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Apr 18, 12:51PM
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Back when
Uber intially launched in San Francisco, it was heralded as a service that would disrupt the taxi industry by providing black cars on-demand via mobile phones. Thus fare, the service has gained a loyal following, and expanded to a number of cities including Seattle, New York, Paris, and
Chicago. Today, we're seeing a possible evolution of Uber with a new experiment in Chicago—using Taxis. Here's how Uber works. The service allows you to order a black car to come to your location via an Android or iOS app. You can actually track your car as it comes to your location as the app tracks the car via GPS. Payments are handled automatically by charging the card you have on file (no swiping necessary and gratuity is includes), and it costs at least 50% more than a taxi. But you can order comfortable transportation on demand, which is worth the premium to many.
Apr 18, 12:00PM
Marketo, a company that provides an on-demand marketing software that allows businesses to optimize their sales and marketing efforts has acquired
Crowd Factory, a startup that creates white-label social marketing applications. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed. Crowd Factory's social marketing applications allows marketers to amplify and optimize campaigns, and view social-analytics and interactions. The platform allows marketers to add social applications and messages to every channel – Facebook Pages, Twitter and LinkedIn feeds, landing pages, websites, banner ads and emails.
Apr 18, 11:30AM
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The funding environment for technology-focused startups these days is
getting to be a bit ridiculous, so some tech industry folks may need to use their imaginations for a second to understand this concept. There are a lot of companies out there in the consumer and retail space -- with real products, real employees, and, yes, real revenues -- who have a very hard time finding the investors needed to take them to the next level of growth. The truth is, it's even more difficult than you probably think to start the next
Clif Bar,
Burt's Bees, or
American Apparel. That's where
CircleUp aims to help. CircleUp is a San Francisco-based startup that has built an online platform to allow consumer product companies to raise money from accredited investors. Much like
AngelList does for tech startups and the angel investment community, CircleUp allows both retail companies and the people who would potentially like to invest in them to evaluate each other and communicate in a private social networking setting.
Apr 18, 9:58AM
Eucalyptus Systems, the developer of an open source, on-premise private cloud computing platform, has raised $30 million in Series C funding led by Institutional Venture Partners (IVP), Benchmark Capital, BV Capital, and New Enterprise Associates (NEA). To date, Eucalyptus has raised a total of
$55.5 million in capital. Led by former CEO of MySQL, Marten Mickos; Eucalyptus helps companies create private cloud computing infrastructure on their own servers. Eucalyptus' software sits inside businesses' firewalls, using their own hardware. As Mickos tells us, IT administrators install the software on their servers, which sits on top of the severs, and are then are able to create private cloud.
Apr 18, 9:25AM
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Attention TV world: consumers, it appears, are not as tech-friendly as you might think. According to a new survey out in the UK, the vast majority of the public is not interested in fancy new 3D or mobile TV services, and even less of them care about TV apps. What they would like are better players to watch on-demand content on their main TVs and better TV guides for discovering what is on where. These conclusions come from
Freeview, the UK's subscription-free digital TV service, which canvassed opinion from some 2,000 UK consumers. Only 12 percent of consumers said they consider mobile TV an appealing service, and only 19 percent thought the same of 3D TV. And TV apps -- something that has become standard among producers and broadcasters -- fared worst of all, with only six percent saying these apps were appealing, and only eight percent thinking they were in any way "useful."
Apr 18, 9:10AM
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It has already been a year since
Peter Thiel called public attention to the bubble growing in American higher education. Yet, the cost of receiving a college degree in the U.S. has continued to grow, as student debt in the U.S. today has
pushed north of $1 trillion, with the average debt per student standing at more than $25,000. Mountain View-based
Coursera is one of the many young edtech startups looking to help solve the rising costs in higher education by offering Ivy League-caliber courses online -- for free. To help steer it down this path, the startup is today announcing that it has raised $16 million in venture funding from
Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers (KPCB) and
New Enterprise Associates (NEA). As part of its investment, veteran investor, KPCB partner, and education reform advocate
John Doerr and NEA General Partner Scott Sandell, have joined the startup's board of directors.
Apr 18, 8:45AM
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Russia, like China, is a market full of tech promise, but in the face of strong local competiton, it is one that has also proven to be tough nut to crack for big U.S. companies looking for international growth. But according to one IT leader in the country -- Alexander Turkot, executive director of the IT Cluster at Skolkovo, Russia's multi-billion dollar Silicon Valley-like work in progess, the game is not yet over for the likes of Facebook and Google. In a briefing this morning, he also had some good insights into what is happening in early-stage investing in the country, and what Russian startups need to be doing to get ahead.
Apr 18, 6:13AM
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Oh San Francisco, has it really come to this? Are we now at the point where the disheveled men on street corners no longer ask for change, but rather developers? Apparently so. I walked out of the TechCrunch offices yesterday afternoon and passed this guy. He handed me a business card, cut out of cardboard with the URL fingg.com scrawled onto it in black Sharpie pen. "Find me a programmer and we'll buy an island together," he said.
Apr 18, 4:06AM
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Not all hotels are created equal. That's why paying $150 for a room at one hotel may be a rip-off at one hotel while it may be a great deal somewhere else — and that, in turn, is why
DealAngel is launching a new way to search for hotels. When you go into DealAngel and select your dates, the site provides a list of hotels and prices for your trip. Each of those rooms is assigned "value" score — basically, how the offered price compares to what the expected market rate for the room, based on pricing data from both that hotel and surrounding locations. So if a room at a hotel on a given night would normally cost $300 is priced at $150, that's a great value — but you might not see it if you're searching purely based on price.
Apr 18, 1:54AM
RocketSpace, the San Francisco co-working space for tech and new media startups, has attracted a strong set of tenants in the 14 months since it first opened its doors.
Uber,
Zaarly,
Giftiki,
Spotify, and
GeekList are just a few of the more than 100 companies who have called RocketSpace home for a stretch of time in either in the past or present. So TechCrunch TV stopped by RocketSpace's
four-story offices in San Francisco's SOMA district to get a first-hand look at how exactly its ship is run. In the video embedded above, you can see footage of RocketSpace denizens at work and watch our interview with its founder and CEO
Duncan Logan.
Apr 18, 12:05AM
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CloudFlare, a San Francisco-based startup that protects web sites from security threats and speeds up their load times, has been in talks to raise funding at a valuation that's around $1 billion, according to multiple sources familiar with the discussions. Apparently on the back of the company's growth, there was inbound interest during the last three to four months with at least one firm agreeing to north of a $1 billion valuation. A few other venture firms have given pushback, saying that a $1 billion post-money valuation is too high. The company itself says it has no need to raise funding, with the majority of its last $20 million round still in the bank. (And no, they didn't plant this story because I heard about it through other backchannel chatter about Sand Hill deal flow.) "Cloudflare's team is working to address some of the Internet's hardest challenges. We're literally building a faster, safer, smarter web," the company's chief executive Matthew Prince told me. "We're in a fortunate position where we don't need to raise capital and have no immediate plans to do so."
Apr 17, 11:00PM
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If you've ever had to transfer money from one currency to another, you know that it can be a frustratingly pricey business. Now a new company,
TransferWise, has raised seed funding totaling $1.3 million to tackle that problem. TransferWise describes itself as the "Skype of money transfer" because it allows consumers to send money between UK and European accounts for a fraction of the price that banks charge, using a peer-to-peer, "crowdsourced" model to get the best rate on the exchange. (And, also like Skype, it is banking on scaling up the business quickly in order to make some money back on the margin that it loses in individual transactions. So far the service is only available in two currencies, euros and pounds, but there may be more added soon.)
Apr 17, 10:58PM
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I've seen plenty of apps get yanked from Apple's App Store in my day, but the news of an app called iKamasutra getting that same treatment really has me scratching my head. I won't rehash the
entire story, but here's the gist of what happened: Apple pulled the iKamasutra from the App Store in February, and after a bit of sleuthing, creator Naim Cesur of NBITE managed to contact someone in Apple's verification department. According to that Apple employee, the app was removed because of a suggestive app icon and a preponderance of detail in the images used (including the use of brown hair). Cesur and his team dutifully updated the apps with a revamped icon and less detailed imagery, and resubmitted it. And then they waited.
Apr 17, 9:39PM
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CEO Scott Thompson outlined a vision today of how Yahoo can start growing as a company again. His big theme: Focus, focus, focus. "Yahoo has been doing way too much for too long and was only doing a few things really well," Thompson said. He was speaking on the conference call covering
the earnings report covering his first full quarter as CEO, where revenue was flat while earnings went up. Thompson has already been making some big changes, with big layoffs and a major reorganization, but he said he isn't satisfied with the results so far.
Apr 17, 9:30PM
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If you've ever scoffed at Flickr, felt that photo sharing and storage websites hold your photos hostage, associated photos on the Web with platform lock-in, then you've already started to get a sense of why Jaisen Mathai left Yahoo last year to build
OpenPhoto. Appalled by having to watch Yahoo let an awesome startup/service like Flickr go to seed, ("I was extremely frustrated by the lack of product vision,"
Mathai said at the time), he took to Kickstarter and raised the $25K he needed to get it off the ground. The OpenPhoto project has gained the attention of ex-Yahoo and Apple engineers, current Twilio and Mozilla engineers, and more, who are all donating their time to help get Mathai's open source photo hosting and sharing platform off the ground. Today, Mathai is officially unveiling the new OpenPhoto iPhone app, a new website, and sharing more about a project that I'm fully convinced will eventually replace all of your other photo sharing and storage tools. Plenty for geeks to get excited about, and plenty for the non-geeky as well.
Apr 17, 9:28PM
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Technology is all about convenience. At least, that's where it's headed. I can now ask someone to run across the city and pick up a package for me on
Zaarly (which I did),
Songza chooses my music playlists for me, and I can literally push a button and ask my phone where the nearest burger joint is (
even if she never quite understands me). It's incredible. And now that same convenience is entering into our love lives in the form of a site called
Coffee Meets Bagel (CMB), which just launched today in NYC.
Apr 17, 9:16PM
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As Spotify continues its march to becoming a
$1 billion-revenue company, the music streaming service is launching a battery of new products to increase the amount of time that people spend on the site: There is an iPad app that
could launch as soon as tomorrow; and there is the ability to play Spotify tracks on third-party websites,
launched last week. Another development in Spotify's stickiness has been the rise of third-party,
web and
mobile apps, which have been planting themselves on its platform and growing in use. One of the more popular has been
Soundrop: a jukebox-style app that lets users create playlists or listen to "rooms" of music created by others, adding their selections to the mix -- similar to Turntable.fm, except that it works in more countries (everywhere that Spotify does; currently 13 markets compared to Turntable's U.S.-only limit). It's not only users who are finding Soundrop popular: Inge Andre Sandvik, the co-founder and CEO, says the company is weeks away now from closing its first round of funding from "leading VCs."
Apr 17, 9:09PM
VenueSeen launched their new platform today that lets businesses aggregate location specific sentiment, via social photography. What does that mean in layman's terms? It means this startup company will monitor and identify any shared photos that a consumer takes inside a place of business. If the photos are shared via
Instagram,
Foursquare,
Foodspotting or
Facebook then VenueSeen can tabulate and send reports about those photos to a subscribing business, complete with comments.
Apr 17, 9:05PM
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A new breed of mobile applications is coming. These new apps will not only "sense" the world around you, using the smartphone's sensors like the compass, GPS, and accelerometer - they'll also be able to combine that data with a history of your actions to intelligently determine your likes, interests and favorites. This understanding of the world, or "ambient discovery" if you will, could then be piped into any app to make it smarter, whether it's a social app for finding friends, a Siri-like personal assistant, a fitness app, a mobile game, or anything else. This, at least, is the promise from the Palo Alto-based startup,
Alohar Mobile, which recently introduced
new SDKs for mobile app developers interested in experimenting with the possibilities of smarter apps.
Apr 17, 8:31PM
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In what I suspect will be an increasing trend, cartoonist Bill Amend has released three "packs" of his popular FoxTrot comics for the iPad. He built the books by himself using iBooks Author and proceeds go to the Help Bill Amend Eat Food Fund (I suspect). He's selling three titles including a special issue -- number 3.14 -- featuring geek strips. Each book contains 100 strips and is optimized for the new iPad.
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