Archive for July 11th, 2007

Shoppero Comes To America: Money For Writing Reviews

Written by on Wednesday, July 11th, 2007 in Ajax News.

shoppero.pngGerman social shopping platform Shoppero has launched an American version.

The site combines consumer written product reviews, lists and user profiles with a revenue sharing model that rewards users for contributing reviews to the site.

The German version launched 2 months ago and already rates in the top 3000 sites visited by Germans, according to Alexa.

Revenue is made in two ways. Users get a 20% share of revenue from product links and ads featured next to their reviews. Users who place “Adgets”, Shoppero’s shopping widgets on their sites get a 60% profit share from the Widgets.

The site is an interesting crossover product. The review side of the business will see Shoppero compete with established players such as CNET Reviews and Epinons to name but a few players in the space, yet on the other hand it will also compete with the growing number of widget providers as well (see our previous coverage here).

Consumer reviews do have a tangible value for all players in this space, and it’s not unreasonable to expect that some will be willing to pay for that data. The days of getting a free lunch from user-generated contributions may be coming to a close; I’d expect that Shoppero be one of many sites to come who will pay for or financially reward users for writing product reviews.

shoppero.jpg

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/132871902/

$15 Million For Shopping Search TheFind

Written by on Wednesday, July 11th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Mountain View based shopping search site TheFind has raised another $15 million in a third round of venture capital, bringing their total capital raised to $26 million. Bain Capital Ventures led the round.

The company previously raised $11 million from Redpoint Ventures, Lightspeed Venture Partners & Cambrian Ventures ($7 million Series A, $4 million Series B). Redpoint and Lightspeed also participated in this round.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/132860772/

CozyBug: The eBay for Big Stuff

Written by on Wednesday, July 11th, 2007 in Ajax News.

cozybuglogo.pngCozyBug launched today. It is best summed up as an eBay for big stuff. It’s meant for large items that people often sell locally because they’re too big to ship or are used and need in person inspection. Sellers get a mini virtual web storefront, and have the option to advertise their storefronts throughout the site.

The site doesn’t support shipping goods and is meant to replace local business classified advertising. They say it’s ideal for “antique stores, second-hand furniture stores, local car dealerships, flea market vendors, and small businesses that do not have websites.”

Listings cost $1.00, include up to four images and last 30 days. Premium listings cost $2.00, but include four images and the option of uploading two additional images for $1.00 each. Virtual storefronts cost $5.00. New registrants get one store and listing for free.

The company was formed in late 2002, and I can’t help but think they were coaxed into launching by the entrance of eBay’s Kijiji into the market. Both are taking on the large incumbent Craigslist. While Kijiji is essentially Craigslist, CozyBug differentiates itself by adding storefronts.

However, CozyBug has a tough road to plough if they want to be a localized eBay. They’re up against LiveDeal and sandwiched between Craigslist, which serves the “garage sale” crowd, and eBay, which serves entrepreneurial local business looking to scale their business internationally. They also face a growing local advertising market that will generate leads for local business based on search terms.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/132858040/

TIBCO GI Ajax Challenge

Written by on Wednesday, July 11th, 2007 in Ajax News.

TIBCO has created an Ajax Challenge where the goal is to build the world’s largest mashup over the summer using TIBCO GI.

Your components must:

  • Must use General Interface™ v3.4.1, an open source Ajax toolkit from TIBCO with over 100 Ajax components and a suite of visual tools.
  • You may also include other Ajax components and libraries if you wish.
  • Must be created as a Project using the General Interface visual tools.
    • Give your project a unique name and set the namespace of the TIBCO General Interface project you create to a unique name. We suggest using the reverse domain name convention.
  • Must use TIBCO PageBus, an open source Ajax message bus, the core of which was recently contributed to the OpenAjax Alliance.
  • Must subscribe to at least one of the three messages below
  • May publish to at least one of the three messages below
  • Ben and I will be helping out as judges, so we are interested to see what creative ideas come in.

    Source: Ajaxian
    Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/132839742/tibco-gi-ajax-challenge

    Top 50 Copyrighted Videos Google is Pirating

    Written by on Wednesday, July 11th, 2007 in Ajax News.

    googlepirate.pngIt’s no secret that the net is a multi-headed hydra of piracy. When a video gets taken down place, it often pops up somewhere else. P2P applications, torrenting, and news groups have long served up copyrighted content to those in the know. Sometimes DMCA notices are respected, other times companies get sued into oblivion (e.g Napster).

    However, new web sites are making it even easier for anyone who can click a mouse to access copyrighted content across the net. You no longer need to know your way around IRC or understand what a .torrent file is. Instead you can just stream them over any number of social video sites we’ve talked about before.

    Piracy is going mainstream and the National Legal and Policy Center is pointing the finger at Google for facilitating it. Today they released a study outlining Google’s role in helping piracy. It’s nothing new for Google, which was slapped with a $1 billion lawsuit by Viacom over YouTube. YouTube has since implemented so-so anti-piracy protection through AudibleMagic.

    The big difference here is that Google doesn’t always host the content users find, they only facilitate finding it. Copyright holders have already gone after ISPs, so it’s not a stretch to think they’d go after search engines as well. Google has received wide criticism over their self imposed censorship in China. Will censorship come to US search results because of copyright infringement?

    The study highlighted 50 movies/programs that Google is helping pirate through their video search engine. The full list is here, but I’ve included a sample of the top 10 with links to the ones I could find below:

    Production Company Program/Movie Status Type Days Posted Year Views
    Warner Brothers Harry Potter & The Goblet of Fire (Part I)* Up Movie 434 2005 165,367
    HBO Baghdad ER Up Special 409 2006 121,295
    Columbia Spiderman Up Movie 290 2004 12,739
    Hollwood Pictures Stay Alive Up Movie 284 2006 443,577
    MGM The Woods Up Movie 284 2006 84,761
    Universal Miami Vice (French dub) Up Movie 276 2006 663
    Miramax Jet Li – Twin Warriors Up Movie 275 1993 425,107
    HBO Ali G, Season 1 Up Episode 2 256 2003 126,922
    HBO Ali G, Season 1 Up Episode 3 256 2003 34,527
    HBO Ali G, Season 2 Up Episode 11 256 2004 19,911

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    Source: TechCrunch
    Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/132815699/

    TVtrip’s Multimedia Hotel Directory Gets $4.8 Million

    Written by on Wednesday, July 11th, 2007 in Ajax News.

    tvtriplogo.pngA month after launch, TVtrip has secured another round of financing from Benchmark’s European Branch, Balderton, and Partech, which will be announced tomorrow. Along with the financing they’ve also expanded their directory of hotel videos and added some more travel executives to their board.

    Their directory has moved beyond London and Paris, now including Germany, Italy, and Spain. Erik Blashford (CEO of Terrapass, Former CEO of Expedia), Thierry Antinory (VP Marketing & Sales of Lufthansa) have joined the advisory board.

    Trivop is also pursuing a multimedia directory for hotels.

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    Source: TechCrunch
    Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/132802745/

    Versionate’s Wiki End Run Around Google Docs

    Written by on Wednesday, July 11th, 2007 in Ajax News.

    Y Combinator’s second company of the summer season, Versionate, launches today. It is a document-driven wiki product - upload just about any kind of file (office docs, images, whatever) and Versionate will create an editable, wiki-like page with version and access controls.

    Versionate is a distant cousin to another Y Combinator company, Scribd, which allows users to upload and display documents in Flash. Versionate, though, is a competitor to the wiki startups as well as Google Docs. It also has more flexibility than its competitors when it comes to editing documents online, since just about any type of file can be uploaded (and files can also be exported in a choice of file formats).

    The company is clearly targeting a more enterprise crowd v. Google Docs and the wikis, however. And one of the most interesting parts of the service is something they say they are only considering for the future - installing Versionate on a private server:


    Can we install Versionate on our internal server?

    Currently, we are a hosted solution only. This has the benefit of allowing us to manage all the security details and lets us roll out updates on a consistent basis. If you still wish to license our software to use on your own internal server, please contact us directly via e-mail at support@versionate.com.

    Data security is the biggest hurdle for companies considering using these services. Allowing them to host the data on their own servers would give them significantly more comfort in using this, and could be, over time, a real threat to Microsoft Exchange Server/Sharepoint.

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    Source: TechCrunch
    Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/132758264/

    5 business lessons from Costco

    Written by on Wednesday, July 11th, 2007 in Ajax News.

    How Costco Became the Anti-Wal-Mart explores the interesting formula for success that CEO Jim Sinegal has implemented at the nation’s fifth-largest retailer: Sell a limited number of items, keep costs down, rely on high volume, pay workers well, have customers buy memberships and aim for upscale shoppers, especially small-business owners. In addition, don’t advertise – that saves 2 percent a year in costs.

    5 lessons revealed in the article:

    1. Take care of your employees.

    Costco’s average pay, for example, is $17 an hour, 42 percent higher than its fiercest rival, Sam’s Club. And Costco’s health plan makes those at many other retailers look Scroogish. One analyst, Bill Dreher of Deutsche Bank, complained last year that at Costco “it’s better to be an employee or a customer than a shareholder.”

    Sinegal begs to differ. He rejects Wall Street’s assumption that to succeed in discount retailing, companies must pay poorly and skimp on benefits, or must ratchet up prices to meet Wall Street’s profit demands.

    Good wages and benefits are why Costco has extremely low rates of turnover and theft by employees, he said. And Costco’s customers, who are more affluent than other warehouse store shoppers, stay loyal because they like that low prices do not come at the workers’ expense. “This is not altruistic,” he said. “This is good business.”

    2. Keep prices low.

    He also dismisses calls to increase Costco’s product markups. Mr. Sinegal, who has been in the retailing business for more than a half-century, said that heeding Wall Street’s advice to raise some prices would bring Costco’s downfall…

    At Costco, one of Mr. Sinegal’s cardinal rules is that no branded item can be marked up by more than 14 percent, and no private-label item by more than 15 percent. In contrast, supermarkets generally mark up merchandise by 25 percent, and department stores by 50 percent or more.

    “They could probably get more money for a lot of items they sell,” said Ed Weller, a retailing analyst at ThinkEquity.

    But Mr. Sinegal warned that if Costco increased markups to 16 or 18 percent, the company might slip down a dangerous slope and lose discipline in minimizing costs and prices.

    Mr. Sinegal, whose father was a coal miner and steelworker, gave a simple explanation. “On Wall Street, they’re in the business of making money between now and next Thursday,” he said. “I don’t say that with any bitterness, but we can’t take that view. We want to build a company that will still be here 50 and 60 years from now.”

    3. Pay attention to the customer, not the competition.

    But it is the customer, more than the competition, that keeps Mr. Sinegal’s attention. “We’re very good merchants, and we offer value,” he said. “The traditional retailer will say: ‘I’m selling this for $10. I wonder whether I can get $10.50 or $11.’ We say: ‘We’re selling it for $9. How do we get it down to $8?’ We understand that our members don’t come and shop with us because of the fancy window displays or the Santa Claus or the piano player. They come and shop with us because we offer great values.”

    4. Focus on a few core options.

    A typical Costco store stocks 4,000 types of items, including perhaps just four toothpaste brands, while a Wal-Mart typically stocks more than 100,000 types of items and may carry 60 sizes and brands of toothpastes. Narrowing the number of options increases the sales volume of each, allowing Costco to squeeze deeper and deeper bulk discounts from suppliers.

    5. Use surprise to create excitement.

    Mr. Sinegal, who is 69 but looks a decade younger, also delights in not tilting Costco too far into cheap merchandise, even at his warehouse stores. He loves the idea of the “treasure hunt” – occasional, temporary specials on exotic cheeses, Coach bags, plasma screen televisions, Waterford crystal, French wine and $5,000 necklaces – scattered among staples like toilet paper by the case and institutional-size jars of mayonnaise.

    The treasure hunts, Mr. Sinegal says, create a sense of excitement and customer loyalty.

    Related: Costco CEO Finds Pro-Worker Means Profitability [ABC News]

    His philosophy is simple, he said. “We have said from the very beginning: ‘We’re going to be a company that’s on a first-name basis with everyone,’” he said.

    That also includes answering his own phone. “If a customer’s calling and they have a gripe, don’t you think they kind of enjoy the fact that I picked up the phone and talked to them?” he said.

    (tx James)

    Source: Signal vs. Noise
    Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/505-5-business-lessons-from-costco

    iUI gets even better: cleanup and features

    Written by on Wednesday, July 11th, 2007 in Ajax News.

    Joe Hewitt has upgraded iUI with some cleanup, and a bunch of new features.

    The demo application will show you how it has come along.

    New Features

    • New UI controls: List groups, on/off switches, and fieldsets that look like the iPhone
      “Settings” app
    • Linking to external pages via Ajax: Links to external URLs are now loaded via Ajax and inserted (with animation of course) into the page. The pages you link to should not be a complete HTML document, but just the elements that should be inserted into the body of the original page. If you don’t want a link to load via Ajax, specify target=”_self”.

      When a link is loading, it will show a nice activity indicator while
      the user waits.

      To see this in the demo, click on the “Stats” link.

      Here is an example of Ajax-linkable source

    • Submitting forms via Ajax: Just like with external links, if you submit a form it will post it
      via Ajax and insert the resulting content into the body.

      To see this in the demo, click on the “Search” button and perform a
      search.

      Here is an example of PHP used to handle an Ajax form post

    • Correct history support: The back button now shows the name of the previous page instead of just the “home” page. Also, thanks to Kristopher Tate, it keeps in sync with the browser’s history when you use the built-in back button instead of the browser’s back button.
    • Much more visual polish: The visuals now replicate more of the fine details from Apple’s designs. I’ve been combing over pixels all night. Also, text that can’t fit on screen will be properly abridged with an ellipsis.
    • JavaScript compression: There is a variation of “iui.js” called “iuix.js” which is compressed using Dojo ShrinkSafe. It is about 4KB, where the original “iui.js” is 8KB. If you use the compressed version and use gzipping on your server, it will only be 1.8KB on the wire. Size matters when it comes to Edge ;)

    iUI Settings Demo

    Source: Ajaxian
    Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/132626183/iui-gets-even-better-cleanup-and-features

    CSS Selectors - Speed Myths

    Written by on Wednesday, July 11th, 2007 in Ajax News.

    Jack Slocum has continued the CSS Selector trend by taking another look at the various frameworks and dispelling some CSS Selectors Speed Myths.

    Jack talks about the various approaches, comparing Firefox support to cross browser support, and tweaks the slickspeed tests with a few others, ending up with:

    Ext CSS Selector Tests

    Source: Ajaxian
    Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/132594628/css-selectors-speed-myths



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