Archive for August 15th, 2007

Most Useful iPhone Site Yet: Meebo

Written by on Wednesday, August 15th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Facebook may have the best looking iPhone site to date, but Meebo for the iPhone is more useful, as it brings instant messaging, finally, to that phone.

Meebo took its time building the site, which is actually their first mobile application. There is no special URL, just go to meebo.com from an iPhone and the browser will load the correct code.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/144636510/

Kongregate Closes $5 Million Series A For Casual Gaming

Written by on Wednesday, August 15th, 2007 in Ajax News.

kongregateCasual gaming community Kongregate has closed a $5 million series A round led by Greylock today. This is on top of a $1 million angel round they raised from Reid Hoffman, Joe Kraus, Jeff Clavier and Richard Wolpert, among others. The casual gaming category consists of all those addictive online flash games that often distract you during your downtime (remember desktop defense?). James Slavet of Greylock pegs the casual game market at $500 million and expects it to grow even larger.

Compared to the incumbents like Miniclip, Kongregate is modeling itself after Xbox Live. They have built a gamer social network around the games, where gamers can gain ranking, earn awards, and collect trading cards (used in another game). Developers are encouraged to upload games to the site through a revenue share of the ads that are displayed next to the games and chat window as they are played (25%-50% depending on exclusivity).

Kongregate plans on putting the lions share of the cash towards site development. As part of that, Kongregate will be financing 8 to 9 developers to create premium games for about $20-$80,000 each. Each of the games will have a free version with an optional paid upgrade to a full version. In exchange for a limited time exclusive distribution agreement, developers will get the majority of that income. Development times are expected to take 2 to 6 months. Kongregate also plans on monetizing through game specific sponsorships (once they hire an advertising manager). They’ve taken a large round considering their burn rate is $80,000 a month for a team of 9.

Since launching last October, Kongregate has gone through some significant growth. The site has grown to 800,000 uniques last month (300K May, 50K March), with 60,000 registered users. Those visitors can choose from a library of 1,400 games and play for an overage of 38 minutes on the site.

Now if they can only give me my weekend of Desktop Defense back.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/144635756/

Three Ways Startups Are Providing VOIP

Written by on Wednesday, August 15th, 2007 in Ajax News.

voiplogo.pngWhile the consumer “landline replacement” VOIP battles continue to wage (the cable companies now control over 70% of that market, and Vonage is still fighting), a number of nimble software-only startups are experimenting with their own services.

All of them allow users to call normal, non-VOIP telephones at greatly reduced costs. These savings can be captured whether or not the parties to a phone conversation are using VOIP-enabled phones, since transmissions can jump from PSTN to VOIP and vice-versa at certain junctions. For example, a cellular call to your buddy across the country might start on PSTN, quickly jump to VOIP for long distance travel, and jump back to PSTN near its destination.

The key is to use VOIP to strip out some or most of the cost of the call, allowing these startups to offer very low cost calling to consumers. These aren’t free calls, though - any time a normal phone line is used for at least part of the call, particularly the termination, the teleco’s get a toll.

Making sense of all of the new VOIP startups is daunting, so we’re categorizing them by use cases. For a comparison of features, prices, and more companies, check out the chart to the right.

I’m Cheap and I Have a Computer

By far the cheapest way to go with calling is to get a desktop client. VoIP clients on your desktop allow users to make calls from one computer to another across the VoIP network. For an added fee, you can connect to a standard phone on the PSTN phone network for calls to or from your computer. Most of you will know this as Skype-in and Skype-out.

The most well known desktop client has been Skype, with over 100 million users. The big guys - Yahoo, Microsoft, and Google - also have their own VoIP desktop clients. Since the VoIP offerings have been built into their IM clients, combined they comprise a potential market of over 340 million subscribers.

A younger startup, the Gizmo Project, launched in July of last year. They have a reported 2 million downloads of their application. The application functions like Skype, supporting IM and VoIP calls. The Gizmo Project has the unique distinction of not only offering IM and VoIP calls, but also free calls to the standard phone network if you promote their product to a friend and stay an “active user“.

Hullo and Nimbuzz are other desktop VOIP application we’ve covered.

I like WiFi and Saving Money

If the idea of holding a laptop up to your ear to talk to your friends doesn’t sound appealing, Nokia’s WiFi phones may be for you. The Nokia N800 is a great example and takes advantage of the free in network calling of the desktop applications. Fring, which gives Skype-like functionality over 3G/GPRS and WiFi, is very Nokia friendly and just moved on to Windows Mobile. However, you still need to pay for calling standard phone lines and buy a real phone number so your friends on those dated PSTN phones can call you back. They recently raised another round of $12 million and have received a lot of praise from us in the past.

I Have a Social Life WiFi Can’t Contain

If you’re not in WiFi heaven (Mountain View) or perpetually hanging out at WiFi hotspots, there are some other semi VoIP solutions that can still save you some money, at least on long distance calls. Mobile VoIP providers don’t throw out the PSTN lines, but instead save customers money by bridging the connection between two calls the caller and callee make to local numbers with cheaper VoIP lines. However, these solutions work best for long distance where bridging local calls makes sense and still cost minutes on you mobile plan. The main advantage is that it works on that hot new phone you picked up after reading a CrunchGear review.

There are quite a few players in this category, including desktop VOIP client Skype’s own player, iSkoot. iSkoot is the mobile version of Skype, which allows you to place calls to your Skype contacts by calling their Skype servers to route the calls. Shape Services recently hacked together an iPhone version of Skype, but reports are that is suffers from AT&T’s low transfer rates. Another startup, EQO was competing in that category until they stepped out on their own with a VOIP, IM, and messaging mobile application that we’ve written about earlier.

The biggest kids on the block, with $28 million and $24.5 million in financing respectively, are Jajah and Truphone. The two startups allow you to easily make calls from your mobile phones. However, Jajah uses VOIP to bridge two standard phone lines, while Truphone can make truly free calls if your phone has a fast enough data connection. Their relationship has been further complicated with T-Mobile, a Jajah investor, kicking Truphone off their network. T-Mobile made their own venture into WiFi calling with “Hot Spot at Home“, which lets you add unlimited calling from your WiFi network for $9.95 extra a month.

Who’s Winning

While Skype is apparently making money for eBay, no other startups are profitable as far as we know. But the communications industry itself is hurting. There’s a shift is afoot particularly in the mobile industry as voice revenues drop from $51 a month in 2000 to $43 a month last year, carriers are looking for a ways to set themselves apart in the $118 billion U.S. cell-phone market. Data plans are widely heralded as the future for increasing telco annual revenue per user (ARPU).

However, this doesn’t mean an easy path for VOIP. VOIP on your mobile phone is facing quite a few challenges. The most basic problem is just distributing your application on the plethora of mobile platforms. Mobile carriers aren’t helping because they’re still reluctant to hasten the demise of their voice and content services. Verizon and their variety of subscription services (VCast, maps) are perfect example of the latter.

We’ve expressed a lot of dissatisfaction over the usability of a lot of these applications too. After it’s on your phone, VOIP services can add another rats nest of differing call rates and can sometimes only save you money on long distance calls while still costing minutes. With national long distance included in a lot of U.S cell plans, it may not make sense for a lot of users. Even still, that leaves dozens of VOIP carriers (just check our chart) competing to push down calling rates.

Then there’s the bandwidth requirements. Mobile data networks are generally not fast enough to ensure a high enough quality of service. The best way to deliver VOIP, over WiFi, still isn’t everywhere, no matter how hard Google tries. 3G provides better coverage and sufficient bandwidth, but is still controlled by carriers, who can throttle the upstream bandwidth to affect VOIP’s quality. Verizon reportedly plans to offer VOIP over 3G, but hasn’t come through on the promise since 2005.

Consequently, VOIP remains fragmented across the landline, desktop, and mobile platforms.

The crux of the matter is that winners in the this category will have to play nice with the carriers. Even startups that work purely off of data plans or your desktop need the carriers to provide the mobile networking infrastructure. Jajah is in the best position to work with carriers, by offering cheaper long distance calling while still using calling minutes that are carriers bread and butter. Services that operate over data networks, like Fring and the Gizmo Project may offer consumers better deals by circumventing the carrier’s voice plans over increasingly speedier data networks, but are directly competitive with the carriers. Undercutting the profits of these incumbents will eventually cause them to butt heads as TruPhone did with T-Mobile or some carriers have by disabling VOIP on N95s. Short of these startups changing their revolutionary rhetoric, it looks like an uphill battle.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/144626255/

Google Takes Down Blogger Site With Leaked Facebook Code

Written by on Wednesday, August 15th, 2007 in Ajax News.

FacebookSecrets, the blog that posted the accidentally released source code for the Facebook main index page, has been taken down. The blog was hosted on the Google-owned Blogger blog network and was removed pursuant to a DMCA take down notice from Facebook.

A new blog (also on Blogger) has gone up that chronicles the back and forth between Google and the author (well, it’s one way communication, actually).

Facebook’s statement on the matter came down to “it offers no useful insight into the inner workings of Facebook” and “the reprinting of this code violates several laws.” We disagreed on both points - the leak provided information to potential hackers as to potential security holes, and the fact that Facebook accidentally released the code themselves on their site may have made it perfectly legal for others to repost it.

That being said, it’s unlikely the anonymous author of the blog would be around to defend his/her position. I’m surprised this didn’t happen sooner.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/144622881/

Bolt Joins The Deadpool

Written by on Wednesday, August 15th, 2007 in Ajax News.

bolt.png
Video sharing site Bolt has filed for bankruptcy and ceased operations.

The site has been on borrowed time since an acquisition by GoFish failed August 1. Bolt.com was sued by Universal Music in October 2006 and owes Universal $10 million from that suit; the funds from the GoFish acquisition were to have been used to settle the $10 million with Universal.

Bolt joins the TechCrunch Deadpool.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/144619252/

Russian Court Finds AllofMP3 Legal

Written by on Wednesday, August 15th, 2007 in Ajax News.

A Russian court has found the former head of AllofMP3 not guilty of breaching copyright, a decision that finds the now shut AllofMP3 legal under Russian Law.

EMI, NBC Universal and Time Warner took Denis Kvasov to court claiming that AllofMP3’s cheap prices breached copyright laws. AllofMP3 went offline July 2 following continued pressure from the US Government on Russia to shut the site, including an escalation of the dispute to the World Trade Organization. AllofMP3 was also the subject of a lawsuit filed in New York last December that attempted to claim damages of $1.65 trillion.

The judge found that the service was legal as it paid royalties to rights holders via ROMS, a Russian organization which collects and distributes fees for copyright holders.

AllofMP3’s holding company MediaServices continues to operate mp3sparks.com, a nearly identical service to AllofMP3 that offers downloads at significantly cheaper prices to mainstream Western online music retailers.

Previous TechCrunch coverage here.

(in part via CNN)

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/144609828/

A collection of details

Written by on Wednesday, August 15th, 2007 in Ajax News.

John Gruber’s illuminating review of the C4 conference called out a great line by Wil Shipley:

“This is all your app is: a collection of tiny details.”

That’s the best descriptive I’ve heard of any product, project, person, or object. A collection of tiny details.

Details pile up. One influences another. One often makes another possible (or impossible).

If you stack up a bunch of great little details you have a great shot at a great product. If you stack up a bunch of poorly executed details you have a great shot at a mediocre or bad product.

Of course cohesion doesn’t happen for free. You can’t just pile up a bunch of details and expect a perfect whole any more than you can pile up a bunch of bricks and expect the Taj Mahal, but carefully considered details do set the tone for a great product.

Just be careful and don’t get bogged down on the details early on.

Source: Signal vs. Noise
Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/570-a-collection-of-details

What Are Google’s Browser Plans?

Written by on Wednesday, August 15th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Stephan Spencer at CNET writes a speculative post on Google’s browsers plans. Google hasn’t said much on the subject in over a year, when CEO Eric Schmidt sidestepped the question by ansering “We would only do so…if we thought there was a real user benefit.”

People often point to the cozy relationship between Google and Firefox when talking about Google’s browser plans. But Google also Google invested in the Maxthon browser earlier this year. It was a very small investment - just $1 million. But there were rumors of a much larger strategic deal between the companies, too. Neither side has officially acknowledged the investment or the strategic deal to date.

Maxthon is little known in the U.S. Half of its downloads occur in China, though, and it is a big player there. Whether Google’s strategic plans for Maxthon extend beyond China is anyone’s guess.

A lot of this would be cleared up if Google (or Maxthon) made an announcement on the subject. But what we want has little to do with what’s best for Google’s business. If they do launch a browser, and/or acquire Maxthon, we almost certainly won’t hear about it until it actually happens.

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Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/144488632/

Detour is a look at Moleskine notebooks by an international collection of artists, designers, architects, illustrators, and writers. This video shows designer Paula Scher’s notebook, which is filled with funky fonts:

More of the notebooks online at these sites: London Detour and New York Detour.

Related: Picasso, Paula Scher, and the lifetime behind every second [SvN]

Source: Signal vs. Noise
Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/559-a-peek-inside-moleskine-notebooks-by-artists-designers-architects-etc

Lazy Function Definition Pattern

Written by on Wednesday, August 15th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Peter Michaux has written about the Lazy Function Definition Pattern.

His article takes you down the path of implementing a simple problem:

Write a function foo that returns a Date object that holds the time that foo was first called.

After critiquing 3 iterations he ends up with:

JAVASCRIPT:

  1.  
  2. var foo = function() {
  3.     var t = new Date();
  4.     foo = function() {
  5.         return t;
  6.     };
  7.     return foo();
  8. };
  9.  

He then uses the technique to implement getScrollX, and to talk about how you can use defineGetter in certain browsers to simulate lazy definition for properties that aren’t functions.

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/144377641/lazy-function-definition-pattern



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