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May 27, 9:26PM

In less than three decades, the mobile phone has gone from being a status symbol to being a ubiquitous technology that facilitates almost every interaction in our daily lives. One month after the world's population topped 7 billion in October 2011, the GSM Association
announced that mobile SIM cards had reached 6 billion. A
2009 study in India illustrated that every 10 percent increase in mobile penetration leads to a 1.2 percent increase in GDP. Yet patterns of mobile phone use in developing countries are vastly different from what you see on the streets of New York, San Francisco, and Berlin. This is a market underserved by technologists and startups. This is where the majority of future growth lies, and Silicon Valley has yet to realize the huge economic opportunities for network operators, handset developers, and mobile startups. Where are these opportunities?
May 27, 8:00PM

Continuing our trio of daily video highlights from Disrupt NY, Day 2 of the conference featured talks with Andreesen Horowitz's
Jeff Jordan, Sequoia's
Roelof Botha, and SV Angel's
Ron Conway. We also asked our Aol CEO
Tim Armstrong some tough questions. Tuesday's Battlefield competition included a startup trying to disrupt the dry cleaning business, a new way for musicians to collaborate and a neat 3D Modeling program in your browser.
May 27, 5:00PM

Did you miss some of our NY Disrupt conference this week? Or want to watch it again?
TechCrunch Disrupt and our
Hackathon provided more than 30 hours of demos, interviews, panel discussions, and Battlefield competition. Sure, you can spend the holiday weekend watching all of it. But, we've also put together daily video highlights that we will be publishing in a trio of posts today. The player below shows some of the favorite moments from Monday, Day 1 of the conference, including some surprises from VC
Fred Wilson,
Fab.com and
Tumblr. Monday's Battlefield presentations included the first public preview from the Disrupt Cup winner and runner-up.
May 27, 3:00PM

If you feel there's been too much
hype about "
big data" recently, check this out: the Chief Technology Officer of the United States of America --
Todd Park -- wants developers and entrepreneurs to build new products, services, and companies using free data provided by the federal government. In this brief discussion backstage at Disrupt, Park emphasizes that he, his team, and the President of the United States have all fully endorsed the idea that key datasets be made available to the public, and there have even been examples of entrepreneurs forming companies around free datasets, one that's even hired over 70 employees. (For entrepreneurs interested in health data specifically, Park's group is helping organize an entire symposium on the topic in early June in Washington DC; click
here for more details.) For developers interested in big data sets, this brief discussion with Park would be quite relevant.
May 27, 1:29PM

Some significant changes afoot at social and mobile games company
Digital Chocolate: founder Trip Hawkins has stepped down as the CEO of the company. And we have also heard a report -- yet to be confirmed directly by the company -- that president Marc Metis has stepped up as interim CEO; and that Digital Chocolate has laid off up to 180 people across offices in India, San Mateo, Russia and elsewhere. Hawkins' news was made public by Trip himself in his
company blog, where he notes that he is "transitioning into a consulting and advisory relationship with Digital Chocolate." Without giving away much about the state of affairs at the company, the move, he writes, is being made as the company is "narrowing its focus." "It made sense to get more streamlined," he explains. Hawkins founded the company eight years ago.
May 27, 1:00PM

When I was a graduate student at the
MIT Media Lab fifteen years ago, my research group went on a retreat every year with Famous Computer Scientists from
Xerox PARC. I greatly admired these people and their work. But I was young and in a hurry to get where I thought I was going. And it sometimes seemed that every time us young folks talked about our research, or showed a demo, someone would say something like, "oh, that's very nice, when we did that at PARC ...." Fast forward to the present. For the last few years, every time I see a new piece of small, open, hackable, networked hardware, or a new reputation engine, or a generative art piece, or a product built around location tracking plus real-time information push, or — well, you get the idea — I have to bite my tongue and think of the PARC folks to keep myself from saying, "oh, that's very nice, when we did that at the Media Lab ...." All of which just proves that the wheel of history revolves. New work is always new, by definition, even if it's not entirely new (which nothing can ever be).
May 27, 7:00AM

Every day there is a new headline about mobile payments focused on using a mobile phone to pay at retail locations. Paypal, Google and other industry giants are racing to provide new in-store mobile payment solutions. Large merchants, such as Wal-mart and Target have contemplated their own mobile payment solutions. The debate about whether NFC will be the preferred technology to enable mobile payments rages. However, despite all this press and efforts by industry giants, there is stunningly little traction to use a mobile device to pay at retail locations. This is largely because the solutions offered by industry giants thus far don't solve a meaningful problem in the daily lives of consumers or merchants. Few things in life are easier for consumers than swiping a credit card at checkout and in-store payment systems are as easy and ubiquitous as dial-tone for merchants. However, There is a massive mobile commerce opportunity that is a severe pain point for both consumers and merchants, but large industry players are failing to meaningfully address it. That opportunity is e-commerce on the mobile device or m-commerce. M-commerce is ramping up, proving that consumers not only like to shop via their mobile device, but also will purchase. However, the numbers also show that there's significant room for improvement in the mobile device purchasing experience – mainly through optimizing the shopping and payment processes for consumers.
May 27, 4:12AM

If you're like me, you've had enough of the Facebook IPO story. For tech entrepreneurs struggling to build stuff, the cacophony of recent press is just more noise. That's why when my friend
Andrew Chen posted an insightful
analysis of Facebook user data, I was happy to get back to learning from what the company did right instead of debating what its bankers did wrong. Chen calculated Facebook's historical ratio of daily active users (DAU) to monthly active users (MAU) and the stats are startling. Since March 2009, when the earliest data is available, approximately 50% of Facebook users logged in daily. As other technology companies struggle to maintain DAU to MAU ratios of 5% or less, Facebook's numbers appear stratospherically high in comparison. But what is equally surprising is the consistency of that ratio over time. Despite periodic
user revolts in reaction to changes in the site, the ratio remained strangely stable. In fact, the number has risen over the past year and is now hovering at 58% as of March of this year.
May 26, 9:23PM

As software patent litigation ramped up over the past few years, software patents have come under the microscope within the technical community. Many
investors and technologists believe that software patents should be abolished all together, while others take the less extreme position that many software patents are obvious over known prior art ("prior art" being earlier publications that show a patent is obvious or not new). Courts are increasingly cognizant of these criticisms. Though it is unlikely that software patents are
going away any time soon, as the recent
summary judgment in eBay v PartsRiver (PartsRiver is now known as Kelora) demonstrates, courts are beginning to do a more thorough job of applying the obviousness standard to software patents.
May 26, 7:00PM

The game is over. That game where they get to hire you for 40 years, pay you far less than you create, and then give you a gold watch, and then you get bored, you get depressed, and you die alone. It wasn't that fun of a game anyway. When I had a corporate job I would wake up depressed. I couldn't move out of bed. The sun would be coming in. A cat on the fire escape staring at me through the window. Even it was more excited to be alive than me. And, by the way,
I had the best job in the world. I interviewed prostitutes for a living at three in the morning. But they were going to kill me in my cubicle.
May 26, 6:44PM

The legend goes something like this: as a child, Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey's father would relentlessly hound him to "Get better", so Jack eventually
banned the phrase from being tweeted. Go ahead and try it, the tweet won't go through. But the legend? It's a hoax. Here's the real story...
May 26, 6:18PM

California-based watch maker Devon made a name for themselves a few years ago when they released the Tread 1. The modern looking electro-mechanical timepiece dazzled people with its tread-based system to indicate the time. It was large, highly unorthodox for a high-end timepieces, and a little crazy.
A full review of the Devon Tread 1 is here.
May 26, 5:00PM

The Gillmor Gang — Robert Scoble, Keith Teare, Kevin Marks, John Taschek, and Steve Gillmor — explodes in opinions about Facebook IPO, Facebook privacy or lack of it, Facebook acquisition frenzy-to-be, and more Facebook, Facebook, Facebook. Surprisingly, this one goes on for a record-breaking hour and thirty-nine minutes, proving once again that size doesn't matter. Except in electronic condoms. Also discussed; Why G-Tar didn't win the Techcrunch Disrupt grand prize, why Kevin Marks' Target knockoff doesn't come close, and why Keith Teare is a venture communist. No animals or Wall Street traders were harmed in the making of this film. As John Taschek implied, you ain't seen nothin' yet. Did I mention we talked about Facebook.
May 26, 3:00PM

If you're building apps for phones or tablets, here's a must-see discussion for you. We were able to corral Greylock's
John Lilly (who recently helped lead an
investment in Instagram, right before it was acquired) backstage at Disrupt NYC earlier this week for a more casual conversation about the mobile app ecosystem and hardware. In this short talk, Lilly shared his views about the similarities and differences of building applications for mobile devices, taking care to point out that he sees many great entrepreneurs approaching the phone in a similar manner to how they approach the tablet. While the operating systems are similar on iPhone and other iOS devices (like iPad), for instance, the use cases, usage by time of day, and monetization opportunities are entirely different. Lilly encourages entrepreneurs to ask how to get their ideas on the homescreens of users' phones and tablets.
May 26, 1:00PM

The government of Syria uses made-in-California technology from
BlueCoat Systems to censor the Internet and spy on its pro-democracy activists (who are
regularly arrested and tortured, not to mention
slaughtered wholesale.)
McAfee and
Nokia Siemens have done the
same in Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait.
Amesys of France and
FinFisher of the UK aided brutal dictators in Egypt and Libya. Sweden's
Teliasonera allegedly took up the same cudgel in Belarus, Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan, Tajikistan, Georgia and Kazakhstan. Meanwhile, back in the USSA,
Bain Capital recently bought a Chinese video-surveillance company reportedly "used to intimidate and monitor political and religious dissidents," and
Cisco "has marketed its routers to China specifically as a tool of repression." You can't help but be impressed by how globalized the oppression-technology industry has become. So what privacy/surveillance story caused an
eruption of
outrage this week? Yes, you guessed it:
SceneTap, a startup that uses facial-recognition software to (anonymously)track demographics at bars and clubs in major American cities in real time. Forget the dissidents risking their lives for democracy: what matters is that the hipsters are creeped out!
May 26, 4:55AM

The auction house
Sotheby's is selling an official memo from Steve Jobs to Atari about improving the World Cup Football game. The pages - stamped and signed by Jobs himself - describe circuit diagrams and paddle layouts. Delightfully, the stamp says "All-One Farm Design" and features a Buddhist mantra, "gate gate paragate parasangate bodhi svahdl." As you do.
May 25, 11:55PM

Last month, the U.S. Department of Justice
accused Apple and a number of other large U.S. publishers of conspiring to fix eBook prices and filed an antitrust lawsuit. While most of the publishers quickly settled the lawsuit, Apple decided to fight. Earlier this week, as
Ars Technica reports today, Apple
responded (PDF) to the government's accusations. Apple doesn't mince words in its response. The company's lawyers call the case against Apple "fundamentally flawed as a matter of fact and law" and say that the idea that Apple tried to reduce competition and fix prices is "absurd."
May 25, 8:15PM
TinyTap is
a new iPad application designed for kids which introduces a different angle on the "record-your-own-voice" storybooks craze, by offering a playable book or game you and your kids can customize with your own photos, camera shots, music, narration, and more. The resulting creations can then be shared with family and friends. And, for a little inspiration, the built-in TinyTap store offers a collection of pre-made games which kids can customize with their own voice and actions.
May 25, 8:00PM
Gillmor Gang - John Taschek, Robert Scoble, Keith Teare, Kevin Marks, and Steve Gillmor. Recording has concluded.
May 25, 7:43PM
MoPub, an ad serving startup for smartphone apps, is announcing a new way for its publishers to offer their inventory to advertisers — a private marketplace limited to select publishers and advertisers. Basically, the market creates a more direct relationship, where publishers get more control and predictable pricing, while advertisers get early access. Advertisers will get first look a publisher's inventory — MoPub compares the marketplace to a eBay's Buy It Now model, where buyers can skip the auction process and just purchase an item at a set price (in this case, an ad impression). They also get access to special data like demographics, geography, and in-app purchase history.
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