Archive for December 18th, 2007

UStream.TV Gets Some Cash And General Wesley Clark

Written by on Tuesday, December 18th, 2007 in Ajax News.

ustream-logo.pngWhat does General Wesley Clark know about live Web video? Apparently enough to land him a seat on Ustream.TV’s board of advisors. Or maybe they just liked his shiny medals. The company also announced a funding round today from Band of Angels and Western Technology Investors, which specializes in debt financing for startups. The amount was not disclosed.

Ustream.TV is a site for live Web video broadcasting that launched last March. It claims 115,000 people have used the service, “broadcasting one million unique viewer hours per month,” whatever that means. (How do you broadcast a “unique viewer hour”?) Anyway, that comes to about 5,000 hours of video a day, attracting a few hundred thousand viewers. Most of the broadcasters are regular consumers, but the site has also been used by presidential candidates, and the Plain White Ts rock band to broadcast a live concert that was watched by 150,000 fans online.

However much money it raised, Ustream will need it to compete in an already crowded field that includes Justin.TV, Stickam, Blog.tv, and Mogulus.

Loading information about Ustream…
Loading information about JustinTV…
Loading information about Stickam…
Loading information about blogTV…
Loading information about Mogulus…

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Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/202276137/

It’s Going To Be a Wii Christmas

Written by on Tuesday, December 18th, 2007 in Ajax News.

If online shopping behavior is any indicator, it looks like the Wii is going to be the big winner in the videogame console wars this Christmas. Data compiled by Compete about online shopping in the U.S. shows interest in the Wii soaring in November, well past the interest levels last year when the Wii launched. In November, nearly 3 million people shopped for a Nintendo Wii online in the U.S., compared to about 2.3 million last year. The Xbox 360 attracted only half as many shoppers this November (1.5 million), and the PS3 struggled to break a million. But at least online demand for the Xbox is above what it was last year, which cannot be said for the PS3. Demand has steadied for all three brands in December (on a weekly basis), so it doesn’t l;ook like there be any last-minute breakouts by the Xbox or PS3.

compete-wii-1.jpg

Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/202253131/

Ask 37signals: 10 ways to “get ink”

Written by on Tuesday, December 18th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Neil Wilson asks:

’”Get Ink” is the fundamental marketing mantra. You guys are natural self-promoters. What do you find is the best way of getting your name in the frame?

10 ideas that came to mind when I thought about ways to get people to notice you/your product:

1. Provide something of value.
The first step is recognizing that marketing is asking for someone else’s time and attention. You need to provide something worthy of those valuable commodities. So keep your message brief and interesting. When you educate or entertain other people, they’ll pay attention. If you bore them, they won’t.

2. Know your hook.
Imagine you are a reporter who wants to write an article about your company. What’s the hook? What’s the angle that will be interesting to someone who normally wouldn’t care about your software? We’ve got a lot of mileage in the press out of staying small and focusing on “less.” What’s unique about your story?

3. Stand for something.
Know and expose your company’s philosophy and mantras. 37signals started with a manifesto back when we launched as a design firm. Even though it’s from 1999 and our company has evolved a ton since then, you can see the seeds of many of our current ideas there. That sort of belief foundation will help guide you (and others) to your story.

4. Get your face out there.
It’s tempting to think you can do it all from a keyboard. But emails are a poor substitute for real, face-to-face interactions. Go to conferences and meetups, take someone you admire out to lunch, etc. It’s ok to “network” — just don’t be a douche about it. Which leads to…

5. Try to build real, sustained relationships.
Actually be a friend instead of a guy trying to get something. Keep your interactions human (a sincere, honest note will go a lot further than a buzzwordy press release). Seek out ways to help others. It’ll all come back to you.

6. It’s the message, not the amount you spend on it.
Companies that spend tons of ad/PR dollars to convince people their products are worthwhile are like guys who spend lots of money on gifts and dinners to woo a woman. What kind of relationship are they really building? Successful customer relationships are like any other long-term relationship: They start with a foundation of communication and showing you care about the other person.

7. Give stuff away for free.
(I don’t think this contradicts the previous point but maybe?) People love free. Offer a free version of your product, provide coupon codes, etc. Whenever we include a coupon code in a newsletter, there’s a big uptick in upgrades.

8. Ride the wave.
Seek momentum and ride it. Is everyone buzzing about the iPhone? Then make an iPhone app. Are people interested in rapid development processes? Then blog about building your app in, say, under a month. Find out what people are talking about already and then figure out a way to get in the picture.

9. Be in it for the long haul.
Recognize that promotion, like other aspects of building a company, takes time and effort. If you’re starting from scratch, you have to claw your way up. It’s uncanny how many “overnight success stories” you hear about are actually people who busted their asses for years to get into the position where something might take off. Don’t expect instant recognition.

10. Be undeniably good.
Steve Martin was on Charlie Rose last week. At the very end, he gave his advice to someone who’s trying to make it in any field: “Be undeniably good.”

When people ask me how do you make it in show business or whatever, what I always tell them — And nobody ever takes note of it ‘cuz it’s not the answer they wanted to hear. What they want to hear is here’s how you get an agent, here’s how you write a script, here’s how you do this — But I always say, “Be so good they can’t ignore you.” If somebody’s thinking, “How can I be really good?”, people are going to come to you. It’s much easier doing it that way than going to cocktail parties.

That’s some good advice. Go out and make something that kicks ass and people will notice.

Related: Check out the “Promotion” chapter in Getting Real.

Got a question for us? Please send it along to svn [at] 37signals dot com and use the subject “Ask 37signals”.

Source: Signal vs. Noise
Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/741-ask-37signals-10-ways-to-get-ink

Nanosolar Is Gunning For Coal.

Written by on Tuesday, December 18th, 2007 in Ajax News.

nanosolarpanelsrmrhead_web.jpgRenewable energy technologies will never get off the ground until they become cheaper than fossil fuels. Today, Nanosolar CEO Martin Roscheisen says his startup took a step in that direction by shipping its first thin-film solar panel after five years of development. In a blog post, Roscheisen claims his company has produced “the world’s lowest-cost solar panel – which we believe will make us the first solar manufacturer capable of profitably selling solar panels at as little as $.99/Watt.” That would put energy systems made with Nanosolar panels within striking range of the price of coal, which is around $2.10 per watt for new coal plants. The way Nanosolar is lowering its cost is through a new manufacturing process. Instead of making solar panels out of silicon in $3 billion chip factories, it has developed a thin-film process that is more like roll-to-roll printing.

But note that Roscheisen says he “believes” Nanosolar is “capable” of making solar panels so cheaply, not that he has actually done so. Those prices will only come with high-volume manufacturing, and Nanosolar still needs to scale up. But at least it is on its way. Nanosolar says it is sold out of its initial manufacturing run. In the meantime, you can bid on Panel #2 on eBay. (The current bid is $810).

Nanosolar boasts an all-star list of investors, including Benchmark Capital, Mohr Davidow Ventures, Swiss Re, Sergey Brin, Larry Page, Jeff Skoll, and Reid Hoffman. It has raised a total of $112 million.

Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/202218134/

Kango Announces $4 Million Round From Shasta Ventures

Written by on Tuesday, December 18th, 2007 in Ajax News.

kango-logo-beta.pngKango, a semantic search engine for travel, announced that it raised $4 million from Shasta Ventures earlier this year. The terms previously were not disclosed. Kango looks at travel reviews and other information across the Web and automatically generates tags so it can categorize results by how “kid friendly” or “romantic” they may be. I wrote about Kango earlier here.

Today, Kango is also opening up its beta, and accepting more sign-ups on its home page.

Loading information about Kango…

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Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/202174768/

JScript 5.7: Fixing IE6

Written by on Tuesday, December 18th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Erik Arvidsson lets us know about the JScript 5.7 patch that is zooming out to IE6 users:

The JScript 5.7 patch is now being pushed to an IE6 computer near you…

IE6 uses Jscript 5.6 which has some serious design flaws when it comes to garbage collections. This by itself prevented us from releasing Gmail 2 for IE6. After talking to the JScript team we (and others?) got them to realize that this is a critical flaw in Internet Explorer 6 and it is now being installed on all Windows computers (even those without a valid license). Expect Gmail 2 to work on an IE6 computer near you after a few more rounds of QA.

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/202174741/jscript-57-fixing-ie6

Robert Nyman has his eyes set on providing a JavaScript library that can hold it’s own against the major players. He just announced the release of DOMAssistant 2.5 with enhancements that he feels are on par with other libraries:

With this release of DOMAssistant, I feel that it can seriously compete with the major JavaScript libraries on the market. It has a very easy syntax to select or manipulate elements, and with the core functionality anyone needs, without having to worry about web browser differences, the compressed version with all modules included weighs in at a mere 6kb (Gzipped). If Gzipping isn’t an option for you, the compressed version lands at 21kb.

This release has a number of new features:

  • Full CSS1-3 selector support
  • New AJAX methods: load and get
  • Enhanced performance and extra checks for memory leaks
  • XPath Support
  • DOMAssistant now creates its own scope to make use of private properties

Also, in terms of code quality Robert has taken the extra step to ensure that the whole library is JSLint validated.

The main purpose of DOMAssistant is to provide a solid foundation to build upon without all of the extras sometimes included in other libraries. As such, DOMAssistant focuses on:

  • Element selection (through CSS selectors or enhanced methods).
  • CSS handling (adding and removing CSS classes).
  • Event handling (adding and removing events).
  • Content manipulation (add or remove elements).
  • AJAX interaction (getting content from other sources, and adding it to the document).
  • DOM loaded (calling functions when the DOM is loaded, as opposed to the document with all dependencies).

While Robert certainly has a big task ahead of him to make up ground on libraries such as jQuery, Prototype or Ext, it seems he’s heading in the right direction and DOMAssistant may appeal to those folks looking for a convenient and lightweight method of using JavaScript without all of the extra fluff.

More information can be obtained about this release here.

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/202154810/domassistant-25-released-making-a-run-at-the-the-major-javascript-libraries

State of ECMAScript Implementations

Written by on Tuesday, December 18th, 2007 in Ajax News.

John Resig has done some research on the state of ECMAScript 4 implementations:

I’ve just completed my first survey of the current ECMAScript 4 implementations. I went through and attempted to compile as many bugs and features as possible, as stated by the ECMAScript 4 specification and double-check them against all the actively-maintained implementations. You can view a nice overview below.

I think it’s fascinating to note that there’s 3 implementations that already have over 25% of all the new features in the language implemented.

And, there is an interesting note on Tamarin:

Might be worth mentioning that the Tamarin VM by itself doesn’t directly support ECMAScript source code. Rather, the subproject esc (written in ECMAScript 4) compiles ECMAScript 4 to abc bytecode that is run by the Tamarin VM. (And I imagine you know that already, but it might be an interesting detail for some visitors.)

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/202154811/state-of-ecmascript-implementations

W3C CSS Grid Positioning

Written by on Tuesday, December 18th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Dimitri Glazkov has made a prediction that we will see CSS Grid Positioning in IE 8. This would make a lot of sense due to the fact that:

  • Alex Mogilevsky, and Markus Mielke, of Microsoft wrote the spec
  • If Microsoft comes out with a browser that goes above and beyond, they will be able to get rid of the monkey on their back
  • CSS grids are painful right now!

This module allows you to create a layout like this:

with:

CSS:

  1.  
  2. body { columns:3; column-gap:0.5in; }
  3. img { float:page top right; width:3gr; }
  4.  

It can be seen as a grid with 6 vertical lines and 2 horizontal lines.

We can use the grid lines to position the floating image

The statement “float:page top right” here positions the image at the top right corner of the page (as defined in [CSS3GCPM])

“width:3gr” makes image 3 “grid units” wide, where a “grid unit” is the distance between two adjacent grid lines. Each boundary between a column and a gap automatically produces a grid line, therefore to specify “two columns, including the gap between columns, but not including any gaps outside the columns” we can just say “3gr”.

You will see more detailed examples, with lots of gr’s (grid units).

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/202147667/w3c-css-grid-positioning

Google Wants To Index Your Videos

Written by on Tuesday, December 18th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Google has launched Sitemaps for Video, an extension of their webmaster sitemaps program that will assist webmasters in having their videos indexed by Google.

To be indexed, webmasters must create a sitemap page that provides a list of videos on each site that is compliant with Googles sitemaps protocol, which since November 2006 is standardized with Yahoo and Microsoft as well. Webmasters then simply submit the URL of their video sitemap to Google for indexing.

Google has continued to improve its video index beyond its early days when it started as nothing more as an index of Google Videos. Webmasters keen to see their videos indexed in Google will undoubtedly welcome this move, and Google’s video index will be the richer for it.

Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/202138794/



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