Archive for December 20th, 2007

♫ Deck The Halls With Google Gadgets… ♫

Written by on Thursday, December 20th, 2007 in Ajax News.

googxmas.jpgAnother day, another Google announcement, and this one fits right in to the silly season. Google is offering Christmas themed gadgets for Google Desktop and iGoogle users who want to spruce up their desktops with holiday kitsch.

According to Google:

You can decorate a Christmas tree, listen to music, exchange ornaments with a friend, count down to the New Year, and more. They look right at home on your desktop, or you can put them in the Google Desktop sidebar or your iGoogle home page.

But wait, these aren’t just ordinary gadgets!

Take the Christmas Tree gadget, for instance. When you start it up, it’s a simple tree with gently falling snow. With a few clicks you can add ornaments wherever you like. If you find the animated precipitation distracting, you can hide the snowflakes.

HoHoHo and someone pour me a drink. More details on the Google Desktop Blog here.

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/203808528/

Is Pownce Going To The DeadPool?

Written by on Thursday, December 20th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Uncov has a very funny post on the demise of Kevin-Rose-founded-Twitter-clone Pownce, noting that their traffic seems to have fallen to the point that “Even TechCrunch can’t save you now.” The image above is taken from their post.

That may or may not be true, but when you look at Pownce v. Twitter on Compete.com, the difference doesn’t look quite so brutal. Still, there is probably only room for one Twitter in this world, and Twitter itself seems determined to hang in there.

Pownce, previously a one-person shop (developer Leah Culver), has started to hire people and is looking for office space. We’ve also heard Culver doesn’t like being called a Twitter-clone. But the shoe fits quite nicely, and the clone moniker stands.

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/203787484/

Breaking: Kayak Raises $196 Million, Buys Rival SideStep

Written by on Thursday, December 20th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Discount travel site Kayak has acquired rival SideStep for $200 million. This story was set to be announced tomorrow but word is leaking all over the place after Sidestep CEO Rob Solomon told his company employees the news at an all hands meeting (someone even sent this picture from the meeting).

This is a two part deal. Kayak raised $196 million in a new round of financing from their existing investors (Sequoia Capital, General Catalyst Partners and Accel Partners), two of SideStep’s existing investors (Norwest Venture Partners and Trident Capital), new investors (Oak Investment Partners and Lehman Brothers Venture Partners) and debt lenders (Silicon Valley Bank and Gold Hill Capital). Prior to this new round, Kayak had raised $27 million in capital.

Kayak subsequently acquired SideStep. Terms are not being disclosed, but we are hearing that the deal was for $180 million in cash. An additional $20 million that SideStep holds in cash is being distributed as well, making the total deal size around $200 million.

SideStep and Kayak are the two leaders in the discount travel search space (along with Mobissimo and Farecast). Kayak is reportedly doing around $50 million in yearly revenues, compared to SideStep’s $35 million.

This marks quite a turnaround for SideStep. Two years ago the company was on the ropes. Founding CEO Brian Barth had been ousted. Rob Solomon, previously Yahoo’s SVP Commerce, joined as CEO and replaced 40 of the company’s 50 or so employees. In the last two years he grew the company from $14 million to $35 million in revenue, and turned it profitable. SideStep has raised $32 million in venture capital.

Twenty or so of SideStep’s seventy five employees sill stay on at Kayak over the long run. Rob Solomon and a few others will remain for a sixty day transition period and will then be back on the market.

Update: Worldwide Comscore numbers for the four companies are below. Kayak says that there is less than 10% overlap between SideStep and Kayak users.

Loading information about Kayak…
Loading information about SideStep…
Loading information about Farecast…
Loading information about Mobissimo…

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/203705746/

With the help of Stamen Design, Digg has added a new way to visualize their recently added photos category. Stamen has done a great job on the other visualizations, and photos is no exception.

The “pics” visualization lets you view streams of photos as they are Dugg. Each major category has its own stream (technology, offbeat, world & business, science, entertainment, gaming, lifestyle, sports). Digg users love technology and offbeat stories, but lag in the sports category. Surprise, surprise.

digg_pics.png

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/203692060/

Practical Javascript, DOM Scripting, and Ajax Projects picks up where Beginning JavaScript with DOM Scripting and Ajax left off.

Frank Zammetti’s practical guide to real-world JavaScript and Ajax will have you developing actual client-side apps in no time. As more of a hacker than a theoretician, this kind of guide appeals to me. Usually when I start developing my own apps, some of the code used previously (in building sample apps) will be adapted and tweaked for my own purposes.

Some of the projects you’ll learn how to build in Practical Javascript:
* JSDigester - a library that simplifies (takes away the pain) of parsing XML on the client side
* Mashing up a list of hotels + a Yahoo Map for a user-entered zipcode
* Client-side persistence techniques
* A JavaScript validation framework
* Building widgets and working with UI widget frameworks
* Building a JavaScript mini-game (cool!)
* An Ajax-based client-server chat pplication

You can pick up a copy of Practical Javascript, DOM Scripting, and Ajax Projects at Amazon.com (avg. review score is 4.5 stars).

Our series of podcasts and interviews with the 2008 presidential candidates continue - so far we’ve spoken to Barack Obama, John McCain, John Edwards, Mitt Romney and Mike Gravel. We are in active scheduling discussions with all of the remaining candidates.

Now it’s time to endorse a candidate from each party as having the most interesting and effective positions on technology issues.

We no longer live in an industrial economy - the future is information and the Internet. Our president must carefully consider her or his policies on key tech issues, something they’ve never really had to do before. What is their position on net neutrality? How will they bridge the digital divide? How do we handle technology sales to China and other countries using that technology to perpetrate human rights abuses? Should the Internet be taxed? How do we curb identity theft on the Internet? What is the future of intellectual property protection? How do we handle immigration issues for tech workers? How do we catch up with the rest of the world in the mobile Internet space? And what will we do to encourage research and productization in renewable energy?

These are issues that get little attention from mainstream press (with the exception of renewable energy policies), but we think that they deserve to be considered as part of this election. Technology workers in Silicon Valley and elsewhere tend to donate a lot of money and time to campaigns, and they are more frequent voters than the average cititzen. The candidate’s positions on technology and related issues impact how they spend their time, money and votes.

Please help us choose two candidates to endorse in advance of Super Tuesday. See how each candidate falls on the issues, and vote for who you think would make the best Tech President, at primaries.techcrunch.com. And thanks to webreakstuff for building out the site for us.

We announced this yesterday to some major media outlets and got a great response. I was interviewed by ABC News (clip above) to talk about the podcasts and the endorsement yesterday. Today I spoke on Fox News as well (the clip will be up shortly). You can also read ABC’s coverage here.

Note that some of the campaigns (particularly Ron Paul) picked up on this yesterday from ABC’s coverage and started talking to their constituents about it. So some of the early results are skewed heavily towards those candidates. I expect over the next few days for the results to become more normalized.

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/203607435/

[Link it up] Mobile web app interfaces

Written by on Thursday, December 20th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Seen a great mobile web app interface? Link it up.

Source: Signal vs. Noise
Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/745-link-it-up-mobile-web-app-interfaces

Fotolia, a micro-stock photography site that we first covered back in November 2005, is further undercutting some of the larger, more traditional stock photography sites, such as Getty and Corbis, by providing many of the same higher-quality images but at lower prices.

Up till now, micro-stock collections have consisted largely of lower-quality photography shot by amateurs or hobbyists and sold through sites like Fotolia, iStockphoto, and SnapVillage for as little as $0 and often no more than $50. In contrast, stock images sold on Getty and Corbis command a much higher price for their superior quality and come from professional photographers who have hired agents to distribute their work.

With the maturation of the Internet came the rise of micro-stock photography because a wider range of photographers could bypass agents and sell more directly to an online market. Some of the more traditional stock photography outlets have embraced micro-stock photography, despite the cannibalization implications; Getty purchased iStockphoto for $50M in February 2006 and Corbis launched SnapVillage in June 2007. Now Fotolia, which claims to be the largest micro-stock image library with 2.8M images, is doing the opposite: embracing traditional stock photography while maintaining micro-stock photography’s biggest selling point, lower costs.

Providing further evidence that photos on the web demand a different price structure than photos offline, Fotolia has debuted what it’s calling the “Infinite Collection.”. This is a set of 15,000 agency-distributed photographs that would normally be found on expensive stock photography sites but are now being sold for as little as $20 on Fotolia. Since these are exactly the same products sold elsewhere, Fotolia is evidently embarking on a strategy of price discrimination, hoping to sell premium products to an audience that wouldn’t fork over the money necessary to buy them on Getty or Corbis.

This idea is corroborated by Fotolia’s refusal to name the collections from which they are drawing their traditional stock photography, which suggests that it doesn’t want to make it easy for people to hunt down the best prices for the same photography. Since professional photographers also tend to shun micro-stock sites because they can’t make as much money from them, the lack of transparency also makes me wonder about how aware the professional photographers actually are that their photos are being sold at highly-discounted prices.

In any case, it will be interesting to see how well this form of price discrimination holds up in the long run, since the Internet has a tendency to prevent rather than foster price discrimination. I suspect that this new offering will lead higher-end stock photography sites to lower their prices, assuming that photographers are indeed really willing to sell their work for a lot less.

Loading information about iStockPhoto…

cb_widget_report_widget(”cb_widget_1198252518″); cb_widget_report_element(”cb_widget_0_1198252518″,”istockphoto”);

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/203645488/

As we noted earlier, the FTC has indeed cleared Google’s $3.1 billion acquisition of DoubleClick. Notably, the FTC required no conditions for clearing the transaction, which is a big win for Google. It won’t have to sell off any businesses or change any of its current business practices. Google’s chief legal officer David Drummond gives a rundown of the reasoning behind the FTC’s decision:

Third party ad serving markets are highly competitive. [No argument there].

Privacy not a part of the merger review. [You lucked out, boys].

Data combination wouldn’t pose problems. [That means Google won’t be hobbled by any separate-but-equal clauses keeping Google and DoubleClick data apart, which would have probably squirreled the deal].

Advertisers and publishers aren’t concerned. [Well, at least not enough to complain publicly about it to the FTC].

Now that the U.S. is cleared, Google still has its toughest hurdle ahead. The European Commission won’t bow out so easily. It could very well delay a decision until April. (Those Old World regulators like to take things at an Old World pace). In the meantime, Microsoft will keep trying to steal away more business from DoubleClick, as it did yesterday with its Viacom deal. Oh, and it will be spending a lot of time lobbying its good friends at the EC as well. The longer the delay, the more Microsoft can use that time to try to catch up. But come April, DoubleGoog will start to punch back.

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/~3/203636652/

The furor surrounding the now infamous Bubble video (embedded above) is not over. To recap: the parody video was watched more than one million times on YouTube, then taken down because photographer Lane Hartwell objected to the unauthorized use of one of her photos in the video, then put up again with the offending photo replaced and a list of credits at the end for all the images used.

Now, more photographers whose images are included in the video are raising objections including Ramona Rosales, whose picture of TechCrunch’s Michael Arrington (taken originally for my alma matter magazine, Business 2.0, see above) is featured. Echoing Hartwell, Rosales tells professional photography blog PDNPulse: “I’m totally against the unauthorized use of my image. I was never asked permission nor have I received any compensation for it’s use; . . . I will be contacting the Richter Scales today to remove my image.”

What we have here is a major disconnect between the norms of the offline world and the emerging norms of the Internet. Both the law and industry standards are trailing what is a major transformation in how people use other people’s words, music, and images in the Web’s culture of participation. Putting your photos up on Flickr (which Lane Hartwell did) and then acting surprised when someone uses them is like leaving your car in downtown Newark with the keys inside and acting surprised when it is, um, appropriated. The law may (or may not) be on Hartwell’s side (see below), but that is not the point. The law is outdated.

In the old days, someone might have clipped Hartwell’s image from a magazine and put it into a collage, or filmed it and put it into a private video. Nobody wold have known or complained. It is when the private becomes public, when that video is shared with millions on the Internet, that the issue arises. Because all of a sudden it becomes a broadcast, and if there is an ad on any webpage associated with the work, it becomes commercial.

The rights of the copyright holder have always been balanced against the more fundamental right of free speech. And free speech in the Internet age, more so than ever before, goes way beyond words and text. The way people express themselves on the Web increasingly involves images, video, animations, and other rich media, often in mash-ups of pre-existing works. That is how people communicate today. Both copyright law and industry standards need to evolve to take that into consideration.

That means the way creative people like Lane Hartwell get compensated for use of their work must evolve as well. Simply transposing the standards of the pre-Web world won’t work. Charging hundreds or thousands of dollars for a single image makes sense in a world of scarcity, where that image is used once by a magazine, for instance. On the Web, charging a lot upfront is the wrong model.

Charging at all may even be the wrong model. The currency of the Web, after all, is the link. If the Bubble video had proper links (preferably within the video itself as each image pops up) instead of just a list of credits at the end, that might actually be more valuable to each photographer than working out some piddling licensing deal. Links drive traffic, which would help each photographer find more clients and even sell more images on their own sites if they so choose. That is not the way things work today, but everyone would be better off if it was. And that is the crux of the Lane Hartwell problem. It is not her problem, it is all of ours.

Before we get to that, let’s talk about the law as it stands today. There have been arguments on both sides about whether the use of these images in the video would fall under the fair use doctrine of copyright law. Ultimately, only a court can decide. My co-editor Michael, who has a law degree from Stanford but is by no means a copyright expert, argues that it most certainly is fair use. Hartwell (and her lawyer) argue that it is not, principally because the image was used in its entirety without permission and the group who put the video up (the Richter Scales) stands to benefit from sales of their CD and concerts since there is a link to their site on their YouTube page.

Never mind that the Richter Scales is a not-for-profit a capella group that sold a total of eight CDs the week the original video was up. Under copyright law, it doesn’t matter. Damages are based on how much Hartwell could have sold those pictures for, and since she is a professional photographer, that would have been a lot. Unless, of course, all the publicity around the image has helped to drum up more business for Hartwell.

Like I say, you can argue both ways. Is the work transformative? Yes, the image takes on a new context within the video. Is it covered under parody if the video is not making fun of Hartwell’s image, but rather using it to make fun of Silicon Valley? Yes, because Hartwell as a Silicon Valley party photographer and the image in question of Valleywag editor Owen Thomas are both part of the very culture being parodied. (Thomas also happens to hail from Business 2.0—Time Inc. was right, that magazine was nothing but trouble). But Richter Scales took the entire image, and that is not allowed! Yes, but how do you take an “excerpt” from a photograph, unless you crop it? Anyway, a court might decide that the brief flash of Hartwell’s image in the original work constitutes an “incidental reproduction.” (And, no, I am not a lawyer).

The debate has spilled over into our comments. Blogger Robert Scoble points out that photographers like Hartwell are somewhat hypocritical, saying in one comment: “I think it really is lame to take pictures of people (who don’t get a cut of the profits) at parties, without being commissioned, and then send in invoices for that work when it gets used in a parody video.” Hartwell offers a lengthy response, noting the picture was in a public place and was for a news publication rather than for her own private commercial work. At the end, she sums up:

Finally, licensing images is how photographers make money. I didn’t invent the system, I just have to play by the rules. . . . I think a lot of the hatred here springs from the fact that people don’t understand the business of photography and how it is billed. Fair enough…But if you are going to point the finger at me for doing something that everyone in the photography business does, and say that I’m doing something unusual or unethical, I’m suggesting you educate yourself.

In other words, don’t blame Lane Hartwell, blame the system. Okay. The subsequent pile-on by the other photographers confirms that the system of both copyright law and how creators get paid for their work does not translate to the Internet. As Michael put it in his original post after the first takedown:

Societal ideals around what constitutes ownership over art are changing. People who try to protect and silo off their work are simply being ignored. Those that embrace the community, and give back to it not only allowing but asking for their work to be mashed up, re-used and otherwise embraced are being rewarded with attention. At the core is a basic implicit understanding - if you want to be part of the community, you have to give back to it, too.

There needs to be some reciprocity. But the old norms don’t scale. Getting permission from a hundred different photographers does not scale. It is, in fact, a limit on free speech because that video might never be made under those old rules. Let me suggest a better solution: under a certain threshold or for works that are truly non-commercial, images and other content available on the Web should be free to use. Once something hits a commercial level of popularity, if indeed it is commercial, that is when the licensing fees should kick in.

What would happen then? More people who are now “stealing” content would register for such licensing regimes, and photographers like Hartwell would see a flowering in their sources of income. Each license might not be what Hartwell and her ilk are used to in the offline world, but taken together they could become more significant. Now all we need is a startup to put such a licensing registration system into place. Any takers?

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/203504774/



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