Archive for March 13th, 2008

Google Sky, Now in Your Web Browser

Written by on Thursday, March 13th, 2008 in Ajax News.

So while the rest of us who are not Robert Scoble are still waiting to cry and experience Microsoft Research’s WorldWide telescope project that lets you zoom through the galaxy on your computer, Google is putting its not-quite-so-glitzy Google Sky software out on the Web. Glitzy or not (the site is a bit jerky), for astronomy buffs it is an amazing resource.

Google Sky was formerly available only within the Google Earth software, but now you can check it out with your browser. It lets you pan through the galaxy and check out different celestial bodies in ultraviolet, infrared, x-ray, or microwave light. The navigation is the familiar one you know from Google Maps, although I couldn’t immediately figure out how to zoom in and out. But I’m no rocket scientist. The best part about it is you can search the galaxy by typing astronomy terms into the search box. More details from the Google Lat Long Blog:

* Powerful search that lets you browse tens of thousands of named objects.
* Three optical sky surveys that show you what your naked eye would see if it had a really good zoom lens. Try switching to infrared, microwave, ultraviolet, or x-ray to see the sky in a completely different light. Or blend between these views to create unique visualizations on the fly.
* Galleries highlighting the best images from Hubble and many other telescopes.
* Current planet positions and constellations.
* Overlays of custom KML content. (Simply paste a Sky KML URL into the search box, just like on Google Maps.)
* Last but not least, the Earth & Sky podcasts gallery is not to be missed, particularly for those who run a classroom.

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/251069071/

PBWiki Gets An Overhaul

Written by on Thursday, March 13th, 2008 in Ajax News.

pbwiki-logo.pngAs Google gets into the wiki space with Google Sites (the relaunch of Jotspot), all the other little wiki startups out there will need to keep one step ahead. Those includes Wikia, Socialtext, Wetpaint, and PBWiki. As it approaches 500,000 wikis, PBWiki is now putting the 2.0 version of its site into beta. The latest version includes an updated UI, folders, enhanced access controls and an easy way to customize the look and feel of your wiki page (see the screenshot of a customized TechCrunch page below or this generic demo page). The 2 million people a month that the company says visit PBWiki should like that.

Personally, I find the UI to still be something that an engineer would love more than a graphic designer. But it is an improvement. Adding skins is a move in the right direction. What’s your favorite wiki?

The Best Wiki Software By Far is:

View Results

pbwiki-small.png

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/251050883/

Yahoo Relocating European HQ From UK To Switzerland

Written by on Thursday, March 13th, 2008 in Ajax News.

yahoo-uk-ireland.jpgYahoo has announced that it will relocate its European head office from the United Kingdom to Switzerland. Yahoo plans to make the move to the shores of Lake Geneva within 18 months.

According to AP, Swiss media reported that Yahoo will benefit from a special tax break by moving to Switzerland.

The total number of employee’s affected by the move was not clear (5% is a figure quoted) with other reports saying that 70 employees in management roles will be told to relocate or lose their jobs.

Yahoo follows companies including EA and Cisco Systems that have relocated European Operations to Switzerland in recent times. The move would indicate business as usual for Yahoo despite Microsoft’s hostile takeover bid and rumored negotiations with other possible merger or acquisition partners.

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/251046220/

MySpace Opens Up The OpenSocial Spigot

Written by on Thursday, March 13th, 2008 in Ajax News.

Today is the first chance most people will get to actually see an OpenSocial app working on MySpace. The MySpace developer platform, which was first rumored waaaay back in October 2007 and announced shortly afterwards, throws its gates open to users today, about five weeks after the social network let developers begin building and testing their apps using OpenSocial.

When the platform was soft launched on February 4th, developers were told they had a month to develop their applications before more than a maximum of ten users could install them at a time. Now the user caps have been lifted and an application gallery called MySpace Apps has been rolled out. While MySpace won’t yet promote the gallery, any user that makes his or her way there will find all applications that have been approved for safety, following their terms of service, abiding by their guidelines, etc.

MySpace says it’s hard to say how many applications will be available as the platform enters this second phase, especially since they are still rapidly approving them as I write. However, we’re told that approved applications will not number in the thousands, despite the fact that over 5,000 developers have participated in the platform thus far.

This news of MySpace’s progression with OpenSocial comes on the same day as Hi5’s announcement that it will launch an OpenSocial platform on March 31st.

Information provided by CrunchBase

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/~3/250933806/

Moveon.org just launched a contest to see who can create the best TV ad for Barack Obama. These should be along the line of MoveOn.org’s BushIn30Seconds ad contest in 2004 (except these are supposed to be positive). Anyone can upload a video, and the best one submitted to ObamaIn30Seconds by April 1 will aired nationally. The winner will also receive $20,000 worth of video equipment. The judges include Matt Damon, Steve Buscemi, Jesse Jackson, Lawrence Lessig, and Moby.

Yet another example of how the Web is playing to Obama’s advantage. The YouBama folks should love this. But come on, we already know who the winner is:

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/250901182/

Judge Throws Out CNET’s Objections to Investor Lawsuit

Written by on Thursday, March 13th, 2008 in Ajax News.

The showdown between CNET and its largest shareholder, Jana Partners, may be entering a new phase. Following a tense meeting last week with Jana representatives, there is now a good chance CNET’s hard stance against giving Jana any board seats (despite the consortium owning a 21 percent share in the company) is about to vaporize. According to a source close to the situation (updated below, now confirmed), CNET was trying to block a lawsuit Jana has filed to fill the board with its proposed slate of directors. Jana wants to increase the number of board members from 8 to 13, and have the right to name 7 of them.

CNET was trying to block the suit on a technicality—apparently there was some question as to whether it had been filed properly. CNET was advised that it had a pretty strong case. So strong, in fact, that CEO Neil Ashe earlier this week offered Jana only one board seat because he was so confident the lawsuit would be blocked. But the judge didn’t agree.

So now his hand has been weakened considerably.

Update: Reuters has more here

Update 2:
The text of the Delware court ruling:

DELAWARE COURT RULES IN FAVOR OF JANA PARTNERS’ RIGHT TO NOMINATE SEVEN DIRECTORS FOR BOARD OF CNET NETWORKS

NEW YORK, March 13, 2008 – JANA Partners LLC (“JANA”) announced today that the Delaware Court of Chancery has upheld the rights of an affiliate of JANA to nominate seven directors and propose other business at the 2008 Annual Meeting of Stockholders of CNET Networks, Inc. (Nasdaq: CNET). Following today’s ruling, JANA Managing Partner Barry Rosenstein issued the following statement:

“This is the first step towards putting aside the legal mechanisms CNET has relied on to fight our effort to create stockholder value, which have included a poison pill, golden parachutes and an attempt to prevent us from proposing new directors, an attempt which the court today rejected. We look forward to moving on to a substantive discussion of the need for change at CNET, and why we believe our nominees have the expertise and experience needed to reverse CNET’s ongoing underperformance. We hope that the company will now put aside their efforts to thwart this debate with technicalities and instead engage stockholders in a dialogue about the company’s future.”

On January 7, 2008 CNET claimed that the efforts of a JANA affiliate to nominate two directors for election to the open board seats at CNET’s 2008 Annual Stockholders Meeting and to add five additional nominees to the board of directors were “improper” under its bylaws and sought to deny its right as a stockholder to do so, after which this affiliate of JANA filed suit in Delaware challenging the company’s interpretation of its bylaws. The Delaware Court of Chancery today rejected CNET’s arguments and affirmed JANA’s affiliate’s right to have its nominations and proposals considered by stockholders at CNET’s Annual Meeting.
Background
JANA has joined with Sandell Asset Management Corp. (“Sandell”), Paul Gardi of Alex Interactive Media, Spark Capital and Velocity Interactive Group in seeking to elect two individuals to replace the board members who are up for re-election at CNET’s 2008 stockholders meeting and to expand CNET’s board by five members and nominate individuals to fill those vacancies.
JANA Partners LLC is a multi-billion dollar investment management firm founded in 2001 by Barry Rosenstein. JANA has on numerous occasions, alone or with other shareholders, challenged management to focus on creating shareholder value, including with respect to Kerr-McGee Corporation, Time Warner, Titan International, TD Ameritrade and The Houston Exploration Company.
Alex Interactive Media, LLC (“AIM”) is a private company focused on leveraging its domain expertise in digital media and related industries.
Spark Capital is a venture capital fund focused on building businesses that transform the distribution, management and monetization of media and content, with experience in identifying and actively building market-leading companies in sectors including infrastructure (Qtera, RiverDelta, Aether Systems, Broadbus and BigBand), networks (College Sports Television, TVONE and XCOM) and services (Akamai and the Platform). Spark Capital has over $600 million under management, and is based in Boston, Massachusetts.
Velocity Interactive Group, LLC is an investment firm that focuses on digital media and communications. Velocity Interactive Group has offices in Palo Alto, Los Angeles and New York.
Sandell Asset Management Corp., is a multi-billion dollar global investment management firm, founded by Thomas E. Sandell, that focuses on global corporate events and restructurings throughout North America, Continental Europe, the United Kingdom, Latin America and the Asia-Pacific theatres. Sandell frequently will take an “active involvement” in facilitating financial or organization improvements accruing to the benefit of investors.

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/~3/250883485/

Partial List: Microsoft’s Nominees For The Yahoo Board

Written by on Thursday, March 13th, 2008 in Ajax News.

Unless Microsoft and Yahoo amicably agree on a deal to merge, the next step in the process is for Microsoft to propose an alternate slate of directors for the consideration of the Yahoo shareholders in their upcoming shareholder meeting. Once (and if) Microsoft gets control of the board, an acquisition is a done deal.

The deadline to propose board members originally was tomorrow. However, a recent delaying tactic by Yahoo pushed that date forward by a month or so. Everything we’ve heard, though, says that Microsoft intends to push their slate sooner rather than later. In fact, it is our understanding from a source that the slate was to be announced today, but it has been delayed. It could come any time.

So who’s on it? That’s been the subject of a lot of speculation. Microsoft is proposing ten new board members, plus two alternates. (Here’s the current board members they would replace). We’ve got four of the names. These are being gathered piecemeal from separate sources, so consider it somewhat speculative for now. We are reaching out to each of them for comment.

  • Edward H. Meyer - former CEO, Grey Advertising
  • John Chapple - CEO, Nextel Partners
  • Tom Freston - former President, Viacom
  • Jaynie Studenmund - Former CEO of eHarmony

Stay tuned for additions.

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/250883486/

Hummer Winblad Partner Will Price Resigns To Head WidgetBox

Written by on Thursday, March 13th, 2008 in Ajax News.

It’s not often a partner at a successful venture capital fund leaves to do anything except retire. But Will Price, a general partner at Hummer Winblad Venture Partners, has resigned from his firm and, as of today, is the CEO of widget backed Widgetbox.

The company has raised $14.5 million from Hummer Winblad, Sequoia Capital and Northgate Capital. Hummer Winblad has been around since 1989 and has invested $620 million of so in startups. Price feels that Widgetbox is poised to take advantage of the huge surge in widget usage. And if the AOL acquisition of Goowy and the recent Slide valuation is any indication, there’s lots of room to grow for Widgetbox.

I asked Price to write a guest post telling us why he made the decision to leave a very safe and very lucrative job and enter the very unsafe and risky world of startups again. His post is below, although it can largely be summed up in this post, too. If you want to follow Price’s regular updates, his blog is here.


My name is Will Price and until yesterday I served as a General Partner at Hummer Winblad Venture Partners, an early stage venture capital firm that was founded in 1989 (investments include TheKnot, Napster, HubPages, Omniture, Powersoft, Hyperion and others). While passionate about the firm and the venture industry, I am leaving Hummer Winblad today to take the CEO role at one of the startups I invested in - Widgetbox.

Michael Arrington kindly offered me the chance to explain my decision to leave venture capital and to join Widgetbox as the CEO. While the detail follows, in summary the combination of my personal aspirations to return to an operating role and my passion for the widget market and the company (which I helped seed fund) made this a no-brainer move for me.

My logic:

The best markets and the best companies ride the tide of history. Widgets are such a market.

The Web’s tide is open, distributed, standard, user-defined, and, in many ways, the most powerful force of the modern era. Widgets are not a fad, or web 2.0-hype, but fundamentally they are the unit by which users are assembling and defining their web experience.

Widgets are portable applications that are user-defined, user-assembled, and consumed independent of the source of the underlying content, commerce, and application functionality. The combination of user-control and decentralized interaction to important services represents an important paradigm shift in how users discover, select, and consume the best of the web.

In Nov 2007, Comscore reported that 650m global uniques, or 65% of the web universe, interacted with a widget. The growth in widget adoption and social media speaks to users’ unmet needs and frustrations with traditional web models. Today, brands, developers, media companies, and established Internet players are racing to understand the forces driving user behavior and the power of a more componentized and distributed web. While widget penetration is at 65% of Internet users and growing, spend in the widget category in 2007 was less than $20m, or 0.1% of the total online ad spend
market.

The 650x differential between spend and the record growth in user adoption is very powerful to consider. Users are always ahead of the market, as evidenced by the systemic under-allocation of ad dollars on-line; 21% of media consumption is on-line vs. 7% of ad spend. However, this 3:1 imbalance is steadily eroding and the widget market will prove to be no different and no less transformative. Traditional portal models that aggregate users and resell that aggregation are fundamentally at odds with the emerging paradigm of user and community defined experience and distributed consumption.

Marketers need to fish where the fish are, however, in an early market there are often more questions than answers. While widgets are enjoying end-user success, the commercial relevance of widgets remains unclear to many. Are widgets a new marketing channel? If so, are they effective? How do you build them, buy them, track them? What is the unit of value; an impression, an install, an engagement…? What type of ecosystem will form around the phenomena? In order to move beyond fad status, an economic model for the widget ecosystem needs to be better developed and measurable value delivered to both end-users and marketers.

Widgetbox, along with Slide, Rockyou, Goowy, Clearspring, Gigya, and others, is working to enable users, developers, brands, media houses, and incumbents to ride the tidal wave of web componentization.

Widgetbox, backed by Hummer Winblad, Sequoia Capital, Northgate Capital, and Michael Dearing, is the web’s largest gallery of widgets. Widgetbox’s growth in the past year has been extraordinary, with a current monthly audience of 30m uniques, 400m monthly widgetviews, and widgets installed across 230,000 domains.

For those of you who read my blog, you know that I am passionate about the venture capital industry and its importance in supporting innovation and entrepreneurship. As a General Partner at Hummer Winblad, I enjoyed the exposure and access to some of the key innovators and drivers of the new economy; company’s like Omniture, Move Networks, Mulesource, Widgetbox, and many others. At 36, however, I felt a persisting and important pull to embark on a new journey of growth, discovery, and learning.

In my career to date, I have found that if you follow your heart, work tirelessly, and fish in good waters, good things will happen. For Widgetbox and our colleagues in the space, good things will continue to happen if we stay true to the web’s architecture of openness, distribution, and standardization and to users’ passion for empowerment, expression, and need for community.

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/~3/250901183/

Ricardo Semler and agile/lean principles

Written by on Thursday, March 13th, 2008 in Ajax News.

“Agile / Lean or Common Sense and Permission To Change?” is an interesting article that examines agile ideas in comparison to Ricardo Semler’s principles.

I have most recently been reading a couple of books by Ricardo Semler, who runs his company in a completely democratic way – doing away with all top down authoritarian management principles and allowing the employees to make decisions on dress, salaries, where they work, when they work, and most importantly, how they work…

It struck me how most of the things that are characterized by “lean” are just common sense principles explained in such a way that they sound like a “process” that manager types can “buy into”. But really, they work because they make sense – and people have the permission to standardize and then change their work rather than having things written down and subsequently treating these processes like they are set in stone. You can’t change them unless you go through an agonizing approval process up the management chain…

In most of the process agile / lean related books that I’ve read there seem to be a few common themes:

  • Trust people to do the right thing for the company
  • Give them freedom and authority to work the way they want to
  • Push decisions down the chain as far as possible
  • Work in small batches and change things that aren’t working
  • Allow those who are capable of leading to lead, no matter what their title or position is
  • Put quality checks in place – whether it be test-driven development, or quality checks at each step in an assembly
  • Fix problems at the core and stop the line as quickly as possible – in development this would be TDD and automated builds. Once a problem is found, find the root cause and put a test or quality check in place to ensure it doesn’t happen again
  • and finally, Trust people to do the right thing for the company

One more principle that I would add would be “tolerate mistakes”. Many of the issues that I’ve come across with other groups is that if they make a mistake they feel they will be punished. I’ve had great success with my team in articulating that I know mistakes will be made, but I want them to be made once, a lesson learned, and things put in place (usually automated) to ensure they won’t happen again. I’ve found that if people know it is expected that mistakes will be made, and everything doesn’t have to be perfect, they are more receptive to trying something new.

But I digress.

What Semler’s story shows me is that if people are given the freedom to work the way that is most effective, they will. More than that, if you invest in them with trust, they will want to do these things as their commitment to the company will obviously go up based on how they feel they are treated.

Semler uses a key phrase throughout his books that is repeated over and over. “Treat people like adults”. Semco, Toyota, Amazon and Google seem to do a really good job at this, as I’m sure most high functioning companies do. Read this article called The Google Way: Give Engineers Room and you will see the same concepts outlined in the excerpts on Semco that I have just written about. It seems to be a common theme.

Here’s a quick interview with Ricardo Semler:

And here’s another video, a 13min video look at Semco, his company.

Source: Signal vs. Noise
Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/866-ricardo-semler-and-agilelean-principles

Yahoo’s embrace of all things open continues today - expect an announcement in an hour or so that they are expanding their Open Search Platform that we wrote about last month.

In that previous announcement, Yahoo talked about their plans to allow third parties to alter and enhance search results with structured data that may be useful to users. Today, they’ll give more details on the developer platform and will announce support for a number of semantic web standards.

What does all this mean? It means we can expect the web to get itself organized, in a hurry. At stake is a significant amount of traffic from Yahoo search, and anyone else that may choose to build applications on top of this data.

Yahoo’s support for semantic web standards like RDF and microformats is exactly the incentive websites need to adopt them. Instead of semantic silos scattered across the Web (think Twine), Yahoo will be pulling all the semantic information together when available, as a search engine should. Until now, there were few applications that demanded properly structured data from third parties. That changes today.

One example Yahoo director of product management Amit Kumar and others gave me during a briefing yesterday is LinkedIn - were they to mark up user profile pages with microformats, Yahoo search could understand the content and relationships between pieces of content. Yahoo can then present that data in an intelligent way in Yahoo search. “With a richer understanding of LinkedIn’s structured data included in our index, we will be able to present users with more compelling and useful search results for their site,” Yahoo says. Here’s how it will look in search results (see our previous post on Yahoo Open Search for how this is implemented):

Any third party can create mods for Yahoo search that leverage their semantic data (Yahoo will be launching a beta program in a few weeks, along with a developer launch party). Some lucky ones will be added by default to all searches.

A few details are being disclosed now, and Yahoo promises more in a few weeks. They are saying that they will support a number of microformats at the start: hCard, hCalendar, hReview, hAtom and XFN. They will support vocabulary components from Dublin Core, Creative Commons, FOAF, GeoRSS, MediaRSS, and others. They will support RDFa and eRDF markup to embed these into existing HTML pages. Finally, Yahoo will support the Amazon A9 OpenSearch specification with extensions for structured queries to deep web data.

Erick Schonfeld wrote a post in February urging Yahoo to open up search completely to compete with Google. Yahoo isn’t heading in that direction, yet. But they sure look like they might get there eventually.

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/250818558/



Site Navigation