |
| Japanese Retailer Rakuten To Launch The Kobo eReader, Localized Content | Top |
The Kobo eReader is about to invade Japan. Following Rakuten's purchase of the Canadian eReader company, the Japanese online retail giant announced the eReader's launch plans this morning. The Kobo eReader hits the retailer's interwebs on July 17th for ¥7,980 including tax (or $100 USD). The device is completely retooled for the Japanese populace and launches with a large assortment of ePub 3.0 Japanese titles, including novels and comic books. | |
| Some Dissatisfied Wireless Customers Leave A Complaint, Others Do This… | Top |
We've all had our moments of rage when dealing with wireless providers. It's a difficult relationship. We need our phones in a way that makes us far more dependent than any human should be on a large corporation, and because of this, carriers are able to take advantage of our desperation. Now, I'm not saying that's the case with this poor gentleman at a T-Mobile store in Manchester, England. But for whatever reason, he's displaying more rage than I've ever seen out of a dissatisfied customer. Obviously, it doesn't work out too well for him in the end as police officers (Bobbys?) whisk him away in cuffs after his short-lived performance. | |
| Amazon's Flow App Brings Barcode Scanning & Augmented Reality To Android Users | Top |
Amazon Flow, the barcode scanning/augmented reality app from Amazon subsidiary A9.com, has arrived on Android today, following its November 2011 iOS debut. To refresh your memory, the app lets shoppers scan things like CDs, DVDs, books, toys, video games, and more using their smartphone's camera in order to display product details and pricing info. Barcode scanning, however, is not unique to Amazon Flow - the feature is also available in Amazon's flagship application, which is the more popular of the two. But Flow does something special - it supports an augmented reality view of some products, which uses image recognition techniques to show movie trailers and other media previews. | |
| Fly Or Die: Retina MacBook Pro | Top |
The new MacBook Pro with Retina Display. Sure, it stands to fudge up the Internet, but boy is it pretty! The display boasts 5.1 million pixels, with a bump from 1280x800 to a full 2880x1800 resolution. It brings Apple's laptops into the display big leagues with the iPhone and iPad, and gets a bit thinner to boot. Plus, you'll get an HDMI port instead of that optical drive. | |
| Ogone Launches In-App Payment Library For iOS And Android | Top |
It seems that there's no shortage of companies queuing up to help developers integrate payments into their mobile apps and today that space just got a little more crowded: Ogone, a long time player in online payments, has launched an in-app payment library for iOS and Android. The new library complements the company's existing mobile web-based payment system meaning that app developers who rely on Ogone to process payments no longer need to redirect users to the browser in order to take a payment -- presuming that they don't fall foul of Apple's tight grip on in-app purchases for digital goods. | |
| CreativeWorx Launches TimeTracker, A Hands-Free Time Tracking Software For Creatives | Top |
| HTC's $149 Droid Incredible 4G LTE Coming To Verizon On July 5 | Top |
HTC's Droid Incredible 4G LTE hasn't been a very well-kept secret (then again, what HTC phone is?), but Verizon has just confirmed what many of us suspected -- their latest HTC handset will hit store shelves on July 5. If you've been itching for an upgrade and just can't wait for a Galaxy S III, expect to shell out $149 (after a mail-in rebate, sadly) for the new Sense-powered slab. | |
| Dell Acquires Quest Software For $2.4 Billion | Top |
Another major acquisition for Dell this morning. The company announced it's buying enterprise management software maker Quest Software for $2.4 billion. Under the terms of the agreement, Dell will pay $28.00 per share, which beat out Insight Venture Partners' bid of $25.75 per share. Quest's assets, including its access management software, performance monitoring solutions, Windows Server management solutions, database management, and more, will now serve to strengthen Dell's recently formed Software Group. | |
| Mobile Ad Network Jumptap Preps For IPO, Picks Up Another $27.5M From Keating, WPP And More While Waiting | Top |
Jumptap -- one of the last big, independent and privately-held mobile ad networks around reaching 263 million people worldwide -- has today announced that it has picked up another $27.5 million in funding to keep up the pace with other players while it prepares for an IPO itself. This round was led by two new backers, Keating Capital and "a large institutional investor" that Jumptap tells me it cannot name. The round also saw participation from existing investors General Catalyst Partners, Redpoint Ventures, Summerhill Ventures, Valhalla Partners, and WPP (the last one of these perhaps one to watch the closest). In total, Jumptap has now raised $121.5 million. | |
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If you're the average Joe, you don't let your Retina MacBook out of your site. But what if you're an IT guy with a fleet of these things to secure on a client site? What to do? MacLocks has just launched a locking case for the Retina MacBook, allowing folks to snap down their laptops almost anywhere. The case actually envelops the MacBook and the looped cable then fits over a table leg or pillar.
Every time I talk to
Stop pretending to be a rap star. That's the note on the front
I've been a big fan of the
Microsoft is on a hot streak. The company has never been cooler, pushing out hot new start screens (both desktop and mobile),
"On time and under budget" is manna from heaven for project managers the world over, but unfortunately for most of them, those working on the projects and those commissioning them, it's not often the case. Now, a Y Combinator alum (Winter 2011 class) called
Here's a timely funding announcement: 
Have you ever read news that sort of makes you want to cry? I have to warn you, that's what this new study from enterprise mobility company
It's been months in the making, but here it is: the first episode of TechCrunch Makers, featuring Bre Pettis of
The Kobo eReader is about to invade Japan. Following Rakuten's purchase of the Canadian eReader company, the Japanese online retail giant announced the eReader's
We've all had our moments of rage when dealing with wireless providers. It's a difficult relationship. We need our phones in a way that makes us far more dependent than any human should be on a large corporation, and because of this, carriers are able to take advantage of our desperation. Now, I'm not saying that's the case with this poor gentleman at a T-Mobile store in Manchester, England. But for whatever reason, he's displaying more rage than I've ever seen out of a dissatisfied customer. Obviously, it doesn't work out too well for him in the end as police officers (Bobbys?) whisk him away in cuffs after his short-lived performance.
The new
It seems that there's no shortage of companies queuing up to help developers integrate payments into their mobile apps and today that space just got a little more crowded:
HTC's Droid Incredible 4G LTE hasn't been a very well-kept secret (then again, what HTC phone is?), but Verizon has just confirmed what many of us suspected -- their latest HTC handset will hit store shelves on July 5. If you've been itching for an upgrade and just can't wait for a Galaxy S III, expect to shell out $149 (after a mail-in rebate, sadly) for the new Sense-powered slab.
Another major acquisition for Dell this morning. The company announced it's buying enterprise management software maker Quest Software for $2.4 billion. Under the terms of the agreement, Dell will pay $28.00 per share, which 
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