The latest from TechCrunch
- How Twitter Uses Open Source
- Facebook To Roll Out Email- and Phone Number-Based Ad Targeting Next Week
- ShoutEm Launches Development Platform To Make HTML5 Mobile Apps Look Native
- Two Years Post-Acquisition, Ngmoco Axes Bulk Of Staff At iOS Game Studio Freeverse
- Stanford Creates Vice Provost For Online Learning To "Fundamentally Reshape Education"
- Happy Ending To The Joyent Lifetime Subscription Story
- HR Software Maker Workday Files For $400M IPO
- SEC Watch: SV Angel Raising $40 Million
- HireVue Lands $22 Million To Reinvent The Job Interview
- Titans Talking Turkey? Larry Page, Tim Cook Reportedly Discussing Patent Issues
- Microsoft Opens Registration For Imagine Cup 2013, Doubles Prize Money to $300K
- HBO Takes On Netflix In The Nordics, With Its Own Streaming Video Service
- Oracle Issues Security Alert For Severe Java Vulnerability That Gives Attackers Control And Access To Personal Data
- Wolfram Alpha Launches Personal Analytics Reports For Facebook
- "In the Studio," GraphScience's Raymond Rouf Turns Facebook Graph Data Into Dollars
- Cobook, A Better Address Book For Mac, Now Syncs With Google Contacts
- Could This Be Amazon's New Kindle Fire?
- Paranoid Server Admins Get New iPhone App From Cloud Security Company Dome9
- Cambridge University Press Launches An API For Its Dictionaries
- Join HBO, YouTube, Machinima, And Hollywood Producer Dana Brunetti At Disrupt SF
How Twitter Uses Open Source | Top |
Twitter's Chris Aniszcyk gave the keynote this morning at CloudOpen and talked about how Twitter uses open source. His talk provided insights into how open source technology can also be used in an enterprise environment for scaling infrastructure. That's an emerging topic of interest in the enterprise world. | |
Facebook To Roll Out Email- and Phone Number-Based Ad Targeting Next Week | Top |
Facebook will be launching new features next week that allow advertisers to target their ads to customers based on contact information that the advertiser has already collected. It's a way for businesses to connect their Facebook ads with the customer lists they may have built up elsewhere. Inside Facebook first reported on the feature after tipsters saw it go live temporarily. A Facebook spokesperson confirmed this afternoon that it's a real product, and she walked me through how the program will work. | |
ShoutEm Launches Development Platform To Make HTML5 Mobile Apps Look Native | Top |
When ShoutEm was first launched back in 2008, it was focused on helping users to build their own social networking platforms. Well, the world has changed, and since then, it's transitioned the business as a platform that can be used to build mobile applications. But not everyone needs (or wants) a native app -- so ShoutEm now has a way to easily create HTML5 apps that can be viewed in any mobile web browser. With the ShoutEm HTML5 development platform, developers can quickly and easily make mobile web apps that have a lot of the same functionality as native mobile apps. Many businesses are developing native apps already, but for those who don't have an iPhone or Android phone, using HTML5 will allow them to reach a large number of users on feature phones or other smartphone platforms. | |
Two Years Post-Acquisition, Ngmoco Axes Bulk Of Staff At iOS Game Studio Freeverse | Top |
Mobile gaming outfit Ngmoco has swung the ax on Freeverse, the Mac and iOS game development studio it acquired back in February 2010. Today Ngmoco, which is now owned by Japanese mobile gaming giant DeNA, laid off the bulk of Freeverse's staff, possibly as part of a move to close the studio -- a move that one tipster tells us staffers at the 18-year-old Freeverse "did not see coming." The layoffs come just one week after the departures of Freeverse's co-founders, brothers Ian and Colin Lynch Smith. When contacted for comment, an Ngmoco rep sent the following statement attributed to VP of Studios Clive Downey: | |
Stanford Creates Vice Provost For Online Learning To "Fundamentally Reshape Education" | Top |
Stanford University announced the creation of an Office of the Vice Provost for Online Learning today, appointing computer science professor John Mitchell as the office's inaugural head. In the past 20 years, Stanford has only established two Vice Provost offices, for undergraduate and graduate education, both of which "fundamentally reshaped education at Stanford." University spokeswoman Lisa Lapin tells me the Vice Provost for Online Learning intends to do the same. | |
Happy Ending To The Joyent Lifetime Subscription Story | Top |
Earlier this month Joyent announced that it would pull the plug on legacy "lifetime" hosting accounts. Now a long lost co-founder of the company is stepping up to honor the agreement. | |
HR Software Maker Workday Files For $400M IPO | Top |
Workday, a company offering online tools for enterprises to manage human resources, payroll, and finances, just filed an S-1 form declaring its intention to raise up to $400 million in an IPO. Reuters reported in July that the company had quietly filed for an IPO but was able to keep the documents secret for a while longer thanks to the JOBS Act. Now it's official — the S-1 is online, and the details are out. | |
SEC Watch: SV Angel Raising $40 Million | Top |
According to an SEC filing, SV Angel may be raising another $40 million for a new fund. The filing shows that a fund, titled SV Angel IV, is in the process of raising $40 million, but the sale has not yet taken place. SV Angel, which was co-founded by angel investors David Lee and Ron Conway, has invested in companies such as Twitter, Zynga, Square, Hipmunk, Fab.com, Path, and Airbnb. The firm most recently raised $20 million in the Spring of 2011. | |
HireVue Lands $22 Million To Reinvent The Job Interview | Top |
Today HireVue, makers of a video based job interview and hiring management platform, announced that it raised a $17 million Series C round led by Investor Growth Capital along with an expansion of its debt facility for a total of $22 million in new funding. The company raised a total of $6 million during its B and C rounds, bringing its total raised to $28 million. | |
Titans Talking Turkey? Larry Page, Tim Cook Reportedly Discussing Patent Issues | Top |
It sounds like the setup to a weird, utterly geeky joke -- "So Apple's CEO calls up Google's CEO..." -- but according to a new report from Reuters, the situation is anything but. Apple CEO Tim Cook and Google CEO Larry Page have recently spent time chatting with each other over the phone, and they plan to continue doing so at least for the time being. Exactly what the two titans of tech are talking about isn't totally clear yet, but it's probably safe to assume that they dispensed with the pleasantries pretty quickly. No, these supposed conversations were all about patents — how they could they not be, given Apple's recent legal triumph over Samsung — and Reuters' sources pointed to the possibility of an arrangement between the respective companies that could help ease some tension. | |
Microsoft Opens Registration For Imagine Cup 2013, Doubles Prize Money to $300K | Top |
Microsoft has organized its Imagine Cup student technology competition for the last 10 years and today, the company opened registration for the 2013 edition of this event. Students ages 16 and older can now register for their national events and the winners of these local events will be flown to St. Petersburg, Russia, where the worldwide finals will take place from July 8 to 11. For this edition of Imagine Cup, Microsoft has doubled the prize money to $300,000. Microsoft also reorganized the competition around three new core areas: world citizenship, games and innovation. Previously, the flagship event was the software design competition, which a group of Ukrainian students won this year after developing gloves that can translate sign language into speech. | |
HBO Takes On Netflix In The Nordics, With Its Own Streaming Video Service | Top |
HBO is going to launch its first significant over-the-top offering, and it's going to do so in one of the same markets as Netflix. The service, called HBO Nordic, will be launched in Denmark, Sweden, Norway, and Finland in mid-October, and could provide some interesting competition to Netflix, which will also soon be entering that region. HBO Nordic is a joint venture between Home Box Office and Parsifal International, which will help bring the company's original programming to the region. Viewers in the Nordic states will have multiple ways of getting HBO Nordic: it will launch a premium, 24-hour live channel that will be distributed through local TV providers. But HBO Nordic will also be available direct to consumers as an on-demand, over-the-top video offering that will cost less than €10 per month. | |
Oracle Issues Security Alert For Severe Java Vulnerability That Gives Attackers Control And Access To Personal Data | Top |
Oracle has issued a security alert for a Java vulnerability that if exploited can give attackers access to a user's personal information. The vulnerability means that attackers can access a user's data without the need for a user name or password. To be successful, the user would have to fall victim to a malware attack. It would specifically hit people who who visit a malicious web site that is designed to attack those with the Java vulnerability. Successful exploits can impact the availability, integrity, and confidentiality of the user's system. | |
Wolfram Alpha Launches Personal Analytics Reports For Facebook | Top |
Wolfram Alpha, the "computational knowledge engine" that quietly handles a large number of queries from Apple's Siri, launched a new feature today that allows you to quickly get an overview of all your data on Facebook. The new report, says Wolfram CEO Stephen Wolfram, expands Wolfram Alpha's "powers of analysis to give you all sorts of personal analytics." The company plans to expand these reports with new features over time, but they already give you a pretty deep look at your Facebook habits. | |
"In the Studio," GraphScience's Raymond Rouf Turns Facebook Graph Data Into Dollars | Top |
"In the Studio" closes out the summer months by hosting a repeat entrepreneur who started his first two companies right after college, both of which grew to modest sizes before imploding, and after moving to the Valley about five years ago to work as a product manager at a small venture-backed company, had an insight about the e-commerce potential of Facebook that led to his current company. Raymond Rouf, founder and CEO of GraphScience, is an enviable position now, but it didn't come easily. After starting a healthcare consulting company and a publishing company for young minority professionals after college, he was able to grow both businesses before they fell apart due to a lack of focus, to paraphrase Rouf's humble and honest admission. When he moved to Silicon Valley and worked for MindKey building Facebook apps back in 2007, he began to realize the power of the Facebook API. Eventually, he founded, in 2008, what would later become GraphScience, working for 30 months with no income, living entirely off savings, where he focused entirely on how to build real, measurable value in his company and avoid the mistakes of his past. | |
Cobook, A Better Address Book For Mac, Now Syncs With Google Contacts | Top |
Cobook, a Mac contact management app which offers an improved experience over the default OS X address book (at least, that's a popular opinion), has released an update today which introduces a notable new feature: the ability to sync with Google Contacts. That's a great selling point for this free software application, which previously pulled in contacts from the Mac's native address book, as well as from social networks like Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. | |
Could This Be Amazon's New Kindle Fire? | Top |
After this morning's news that the Kindle Fire is now sold out, The Verge received a leaked photo of what is purported to be the next Kindle Fire. Two models are supposed to be released, a 7-inch variant that will replace the existing device and a new 10-inch device that would put it in competition with Apple and the iPad. The Verge's report lines up nicely with previous rumors that circulated before Amazon told its employees to stop talking to tech blogs. The first generation Kindle Fire bore a striking resemblance to the BlackBerry Playbook since it was based on the same reference design, but if this image is actually legitimate, Amazon has clearly gone in a different direction. | |
Paranoid Server Admins Get New iPhone App From Cloud Security Company Dome9 | Top |
Israeli security company Dome9 provides a hosted firewall for protecting servers in both private or public clouds. It enables customers to lockdown SSH access or admin panels until they're specifically opened via the web-based Dome9 console. Today the company released an iPhone app that will provide more convenient access to the console. | |
Cambridge University Press Launches An API For Its Dictionaries | Top |
Cambridge University Press just launched a new API that is meant to make it easy for developers to add data from a variety of the organization's dictionaries to their own sites and mobile apps. With the launch of this API, Cambridge University Press is following in the footsteps of other well known dictionary publishers like Merriam-Webster and the Oxford English Dictionary, as well as startups like Wordnik. | |
Join HBO, YouTube, Machinima, And Hollywood Producer Dana Brunetti At Disrupt SF | Top |
The content world is changing fast, as TV shows and movies are rapidly moving online. Users are turning to online video, mobile and tablet apps, and connected TVs for new ways to watch their favorite shows, and to discover new ones. For TV networks and Hollywood filmmakers, that means it's no longer sufficient just to think about the usual means of distributing their content on TV and in theatres -- they have to take into account digital distribution. And for independent creators, there's never been a better opportunity to find an audience without having to go through the studio system. With that in mind, we've assembled a panel of old and new media experts at Disrupt SF to discuss how the online video, mobile apps, and connected TVs are changing the ways they try to reach audiences and create new interactive experiences. | |
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