The latest from TechCrunch
- ParkPlease Partners With Limos.com To Help Users Avoid This Weekend's ParkApocalypse In San Francisco
- Microsoft Announces Updates For Virtually All Of Its Built-In Windows 8 Apps
- Zynga Shares Decline About 20% To All-Time Low In After-Hours Trading
- Haters Gonna Hate This
- For Oracle It's About The Machine Not The Fantasy Of A New World
- ZEFR Hires Former Dailymotion Exec To Expand Internationally, Also Nabs Some BetterWorks Engineers
- Paper By FiftyThree Now On Apple Retail iPads, Tops 3.3M Downloads And 190 Years Spent In-App
- The PandaBot: Another Day, Another Anamorphic 3D Printer With A Cute Name
- Rock The Post And CrowdHut Are Trying To Solve Two Of Crowdfunding's Biggest Pain Points
- Samsung's ATIV Smart PC And Asus' VivoTab RT To Launch On AT&T In Time For The Holidays
- Zynga Cuts Revenue Outlook For 2012, Q3; Cites Weakness In Certain Games Including The Ville
- Y Combinator-Backed Perfect Audience Makes Facebook Retargeting Easy (Even For Tech Bloggers), Raises $1.1M
- Facebook's 1 Billion Human Shield Against Disruption
- Panjiva Adds Global Search To Its Social Network For World Manufacturing
- TuneIn Turns On Facebook Scrobbling For Its Online Radio Service
- Samsung Galaxy Camera Will Arrive On AT&T, Pricing And Availability Unknown
- Everpurse Is A Purse That Charges Your Smartphone, Wire-Free
- There's A Fine Line Between Private And Public, And Facebook Might Have Just Crossed It
- Mind-Reading Tech Helps Students Overcome Test Anxiety
- 1 Billion Users Have Done Zilch For Facebook's Stock Price Today
| ParkPlease Partners With Limos.com To Help Users Avoid This Weekend's ParkApocalypse In San Francisco | Top |
Altogether, some estimate San Francisco will have more than a million visitors entering the city this weekend for all these events. That's a huge amount, considering that on a good day San Francisco has a native population of about 800,000 residents. Enter ParkPlease, a new marketplace for parking spots. | |
| Microsoft Announces Updates For Virtually All Of Its Built-In Windows 8 Apps | Top |
| Zynga Shares Decline About 20% To All-Time Low In After-Hours Trading | Top |
After cutting its full-year projections for bookings and earnings, Zynga's shares fell more than 20 percent to an all-time low in after-hours trading. The company's shares are trading at $2.22, down more than 21 percent from today's close of $2.82. It's been a hard road for the company since its IPO last December. Not only have numerous executives left (many of them brought over from EA), but several games like The Ville have not performed up to expectations. Zynga also said that it has had to write off between $85 million and $95 million of the $180 million it paid for OMGPOP this spring. The company bought the New York-based and YC-backed developer earlier this year for its surprise hit "Draw Something." If you look at the cash, short-term and long-term investments Zynga has on its balance sheet (which add up to just over $1.6 billion), the market is giving the company an enterprise value of between $100 million to $200 million beyond. | |
| Haters Gonna Hate This | Top |
![]() "At times one remains faithful to a cause only because its opponents do not cease to be insipid."I've spent a good part of this morning defending two blog posts that hit the TechCrunch homepage last night. No it wasn't "Jumio's Credit Card Scanning Technology Pops Up in Travelocity's Hotel Deals App" or even "Flayvr, A Mobile App That Automatically Creates Photo Albums, Raises $450K Seed Round." Nope, instead, it was two posts that used the F-word* in the headline. | |
| For Oracle It's About The Machine Not The Fantasy Of A New World | Top |
For Oracle, it's about the machine, not the user; this became abundantly clear this week at Oracle Open World. Oracle talks the cloud talk but what the company is really doing is protecting its base, and building engineered systems that by all accounts is extraordinary technology. But its principles are wrong. I see little proof of humanity. What I do see are calibrated machines - homogenous and stacked in Oracle's shiny red brand. But maybe that's what people want in the end. For me, that is depressing as hell and counter to the swell of innovation that pushes me back every day like some gale force wind that picks me up and drops me into a new world. At every level of this altered place a creature pops up to remind me that the reality is not all that we see in a subterranean conference hall on the Bay. | |
| ZEFR Hires Former Dailymotion Exec To Expand Internationally, Also Nabs Some BetterWorks Engineers | Top |
ZEFR has been focused on getting Hollywood studios to let it license their movies, and create clips to put on YouTube. But it's recently added a new business focused on helping content creators across a number of verticals to monetize content that gets posted on YouTube. Now, it's going beyond just its home U.S. market and taking on the world, with a key international hire to expand overseas. | |
| Paper By FiftyThree Now On Apple Retail iPads, Tops 3.3M Downloads And 190 Years Spent In-App | Top |
Here's a neat, well-deserved win for a startup company: Paper, the critically acclaimed drawing application for iPad is now being featured by Apple on iPad demo units in its retail stores, and now has over 3.3 million downloads, with 25 million pages of drawings created by users. The time spent in-app creating Color journals adds up to almost 200 years in total. | |
| The PandaBot: Another Day, Another Anamorphic 3D Printer With A Cute Name | Top |
The 3D printer craze shows no signs of stopping and Kickstarter is full of exciting examples of new printing hardware. Today's entrant in the 3D race? The devilishly cute PandaBot, a "fur white" 3D printer with an 11x11x11-inch build area and a smooth, seamless design. | |
| Rock The Post And CrowdHut Are Trying To Solve Two Of Crowdfunding's Biggest Pain Points | Top |
The passage of the JOBS Act earlier this year cemented that not just in practice, but in policy. As a result, it's been a huge year for crowdfunding platforms -- especially Kickstarter, which has raised $50 million for games alone in 2012. But with the increased attention, we've started to spy potential holes in the crowdfunding model. Two problems in particular stand out and two startups are trying to solve them. | |
| Samsung's ATIV Smart PC And Asus' VivoTab RT To Launch On AT&T In Time For The Holidays | Top |
Holy cow AT&T, another announcement? While most of the other national wireless carriers have opted to save some news for later on, AT&T keeps pushing out releases like it's going out of style. Anyway, in addition to heavily pushing Nokia's Windows Phone 8 handsets, the carrier has also announced that it will carry a pair of Windows 8 tablets — the Asus VivoTab RT and Samsung's ATIV Smart PC — in time for the holiday rush. | |
| Zynga Cuts Revenue Outlook For 2012, Q3; Cites Weakness In Certain Games Including The Ville | Top |
Gaming company Zynga has just released preliminary financial results for the third quarter of 2012, lowering its outlook for the year. The company expects to report full Q3 results October 24. Zynga expects to report revenue in the range of $300 million to $305 million and bookings in the range of $250 million to $255 million for the third quarter. The company also says it will report a net loss of between $90 million and $105 million, non-GAAP net loss between $2 million and $5 million and adjusted EBITDA between $10 million and $15 million for the third quarter. | |
| Y Combinator-Backed Perfect Audience Makes Facebook Retargeting Easy (Even For Tech Bloggers), Raises $1.1M | Top |
| Facebook's 1 Billion Human Shield Against Disruption | Top |
Facebook grew to 1 billion users by adding massive value on top of what came before it. Specifically, authenticated identity. There may be no greater leap forward another social network could take, and that's why Facebook will hold the crown for a long time. What's emerged is network effect incarnate. No feature, no user interface, and no marketing campaign can trump that. Sorry, startups. | |
| Panjiva Adds Global Search To Its Social Network For World Manufacturing | Top |
Imagine Google Analytics but for world trade, with graphs showing data like shipping volume instead of site visitors. Combine that with LinkedIn-style profiles, but for manufacturers, and you get Panjiva. The six-year-old New York company is rolling out a new global search feature this week that takes the dozens of data sources it has been quietly accumulating about anyone shipping in bulk -- port shipping volumes, credit ratings, environmental qualifications, etc. -- and lets you easily answer key questions for your business. | |
| TuneIn Turns On Facebook Scrobbling For Its Online Radio Service | Top |
TuneIn, the online radio service that just raised $16 million from an impressive group of Silicon Valley venture capital firms, quietly amassed over 40 million monthly active listeners over the last few years. Lately, however, the company has been starting to make a bit more noise about its success while also consistently adding new features to its service. Today, for example, TuneIn announced that its users can now enable automatic Facebook sharing for whenever they tune to a station or favorite a station or song. | |
| Samsung Galaxy Camera Will Arrive On AT&T, Pricing And Availability Unknown | Top |
AT&T has had a lot of announcements today, most notably the arrival of the Nokia Lumia 920 and 820, exclusively on their network. But Samsung and Android are getting in the mix too, as the blue carrier has just announced that the Samsung Galaxy Camera will be available from AT&T. Unfortunately, a due date on this one is missing from the release. | |
| Everpurse Is A Purse That Charges Your Smartphone, Wire-Free | Top |
We've heard of bags that charge your gadgets — the Powerbag Instant Messenger comes to mind — but none targeted directly at women. That's where the Everpurse comes in. | |
| There's A Fine Line Between Private And Public, And Facebook Might Have Just Crossed It | Top |
According to The Next Web, sending someone a link to something on a third-party site using Facebook's social system in a private message increases the "Like" numbers on public counters by two. | |
| Mind-Reading Tech Helps Students Overcome Test Anxiety | Top |
Here's something straight out of science fiction: the University of Iowa is offering a new service to help students overcome test anxiety, using a mind-reading technology that guides them into a state of relaxation. So-called "Biofeedback" displays students' brainwaves in realtime and alerts them when they've dropped into a state of calm focus. "Once a student learns to reduce their anxiety using skills learned through biofeedback training, their performance increases significantly — often resulting in dramatic improvements in academic performance," says U of Iowa Counselor and clinical psychologist, Jeffrey Ellen. | |
| 1 Billion Users Have Done Zilch For Facebook's Stock Price Today | Top |
Last week, we noted that Facebook's stock appeared to have gotten a nice little bump after it announced its move into the sale of physical gifts, potentially opening a new revenue stream for the company. Not all of Facebook's big news is so kind. Today's announcement that Facebook has reached 1 billion users has had no impact, or possibly a negative one, on its stock so far today. | |
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Altogether, some estimate San Francisco will have more than a million visitors entering the city this weekend for all these events. That's a huge amount, considering that on a good day San Francisco has a native population of about 800,000 residents. Enter ParkPlease, a new marketplace for parking spots.
After cutting its full-year projections for bookings and earnings, Zynga's shares fell more than 20 percent to an all-time low in after-hours trading. The company's shares are trading at $2.22, down more than 21 percent from today's close of $2.82. It's been a hard road for the company since its IPO last December. Not only have numerous executives left (many of them brought over from EA), but several games like The Ville have not performed up to expectations. Zynga also said that it has had to write off between $85 million and $95 million of the $180 million it paid for OMGPOP this spring. The company bought the New York-based and YC-backed developer earlier this year for its surprise hit "Draw Something." If you look at 
For Oracle, it's about the machine, not the user; this became abundantly clear this week at Oracle Open World. Oracle talks the cloud talk but what the company is really doing is protecting its base, and building engineered systems that by all accounts is extraordinary technology. But its principles are wrong. I see little proof of humanity. What I do see are calibrated machines - homogenous and stacked in Oracle's shiny red brand. But maybe that's what people want in the end. For me, that is depressing as hell and counter to the swell of innovation that pushes me back every day like some gale force wind that picks me up and drops me into a new world. At every level of this altered place a creature pops up to remind me that the reality is not all that we see in a subterranean conference hall on the Bay.
ZEFR has been focused on getting Hollywood studios to let it license their movies, and create clips to put on YouTube. But it's recently added a new business focused on helping content creators across a number of verticals to monetize content that gets posted on YouTube. Now, it's going beyond just its home U.S. market and taking on the world, with a key international hire to expand overseas.
Here's a neat, well-deserved win for a startup company: Paper, the critically acclaimed drawing application for iPad is now being featured by Apple on iPad demo units in its retail stores, and now has over 3.3 million downloads, with 25 million pages of drawings created by users. The time spent in-app creating Color journals adds up to almost 200 years in total.
The 3D printer craze shows no signs of stopping and
The
Holy cow AT&T, another announcement? While most of the other national wireless carriers have opted to save some news for later on, AT&T keeps pushing out releases like it's going out of style. Anyway, in addition to heavily pushing Nokia's Windows Phone 8 handsets, the carrier has also announced that it will carry a pair of Windows 8 tablets — the Asus VivoTab RT and Samsung's ATIV Smart PC — in time for the holiday rush.
Gaming company Zynga has just
Facebook grew to
Imagine Google Analytics but for world trade, with graphs showing data like shipping volume instead of site visitors. Combine that with LinkedIn-style profiles, but for manufacturers, and you get 
AT&T has had a lot of announcements today, most notably the arrival of the
We've heard of bags that charge your gadgets — the 
Here's something straight out of science fiction: the University of Iowa
Last week, we noted that Facebook's stock appeared to have gotten a
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