Archive for May 7th, 2008

SlideShare Secures $3M for Embeddable Presentations

Written by on Wednesday, May 7th, 2008 in Ajax News.

Sometimes the simplest ideas are best. While a number of startups are working to bring the whole process of creating presentations online, SlideShare recognizes that many people are mostly satisfied with PowerPoint or Keynote. They just want an easy way to share their traditional presentation files with others.

So the company took the YouTube strategy of creating a place where people could upload, share, and embed their media. And now it’s getting $3M more from Venrock and a handful of notable angel investors in its first major round of funding, which should help them pursue that strategy further (i.e. build as massive user base as possible). Oh, and fight off future denial of service attacks and increase capacity.

Individual investors include Dave McClure, Ariel Poler, Mark Cuban, Jonathan Abrams, Hal Varian, Yee Lee, and Saul Klein. Many of them actually came to know SlideShare as normal customers and only decided to invest once realizing how handy it was. David Siminoff will also join SlideShare’s board.

SlideShare is using some of the money to relocate from Mountain View to San Francisco, where they’ll have a larger office. It will also grow its team from about 10 people to 18, mostly with local hires even though the bulk of its development occurs in India.

Of course, we’ve been given a press release in the form of an embeddable slideshow, inserted below. Way to go on the blatant self-promotion, Dave.

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/285815987/

50 Startups Strut Their Stuff At PlugandPlay Expo

Written by on Wednesday, May 7th, 2008 in Ajax News.

PlugandPlay’s third annual Expo was held today at their Sunnyvale TechCenter, drawing nearly fifty exhibitors from an array of markets that included mobile advertising, massively multiplayer gaming, and medical technology.

The venue itself was a little strange - a large meeting space/multipurpose room that seemed better suited for a crowd half the size of the expo’s 400 attendees. Seats were in very short supply, though the crowd dwindled as the day progressed.

The expo’s main draw was a 46-company-long elevator pitch marathon that lasted for nearly two hours. Each company was allotted approximately two minutes to impress potential investors, though some didn’t seem to pay much attention to the rule. With very few visual aids (and no breaks) the presentations got a little tedious at times, but there were a few bright stars in the bunch.

Among my favorites:

  • Epsodic- Epsodic wants to take events from typical computer games and visualize them with fully rendered cutscenes. The technology will take a supported game’s data and animate pre-fabricated characters.
  • Novauris - One of the better-established companies at the expo, Novauris wants to provide speech recognition technology for mobile devices. The on-stage demo featured a cell phone’s voice lookup for Michael Jackson’s Billy Jean. It’s not a new idea, but I want it.

The TechCenter is the unconventional brainchild of entrepreneur Saeed Amidi, who has created a “startup ecosystem” where creativity and competition run rampant. The flagship office, located in Sunnyvale, is currently home to 129 companies, and there are a number of smaller locations across the Valley. With a near-constant stream of VCs and monthly Web 2.0 events, it’s easy to see why the TechCenter appeals to so many startups.

Amidi fosters the community by selectively permitting only “exciting” startups to rent in the building. Of course, his motivations are not exactly charitable - he gets a first look at any company that wants to take space, and has invested in around 20% of them.

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/285808100/

More Details About Facebook’s Profile Redesign

Written by on Wednesday, May 7th, 2008 in Ajax News.

Facebook has posted more details about the upcoming redesign of user profiles, which were supposed to launch early April but are apparently now close at hand.

Profiles will be broken down into 5 main tabs: Feed, Wall, Info, Photos, and “Boxes”. The feed tab appears to contain the News Feed as we know it, except with three new size standards: one line, short, and full.

There’s also a bit of confusion between this Feed tab and the new Wall one. Apparently users will be able to post items to friends’ Feed tabs (and their own) using a new Publisher tool. This is described as meant to replace the old wall attachments feature, so it appears as though the Wall will revert to plain text posts and no longer allow for rich media. But it will also incorporate all mini-feed items somehow.

Some suggest that the new Publisher feature will allow for FriendFeed-like conversations through comments, but the official documentation doesn’t make any reference to such capabilities. Screen shots showing comments appear to be only wall-to-wall conversations.

The “Boxes” tab will be where all the current application profile boxes are quarantined, er, showcased. While 5 tabs will show by default, users will be able to add their own tabs that display canvas-like pages for their favorite apps. This appears to be a trade-off Facebook is imposing on developers: isolate their profile boxes in a “boxes” tab but compensate them by allowing for more prominent, full-view pages. That said, Facebook will also be allowing up to 5 app boxes to show up across all tabs in the left-hand column (but they’ll have a severe height restriction).

Unfortunately Facebook has yet to release any screenshots of the new design except for the rather uninformative one above.

More information at Inside Facebook.

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/~3/285792023/

The seven rules of pragmatic progressive enhancement

Written by on Wednesday, May 7th, 2008 in Ajax News.

I’ve been talking about progressive enhancement here before and got a lot of flak in comments about it. It seemed that there was a general misunderstanding of progressive enhancement and unobtrusive scripting as a “passing fad” or “backward facing rather than being innovative”.

I was asked by a design agency in London to go there and give a brown bag presentation (during lunch break) on the matter and took this as an opportunity to write up reasons and examples for progressive enhancement concentrating more on the why than on the how.

The gist would be to say: enhancing a product progressively means you’ll always deliver a working product - as you have no idea how your product can fail in certain environments, you plan for it to fail. This ties in nicely with the agile manifesto - you always deliver software that works.

In my talk I came up with seven “rules” of pragmatic progressive enhancement:

  1. Separate as much as possible
  2. Build on things that work
  3. Generate dependent markup
  4. Test for everything before you apply it
  5. Explore the environment
  6. Load on demand
  7. Modularize code

I’ve taken these ideas and backed them up with benefits you get by following them and code examples in a full article: Pragmatic Progressive Enhancement.

The article is licensed with Creative Commons and uses YUI in the example scripts, feel free to translate, remix and create examples using other libraries.

You can also read the slides on slideshare:

Pending the quality of the recording, there’ll also be a video available sooner or later.

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/285683463/the-seven-rules-of-pragmatic-progressive-enhancement

MeeVee Finds A Home, Acquired By Live Universe

Written by on Wednesday, May 7th, 2008 in Ajax News.

Brad Greenspan’s Live Universe continues its acquisitions spree: they’ve bought troubled Silicon Valley startup MeeVee, we’re heard from multiple sources. This comes less than a month after they announced the acquisition of Pageflakes, another northern California startup.

We do not know the acquisition price, but it is undoubtedly less thant the $25 million Meevee has raised in venture capital over the years. The company, which was founded in 2000, let 20% of its staff go in mid-2007, and made more layoffs earlier this year.

Meevee integrates online TV listings with video. In 2006 we compared them favorably to other online tv guides, and the product has evolved significantly since then. Still, they never got the traction they needed for a big liquidiity event. Perhaps Meevee will find a comfortable home at Live Universe, which has, among many other properties, a popular online video site called LiveVideo.

The MeeVee team will report to Dan Cohen, the former CEO of Pageflakes, according to our sources.

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/285682336/

I’m proud to announce that Ning’s Marc Andreessen, Sequoia Capital’s Roelof Botha and Google’s Marissa Mayer will join us on September 8 - 10 in San Francisco for the TechCrunch50 conference Panel of Experts. The experts will judge the fifty startups launching at the event, and then discuss each of the demos on stage as a group.

More details on the conference are here. TechCrunch50 is a three day conference where fifty new startups will launch over three days. There will also be a number of topical panels and workshops. The event will be held at the San Francisco Design Center, a huge and beautiful venue that can accommodate over 1,000 attendees with ease.

There will be 24 experts in all, more will be announced in the coming weeks. Tickets for the event can be purchased here (early bird pricing is available until July 15). The submission process to launch your startup is here.

Marc Andreessen

Marc Andreessen is the co-founder of Ning, the create-your-own social network platform company that has raised over $100 million in funding. He also serves on the board of Open Media Network. Marc is best known as a co-founder and chief technical mind behind Netscape Communications Corporation and co-author of Mosaic, the first widely- used web browser.

Roelof Botha

Roelof Botha is a partner at Sequoia Capital focused on services and software investments. Prior to joining Sequoia Capital in 2003, Roelof served as the Chief Financial Officer of PayPal (EBAY) and worked as a management consultant with McKinsey & Company. Roelof is a certified actuary (Fellow of the Faculty of Actuaries), has a BS in Actuarial Science, Economics, and Statistics from the University of Cape Town and an MBA from the Stanford Graduate School of Business.

Marissa Mayer

Marissa Mayer is VP, Search Products & User Experience at Google. She joined Google in 1999 as Google’s first female engineer. Her efforts have included designing and developing Google’s search interface, internationalizing the site to 100+ languages and launching numerous features and products. Several patents have been filed on her work in artificial intelligence and interface design. Before Google, she worked at UBS research lab (Ubilab) and SRI International. Marissa has been featured in various publications, including Newsweek (“10 Tech Leaders of the Future”), Red Herring (“15 Women to Watch”), Business 2.0, BusinessWeek and Fortune.

Thank you to our early corporate sponsors: Sequoia Capital, Mayfield Fund, Clearstone Venture Partners, Charles River Ventures and Fenwick & West all returned quickly to support us for the second year in a row. Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo reached out as well, and we’re very grateful for their new commitment to our merit-based conference format.

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/285671024/

New startup KickNote, founded by Brian Erickson, will be launching a “Battle Of The Bands” event this summer that will allow people to watch, and vote, online. The actual concerts will be held in the New York city area, so this event will be called “Battle of the Boroughs.”

Thirteen separate events will be held over three rounds; 50 bands in total are expected to participate. The entire process will take seven weeks. KickNote is partnering with Justin.tv to deliver the live video to viewers.

There are various prizes for the winners, although the potential notoriety and exposure will drive participation. The company says they’ll have a second event in the Fall, based in Los Angeles.

Promotional video for the site is below:

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/285656768/

Ben and I gave a presentation at JavaOne on what’s new with Ajax. Since this was JavaOne, we skewed a little more than we normally would to Java topics, and one of them was using the new Java Plugin, that has great new features such as being able to take a running applet out of the web page, and having it continue to live after shutting down the browser. Java is running out of process here, which also helps the “Java crashing the entire browser” problem.

Anyway, back to our demo. For some context, last year at JavaOne had us performing Guitar Hero on stage, so we knew that we had to use a gaming console in some way. This year it had to be the Wii, but instead of using the console, we decided to just use the controllers.

Wouldn’t it be cool to control a Web page using the controllers? We thought so, and we set to it. You can talk to the Wiimotes via Bluetooth, so we needed a stack that would allow us to do just that. Java has a bluetooth stack. We could get an applet to talk to the Java stack. Hmm.

It actually took quite some time to test out the various stacks out there. In the end we went with a native system called Wiiuse that a lot of Wii hackers use. There is a wrapper library called Wiiusej that gave us exactly what we needed.

A quick test later and we had an application that was talking between the remote and the program. It turns out that the main controller sees a series of IR lights that are in the Wii sensor bar, and this allows you to simulate the system with any decent IR source. In the presentation room the big lights that shine on stage were strong enough to act as a sensor bar so we won’t even have to use it. We can just point out to the crowd.

Anyway, back to the application. We then wrote a Java class that acts as a state machine for what the remote is doing. It understands the movements, which buttons are pushed, how fast you are moving the device. With this data we could build a simple darts game. With the state machine Java code, and an Applet wrapper that exposed the information, we were ready to get to the Ajax side of the house.

We painted a darts board onto the screen and then had JavaScript start polling the Applet for information via JSObject (As simple as: document.nameofapplet.pollmethod()). This turned out to be more stable than talking the other way, even though it meant we were polling instead of being entirely event driven. When the JavaScript code polled the applet it would pass back a data structure with the data for the coordinates of the remote, and whether the dart had been fired (button A to fire, button B to reload). We would move the dart image on the screen as you move the remote, and when fired we kicked off an animation to fire the dart at the board.

At first, it was all too simple. You setup the shot and it would get the right area every time. Not a fun game. We then decided to add some simple physics to the Ajax game. We took into account the velocity of the throw (if weak it would fall down) and how straight your shot was. If you wiggle around, the dart will not be accurate.

Anyway, this was a lot of fun, and shows that as much as we mock Java applets, if we forget about using them as fancy blink tags, and instead think of them as more extension points, maybe there is life for them.

The video below shows you a demo of the application, the source code with an explanation, and more details.

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/285655409/wii-darts-powering-ajax-applications-with-wii-controllers

Twitter Starts Blacklisting Spammers

Written by on Wednesday, May 7th, 2008 in Ajax News.

You know you’ve made it as a communications medium when you start attracting spammers. On Twitter, the problem is getting bad enough that the service is starting to blacklist people who spam other members. There is already an unofficial site called The Twitter Blacklist that lists 329 known spammers on the service (see screen shot below). That has nothing to do with Twitter officially and is just a public service.

But Twitter also has its own official blacklist. It is not clear how you get on it, but perhaps if you are blocked by enough members you get inducted. Jesse Stay explains:

Before today, Twitter would mark accounts as “spam”, but not tell the owners of the accounts they marked them as spam. Those owners of the accounts could follow others, but no one was able to follow them, and there was no way for the owners of those accounts to know they had been blacklisted.

But now Twitter is simply suspending the accounts of people it considers spammers, but it will notify them. According to a discussion on the Twitter Development mailing list:

We’ve been considering this issue here at Twitter HQ, and we’re planning on simply removing the accounts of users who have violated our Terms of Service, as opposed to freezing their account as we’ve done in the past.

I just hope Scoble isn’t on that list. Taking away his Twitter would devastate him, especially after the whole Facebook banning incident.

twitter-blacklist-small.png

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

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/285566085/

Ajax Pioneer Week: John Resig of jQuery

Written by on Wednesday, May 7th, 2008 in Ajax News.

John Resig got in front of the camera, and the projector, as he gives us his thoughts on the state, and future of Ajax.

He starts out by discussing jQuery Core, and the features in the near term (1.2.4), short term (1.3) and beyond. He then delves into the UI side of the house with jQuery UI 1.5. He segues from jQuery to the future of browsers and JavaScript in general.

Previously on Ajax Pioneer Week…

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/285541056/ajax-pioneer-week-john-resig-of-jquery



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