Archive for May 2nd, 2008

tripwolf.jpgTripwolf is a social travel guide and trip planner that allows users to get a feel for how a destination will feel, look and sound, and adds a social recommendations layer on top.

The site offers advice and recommendations by locals and experienced travelers, and users get highly personalized travel recommendations from friends, peers and like-minded travelers. Users can create new locations, upload and edit content, then share their favorite places from around the world with friends.

The Austrian based startup has backing from European startup incubator i5invest and is currently in closed beta testing, with a planed June launch date. The final version will also include support for booking travel arrangements, and an iPhone version is also on is also planned.

We have 200 invites for TechCrunch readers for the closed beta test. Click here to sign up; first in, best dressed in terms of invites.

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/282446806/

After Dark Microsoft Employees Make Sweet Music

Written by on Friday, May 2nd, 2008 in Ajax News.

While the battle for Yahoo continues unresolved, some Microsoft employees are breaking the suspense (or is it now boredom) by winning new awards for Redmond.

The Baudboys is a acapella group consisting entirely of Microsoft employees and is billed as Microsoft’s Finest A Capella. The group: Graham Sheldon, Ric Lewis, Owen Braun, Elliot Lewis, Dave McEwen, Jon Schwartz, Mark Adolph and Paul Eng, “risks the rath of fellow employees by rehersing in on-campus conference rooms,” and sing a variety of popular and original music.

Casual singing isn’t new in tech, but these guys are serious, having taken first place in the Harmony Sweepstakes Northwest Regional and qualifying to go through to the national final.

The group regularly performs at Microsoft’s Redmond Campus, and was even spotted earlier today at Microsoft’s Silicon Valley offices. You can hear more of the group on their MySpace page here.

(via Frankarr)

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/282430666/

Investors Bullish on Internet-Enabled Picture Frames

Written by on Friday, May 2nd, 2008 in Ajax News.

Apparently not everyone agrees with me that those hi-tech picture frames you bought for your parents last Christmas are probably a passing fad.

Longworth Venture Partners and CommonAngels have just put an additional $3 million into FrameMedia, which provides a platform for delivering content to these frames wirelessly. The round brings the company’s total funding to $5.2 million after a $2 million round in November led by the same investors.

The FrameChannel platform allows users to choose from over 400 FrameChannel feeds for topics such as sports news, traffic conditions, and weather. FrameChannel also supports generic RSS feeds and social media sites such as Flickr and Facebook.

According to research firm IDC, 42.3 million digital frames are expected to be in sold by 2011 (a straggering figure given how few I’ve seen in the wild). It seems that the introduction of dynamically updated content is expected to spur rapid growth, and FrameMedia hopes to use the new capital to establish themselves as a leader in this fledgling space.

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/282368516/

Akamai engineering manager David Barrett, who spoke on the record as being opposed to the Warner Music sponsored music tax (more) last month, was fired on April 25, sources say.

Barrett criticized the proposed music tax in an interview with Portfolio Magazine. The relevant text:

David Barrett, engineering manager for peer-to-peer networks at Web content-delivery giant Akamai, says he’s opposed to it on principle. Griffin’s plan, he says, is tantamount to extortion, because it forces everyone to join. “It’s too late to charge people for what they’re already getting for free,” says Barrett. “This is just taxation of a basic, universal service that already exists, for the benefit a distant power that actively harasses the people being taxed without offering them any meaningful representation.”

Warner Music is an Akamai client, and we have heard from one source that they “leaned on” Akamai following Barrett’s statements, and threatened to terminate their business relationship.

We’ve confirmed that Barrett has been terminated, but we have not yet had a chance to speak to him or Akamai about the details of the termination. The timing is certainly suspicious though, to say the least.

Barrett joined Akamai last year as part of the acquisition of Red Swoosh.

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/~3/282348913/

Talks between Microsoft and Yahoo continue as the market closes and the business week comes to an end. Every signal is that the two sides are close to finalizing a deal, somewhere between $33 and $37/share.

Microsoft has signaled that they’ll go as high as $33 this week. The alternate board members, who must be notified before any announcement of Microsoft going officially hostile, have not been contacted by Microsoft, sources say.

The market agrees, with Yahoo stock up as much as 11% today. Yahoo closed at $28.68, up about 7% for the day.

Analysts we spoke to today, emphasizing that they have no inside information, say they expect a deal to be wrapped up over the weekend and announced on Monday. Look for a cash/stock mix in the $35 range, announced before the market opens, possibly with a conference call pre-market as well.

The main reason Microsoft has changed strategies seems to be the overt willingness of Yahoo to do a search outsourcing deal with Google in the event Microsoft walks away or goes hostile. The threat is very real, and some experts say that regulatory approval of such a deal would not be as difficult as some have speculated.

See our interview with Citi Analyst Mark Mahaney from earlier this week.

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/282329414/

popfly-logo.pngWhen it comes to casual games online, they tend to be built in Adobe’s Flash (see Kongregate). But Microsoft wants people to start creating Web video games in its competing Silverlight.

Today, it is taking a step to make that easier by introducing the Popfly Game Creator. Microsoft launched Popfly last year as an easy way to create widgets and mashups using Silverlight. With Popfly Game Creator, it is adding a simple Web-based authoring environment for creating casual arcade-style games.

popfly-side-2.pngThe tool is built for non-programmers so that anyone can create a game, and is particularly aimed at kids and teenagers. It is entirely browser-based. You create a game using predefined templates that can be modified, and when you are satisfied, you hit play to run the code. The games run in Silverlight and will be hosted at Popfly, but are embeddable anywhere on the Web.

The Game Creator starts off with templates for about 20 different types of games—from space invaders and breakout to racing games and shooters. Game makers can populate their games with hundreds of characters, background scenes, sound effects and objects, or create their own from scratch. More details can be found on the Popfly wiki.

popfly-edit-small.png
popfly-game.png
popfly-princess-small.png
popfly-space-invader-small.png

Information provided by CrunchBase

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/282259420/

Who Should Collect The Amazon Tax?

Written by on Friday, May 2nd, 2008 in Ajax News.

death-and-taxes.pngA fight is brewing between Amazon and the State of New York over who is responsible for collecting state sales taxes on online purchases. Up until now, online retailers have only had to collect state sales taxes in states where they have physical locations—the same way that catalog retailers are treated. Otherwise, it is up to consumers to declare goods bought over the Internet as out-of-state purchases. (Right. I’ll go find those receipts).

Since most people don’t bother to declare online purchases on their tax forms, the State of New York recently passed some legislation (tucked into last month’s budget bill) known as the “Amazon Tax”. This new law conveniently redefines any Amazon affiliate as part of the retailer, and since there are plenty of Amazon affiliates in New York State, puts the burden of collecting the state sales tax onto Amazon. Clearly, this ridiculously stretches the boundaries of what constitutes Amazon and what does not. So Amazon is suing New York State to overturn he law.

Amazon argues that the law is “overly broad and vague” in its attempt to place the company physically inside the state, and also complains that the law unfairly targets Amazon as opposed to online retailers in general. (Although it does apply to all online sales, not just Amazon’s).

The law, as written, is just a bad law. And it would set a dangerous precedent. Not because New York State shouldn’t try to collect the $50 million in estimated uncollectetd sales taxes owed to it. But because the law is tortuous in the way it attempts to do that.

A marketing affiliate is not part of Amazon. If I put some Amazon book recommendations on the side of TechCrunch , set up an affiliate account, and readers click through and buy those books, that does not make TechCrunch part of Amazon. It is a marketing arrangement. Just like someone who sets up an AdSense account does not work for Google.

This still leaves the question of who should be collecting state sales taxes on online purchases. On that matter, I’m on New York’s side that it should be Amazon. It knows what state its customers reside in since it has their credit card information and is shipping goods to them. How hard would it be for Amazon to add a sales tax calculator to its checkout cart that calculates a different sales tax depending on the state of the purchaser? The answer is that it wouldn’t be hard at all, but that Amazon doesn’t want to do it because every additional surcharge at checkout results in more abandoned carts due to last-minute sticker shock.

Unfortunately, New York State has no jurisdiction over Amazon, which is headquartered in Washington. So the way to fix this would be a federal law that applies to all retailers. But Congress only cares about federal taxes and is not going to pass a law that will be unpopular with consumers to put more money into state coffers (setting aside the question of whether it can pass a law directing how state taxes should be collected in the first place). Without a federal law, though, more states will pass more bad laws on their own. So, what’s the answer?

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/~3/282244725/

Four More On Deck

Written by on Friday, May 2nd, 2008 in Ajax News.

Starting right now The Deck, our advertising network targeting web, design and creative professionals, is bigger, smarter and better looking with the addition of Chip Kidd’s Good Is Dead, Dean Allen’s Textism, the various projects of Mr. Ze Frank and the new suite of rich internet applications geared for artists, Aviary.

As usual, Jeffrey has said it all, and perfectly. Thanks to Naz for permission to use the alley above.

Source: Signal vs. Noise
Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/1011-four-more-on-deck

On Facebook, Girls And Boys Just Want To Have Fun

Written by on Friday, May 2nd, 2008 in Ajax News.

app_breakdown3vq2vabv4x448s0sk080s8wwsazayxg50vkwk0g080ko8kw8s4th.jpeg

In case you needed any proof that the No.1 activity on Facebook is goofing off, the chart above from Flowing Data shows the number of applications by category. About half of the 23, 160 applications on Facebook fall into the “Just for Fun” or “Gaming” categories. “Dating” and “Chat” are also high up the list. “Money,” “Classifieds,” and “File Sharing” are the least popular.

Facebook is a marketplace of sorts. It stands to reason that application developers are chasing the categories where they are a seeing the most usage. No surprises here, but a chart like this really drives the point home.

Information provided by CrunchBase

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/282199096/

[Sunspots] The astronomy edition

Written by on Friday, May 2nd, 2008 in Ajax News.

Never have a limit on your income

“if you make a living only providing an in-person (hands-on) service, you are limiting your income. If you were in a ‘while you sleep’ business, there is no limit to how much you can make.”

Business vs. academia

“In business you learn at a faster rate, and there’s a lack of bureaucracy and better pay. I tell associates you don’t really know bureaucracy until you experience academic institutions.”

Architecture astronauts take over

“Between Microsoft and Google the starting salary for a smart CS grad is inching dangerously close to six figures and these smart kids, the cream of our universities, are working on hopeless and useless architecture astronomy because these companies are like cancers, driven to grow at all cost, even though they can’t think of a single useful thing to build for us, but they need another 3000-4000 comp sci grads next week. And dammit foosball doesn’t play itself.”

Gel 2008 recap

Notes, photos, blog posts, etc. Sample: “All in all I highly recommend Gel for anyone looking to expand your understanding and awareness of what makes a great user experience. Whether it’s visiting a website, making your own food, building a catapult or attending a conference it will open your eyes in a lot of new ways.”

After three decades, Tom Petty reassembles mudcrutch, his old band

“At an age when most stars are content to cruise, he seemed thrilled to have a new challenge. ‘Really it makes no sense,’ said Warren Zanes, a musician and educator who edited the oral history companion to ‘Runnin’ Down a Dream.’ ‘It’s completely at odds with the self-mythologizing tendency you see in a lot of rock stars. But Tom Petty is a guy who likes to have fun playing music, and he continues to explore different ways to do that.’…Diarmuid Quinn, chief operating officer of Warner Brothers Records, compared Mr. Petty to unconventional musicians (and label mates) like Neil Young and Jack White. ‘With this kind of artist, you go with their instincts,’ Mr. Quinn said, ‘because they’re usually right.’

National Small Business of the Year: SnagAJob.com

“A lawyer-turned-entrepreneur was the recipient of the title National Small Business of the Year…Shawn Boyer, the award recipient, started SnagAJob.com in 2000 after a friend asked for help finding a summer internship online. When Boyer noticed the absence of websites geared toward internships or hourly jobs, he researched the business, left his job as a lawyer, found venture capital and started the company. Eight years later, Boyer’s business has grown from just two employees to 110 full-time employees. The company grossed sales of $11 million in 2007.”

Soda can synchronization

Source: Signal vs. Noise
Original Article: http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/1010-sunspots-the-astronomy-edition



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