Archive for July 6th, 2007

Buzznet Hits The Road

Written by on Friday, July 6th, 2007 in Ajax News.

buzznet.jpgMusic focused social networking destination Buzznet, a service that we noted May 24 as being the biggest social network many may never have heard of, is taking their message and brand on the road.

Buzznet has hired 21 year-old blogger Audrey Kitching, “a fashion trendsetter, model and e-scene queen” as a traveling reporter to cover the 9 week, 45 city Vans Warped Tour 2007.

Kitching will send video and written dispatches that will include backstage interviews with bands and live discussions with the fans. Kitching will be traveling in a custom Buzznet PT cruiser (see photo), giving Buzznet exposure to millions of music fans and fellow highway travelers; although I’d note looking at the car that it may also blind fellow highway travelers as well.

It’s a clever idea in an age where social networking sites are a dime-a-dozen. Being there no longer cuts through, being seen is the key for any startup. I’m told that Kitching will be free to report events as she sees them, so this isn’t a case of Wal-mart style astroturfing. Although some will not be in the target demographic for this style of promotion, it’s not hard to appreciate this as being a smart marketing move by Buzznet.

Kitching’s travels can be followed on Buzznet here. Previous TechCrunch Buzznet coverage here.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/131295154/

Yahoo Bill Pay To Shut

Written by on Friday, July 6th, 2007 in Ajax News.

yahoofinance.jpgYahoo has announced that Yahoo Bill Pay will close between September and October this year.

Yahoo Bill Pay launched in September 1999 and was promoted as giving Yahoo users the ability “to securely pay bills from any computer connected to the Internet”.

The service is to be shut in two stages. September 14 will be the last day bills can be paid using the service. Previous transactions will remain available for viewing until October 31, when the service will be completely shut down.

The closure of Yahoo Bill Pay is the first announced closure of a service by Yahoo since May, when Yahoo announced the closure of Webjay, Yahoo Photos and Yahoo Auctions. Yahoo Bill Pay joins the TechCrunch Deadpool.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/131281752/

Video Ads: Every Startup Has A Different Solution

Written by on Friday, July 6th, 2007 in Ajax News.

It may seem weird, but I’ve been eagerly awaiting the day when I see ads in my viral video. eMarketer expects online video advertising to nearly double in 2008 to $1.3 billion, but no one’s really nailed a scalable ad platform for video. However, Google’s been quietly testing their own system and there are a bunch of other startups tackling it as well.

There are a couple key issues they’re all struggling with as they try and generate the greatest amount of ad revenue. There’s still some uncertainty about where to put the ads (pre/post/interstitial?). Even the type or length of the ad is up for debate. A recent study found longer ads were more effective at branding, while conventional wisdom has cast doubt on users sitting through the longer plugs.

After deciding on the format, determining the content of the video in order to generate relevant ads is yet another tough problem. It’s also a dire matter for big brands that don’t want to risk being associated with inflammatory content. Finally, these ad platforms will need publishers, advertisers and a marketplace to trade in.

Here’s a look at what people are doing in video advertising:

    youtubelogomini.png Definitely the team to watch, YouTube is treading carefully, experimenting with text ads running along the bottom of the video that users can click on for a full video ad. They’re going to be testing the system with some of their top content producers and word on the street is that the terms are pretty good.

    revverlogomini.png Revver splits ad revenue 50/50 with publishers. They run ads at the end of viral videos, which might mean that people are still paying close attention after watching the main content. However, this also means they lose some precious real estate to help drive traffic to other videos on their network like YouTube does. Revver filters the content themselves, tying in the appropriate ads.

    videoegglogomini.png Similar to Revver, VideoEgg helps publishers deliver and monetize their video inventory. It’s a very hands on approach suitable for larger brands that have tight control over the quality and context of their content. They serve up over 20 million videos daily across their EggNetwork. Ads show up alongside lead ins to other videos as well.

    scanscoutlogo.png ScanScout’s technology scans each video and determines content, with ads delivered contextually to match each scene. They run text ads along the bottom of the videos based on context derived from audio analysis and user behavior.

    adaptvlogomini.png They’re like adsense for video, tying contextual text ads based on the content of a video. It looks similar to what YouTube is aiming for. When videos play, Adap.tv digs up relevant Amazon products and Looksmart ads to populate an ad bar on the bottom of the video at key moments. They use tags and other meta data, as well as speech to text translations to find out what the video is about.

    adbritelogomini.png AdBrite was one of the first to overlay ads on videos with their InVideo platform. Adbrite has created an embeddable video player similar to YouTube. If we choose to show a video on TechCrunch, we can use this embeddable player, and at our option it will include Adbrite ads and our logo as a watermark. Anyone who takes the content and embeds it on their own site will show the same video, with the same ads and watermark. And all click backs on the video go to the original site.

    broadramplogomini.png The most interesting ad play, BroadRamp wants to make everything you see on your video a possible point of sale. See a t-shirt you like? Just click the video to buy it now. Tagging or programmatically generating the links to products from the video may not scale or prove too difficult. Their core business is still video content delivery systems, however.

    everyzinglogo.png Formerly Podzinger, Everzing searches audio and video. Since they don’t own the content they can’t insert ads on the video content, but their speech-to-text transcription means they can help solve the problem of finding out the subject of a video.

    blinkxlogomini.png A video search engine like Everyzing, Blinkx analyzes videos speech and meta data to tease out the content of the video. They also claim to use visual recognition as well. However, Blinkx has also leveraged their technology to launch adHoc, contextual advertising based on the content of the video.

    casttvlogomini.png Another video search engine currently running in private beta, Cast.TV looks at a video’s meta data and surrounding links to determine more context around the video. We’ve been impressed with how well it works. They haven’t discussed plans to incorporate advertising, however.

Coming up with a kick ass, scalable ad platform solution for social video that satisfies the needs of publishers, advertisers, and viewers is only a piece of the problem. While finding the most effective format will take a lot of testing until consumers reveal the most effective methods, the platforms will also need video content to monetize. Since well defined video properties with targeted content can work with sponsors on established video ad networks, the ideal market for these platforms remains effectively monetizing the jumble of amateur viral video floating around on social networks and YouTube. However, YouTube, which currently owns the lion’s share of video on the net, seems to be taking their time developing the solution in house.

That leaves becoming a destination, partnerships, or acquisition as possible outs. Video search sites like Blinkx and Everyzing are currently monetizing their search pages, but can’t take full advantage of their platforms by embedding ads into the content they link to. While these sites offer deeper video search, existing as a destination site is also a tough path that goes up against established web properties like Google, Yahoo, and AOL. In a slightly different way of going it alone, AdBrite has been going directly to publishers with their InVideo player. Adap.tv has been testing out partnerships, trying their platform out on MetaCafe.

As with most ad platforms, advertisers and publishers will be trying them out for effectiveness. In the end, the startups that can deliver the most return to these two will win out.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/131250433/

So much for the much hyped Steorn demo - after getting the world all jazzed up for a quick rewrite of the laws of physics the other day (they promised to break the fundamental law of conservation of energy by creating new energy from nothing), the public demo was cancelled. The reason, Steorn says, is that “excessive heat from the lighting in the main display area” caused technical difficulties and the demo had to be called off “until further notice.”

I’m all for turning the world upside down and coming up with free sources of new energy that have zero downside (no emissions, no fossil fuels, no nothing). But you’ve got to actually come through with a product when promised. I’m deadpooling these guys, but give them credit for the sheer audacity of their stunt. We’ll revisit later.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/131209819/

Congrats To CrunchGear, A Top 100 Blog

Written by on Friday, July 6th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Congratulations to CrunchGear, our sister site covering gadgets and gear that launched last year. They just slipped into the top 100 list at Technorati, at no. 100.

Given their growth rate driven by lots of good original content, my guess is they’ll be bigger than TechCrunch by this time next year. Great job, guys. I’m proud to be working with you. See the whole team here, led by editor-in-chief John Biggs.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/131219613/

2007 certainly seems to be the year that technology initial public offerings are coming back into style. A number of startups have nice double-digit millions revenue numbers and are at or near profitability. Last week: Netsuite. Today, Massachusetts based Constant Contact filed to go public.

The draft registration statement is here. CIBC, Thomas Weisel and Cowan & Company are the bankers on the deal. The company is at a nearly $40 million annual run rate and is just barely profitable.

The company has a relatively simple product that allows small businesses to create and manage email lists and newsletters.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/131207327/

Another Online Presentation Solution…zzzzzz

Written by on Friday, July 6th, 2007 in Ajax News.

The trend towards moving Office documents online for collaboration and remote viewing continues unabated. There’s still no dominant challenger to recently acquired WebEx - everyone knows how to use it and so people keep using it. But a new startup pops up almost weekly that addresses this market.

Slidelive is this week’s entrant - a not bad browser-based free WebEx competitor in beta. Presentations can be easily uploaded and conference calls scheduled to review them. Not many bells and whistles, but for many people it will get the job done.

It joins Zoho Show, Zentation, TeamSlide and Scribd in allowing uploading of powerpoint presentations (some of these also have tools to create presentations, access control, and other features as well). Google will launch their own product shortly. And there are also at least two WebEx competitors we’ve covered in the past - DimDim (open source) an 1VideoConference.

So there’s always room for one more, but the space is over crowded and it’s unlikely Slidelive is going to get much traction. Try it out if you are looking for something that helps you schedule meetings around a presentation, including access control, etc. It may be useful for you.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/131201980/

First Look At LiveStation: Not Much To Report

Written by on Friday, July 6th, 2007 in Ajax News.

LiveStation, the Microsoft Research/Skinkers P2P IPTV solution we reported on last night, has sent out beta invites to a number of users. I’ve tested it and have included screen shots below. Frankly, there isn’t much to report.

This is a Silverlight application and currently works only on Windows machines. If Silverlight is not installed on your machine it will be during the setup process.

Once installed, a window opens on your desktop and BBC World News is shown. It is exactly like turning on a one-station television (only BBC works with the application currently). You can watch the station live, turn the volume up or down, see information on the show and what’s up next, and close the application.

You can’t fast forward or reverse the program or pause it. There is no time shifting feature at all. It’s fun, but I won’t be opening it again until it includes time shifting capabilities and a lot more content.

The company left a comment on our original post asking us and others not to compare it to Joost or Slingbox. In the demo video they distributed yesterday, however, the presenter brought up both of those products and made his own favorable comparisons to those startups.

Screen shots below.

(more…)

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/131178804/

iPhone Native Looking Skin

Written by on Friday, July 6th, 2007 in Ajax News.

The default look of a web page is pretty bad. Simple white background with ugly black lettering. Nothing nice.

With the iPhone though, it doesn’t look half as bad, and now, thanks to Joe Hewitt (again) there is an even better base.

You can simply use his native looking navigation skin to make your applications look and feel like a native iPhone application.

The magic sits in:

  • iphonenav.js: The JavaScript handles getting rid of the browser url bar, the back button (Safari finally supports changing the hash nicely!), changing based on the orientation, swiping a page across, and more.
  • iphonenav.css: The CSS makes the standard elements look like real iPhone elements thanks to magic like “-webkit-border-image: url(iPhoneButton.png) 0 8 0 8;”

There is still more to do of course. It would be great to give developers simple access to the red deletes, the blue buttons, the twisty round deletes, and more. This allows anyone to build an app that will look decent and just like the iPhone apps that users are used too.

Thanks again Joe!

Joe\'s iPhone Skin

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/131171363/iphone-native-looking-skin

CSS Redundancy Checker

Written by on Friday, July 6th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Tom Armitage has written a simple tool that is immediately useful to anyone working with CSS. The CSS Redundancy Checker is a Ruby script that will take CSS rules, and a set of HTML files, and will tell you what you aren’t actually using:

css-redundancy-checker.rb [cssfile] [directory of html files OR .txt file listing urls to use]

When you’re writing HTML, over time, your CSS files begin to fill up a lot. If you’re working on a large project, you might even end up with several people contributing to the CSS file, not to mention refactoring each other’s work. The result is a directory full of HTML files, and a very large CSS file.

What tends to happen is that not ever selector in the CSS file actually applies to your HTML; many are rendered redundant by refactoring, or by changes in HTML. But when you’ve got a 70k+ CSS file, it’s not easy to check precisely which selectors aren’t in use any more.

Enter the CSS Redundancy Checker. It’s a very simple tool, really. You pass in a single css file, and either a directory of HTML files, or a .txt file listing URLs (one to a line). It then proceeds to look at each file in turn, and at the end, list all the selectors in your css file that aren’t used by any of the HTML files.

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/131171364/css-redundancy-checker



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