HTML5 Could Help Bring Some Sanity To Online Guitar Tabs


If you’ve ever searched online for guitar tablature (a popular music notation format used for guitars), you know that it’s a generally miserable experience. First there’s the problem of quality — there’s myriad versions of popular songs out there, and many of them are wrong. But even once you’ve found the tab you’re looking for, actually using it is a pain.

The most basic tabs are just text documents, with notes presented using a combination of ASCII characters. That works, but it’s no better than looking at the tab on a piece of paper — you can do much better by taking advantage of the fact that you’re viewing the tab from a computer. Now an experiment on Mozilla’s Hacks portal, which showcases neat things that are being done with Firefox, gives a glimpse of what tabs could look like in the future with the help of HTML5. You can try out the demo here, though you’ll need to be using a recent version of Firefox.

Now, seasoned guitar players already know that there are applications like Guitar Pro and Power Tab that are much richer than standard ASCII tabs — these can actually play the song back to you while simultaneously showing which note is being played. These apps also generally support looping, slower playback and other features that make learning a song easier.

There’s just a few problems: some of these applications aren’t free, there are multiple competing file formats, and having to actually fire up a separate application to open a tab is annoying, especially when you’re not sure if the tab is accurate in the first place.

The experiment showcased on Mozilla’s blog appears to solve at least a couple of these problems. In his post, Illinois State grad student Greg Jopa writes that he used a combination of tools to build it: the Firefox 4 Audio Data API, MusicXML, and an opensource project called Vexflow to present the tabs in the browser, no download required.

Obviously there’s still a long way to go — this will only work in Firefox, and the music being played back sounds more like a cell phone ringtone circa 1998 than a guitar. But hopefully it’s sign of things to come.

For the time being there’s another solution for playing your guitar tabs in the browser: a startup called Songsterr features a pretty slick Flash-based player.

Information provided by CrunchBase


CrunchGear Drives GM’s Autonomous EN-V Concept Vehicle

We’re here at CES in Las Vegas live streaming the show floor; getting our hands on all the super-modern and futuristic cool stuff. Today, GM asked us to come by and check out what they think the future will be like for some people. This future has many types of vehicles that fit entirely different lifestyles. That future is of course more than 10 years away, but we’ll get there with working concepts like the GM EN-V. And they gave us the keys.

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TechCrunch Giveaway: Tickets To The 2010 Crunchies #Crunchies

The Finalists for the 2010 Crunchies Awards have been announced and voting has already started.

So why not give away some free tickets to a few lucky readers?

People say the Crunchies are to technology what the Oscars are to Hollywood. You can read the full list of winners for 2009 here, 2008 here, and 2007 here.

Some fun things to note: these tickets include access to the awards ceremony, as well as access to our exciting after party. The awards will be held at the Palace of Fine Arts Theater in San Francisco on January 21, 2011 at 7:30pm PST, with the after party following at the Exploratorium until 11:30 pm PST. There will be a fully-hosted bar, hors d’oeuvres, a gaming room, and other fun surprises.

If you want to join TechCrunch, GigaOm, and VentureBeat for a night of fun and exciting surprises, all you have to do is the following. Just fan the TechCrunch Facebook page and then do one of these two things: retweet this post (making sure to include the #Crunchies hashtag), or leave a comment below telling us why you think these tickets should be yours. The contest will end tomorrow, January 8th at 5pm PST. Please only tweet the message once or you will be disqualified. We will go through the comments and tweets, make sure you have become a fan of our Facebook page, and contact you this weekend with details if you are chosen. Anyone in the world can enter, but please note this is a giveaway for tickets only, and does not include airfare.

Come join us for a night you will never forget. We will pick two winners tomorrow after 5pm PST. Good luck!


Disrupt Winner Qwiki Is In The Middle Of Raising A Quick $8 Million

Qwiki, the visual search startup that won the top prize at TechCrunch Disrupt last September is in the middle of raising as much as $8 million in a series A financing. According to an SEC filing, it has already sold $5 million worth of the round. Both venture capital firms and individuals are investing. It appears that a large part of the round ($4 million so far) is being taken up by a pooled investment fund from Felix Venture Partners, at least according to this separate SEC filing. The company is still raising money to complete the round.

Qwiki has already raised $1.5 million in seed capital from angel investors including Keith Rabois (from PayPal, Slide, and now Sqaure), Shervin Pishevar (SGN), an Jawed Karim (the third YouTube founder), and Elad Gil (Google, now Twitter). The company was founded by Doug Imbruce and Louis Monier (who founded AltaVista).

The service is still technically in alpha, although it’s been opening up. It presents information in a highly visual way, assembling photos and spoken text from Wikipedia and other sources to create visual guides to millions of topics. Following its debut at Disrupt, the company fielded acquisition offers, but is now raising its series A to more fully develop the product. I still can’t wait for Qwiki to officially come to the iPad. Below is a video of Qwiki’s first demo at Disrupt.

Information provided by CrunchBase


Video: Hands-On With The RED Scarlet

I just wrapped up a short interview with Ted Schilowitz from RED, in which he told us (and all our live stream viewers) all about the new RED Scarlet (AKA Epic Light) digital cinema camera. I got to hold the thing and revel in its 3K glory; and while RED devices are notoriously never “final,” this felt about as final as it gets.

I don’t want to repeat what’s already out there regarding the resolution, accessories, dates, and so on, which are all googleable (and some not final), so I’ll stick to general impressions and you can watch the video for specifics. A few beauty shots are included for you to covet.

Continue reading…


Sustainability Roundtable Raises $1.2 Million To Help Corporations Go Green

A new SEC filing revealed that the Cambridge, Mass. consultancy Sustainability Roundtable, Inc. (SR Inc.) raised about $1.2 million to help corporations green their facilities and operations, and learn how to run their businesses in an environmentally and socially responsible manner.

With a special focus on energy efficiency and real estate, SR Inc. bills itself as a provider of “shared cost” research and consulting services to its members. According to the company’s LinkedIn page, their client-members include several private sector corporate real estate, tech and green building businesses including: Adobe Systems, Akamai, Autodesk, Gensler, Harvard University, IBM and Siemens Industry.

Notably, the United States General Services Administration (or GSA) is also one of SR Inc.’s Sustainable Corporate Real Estate Roundtable “members.” The GSA is the largest landlord in the U.S., according to a report from SR Inc., owning and leasing some 350 million square feet in 8,600 buildings through an estimated 2,200 communities nationwide, and giving it plenty of opportunities to move federal real estate toward greater efficiency either through retrofits or new technology.

Navitas Capital led the round, with participation from the Massachusetts Green Energy Fund (MGEF). According to a company statement, the funding will allow SR Inc. to scale its product portfolio in response to the growing market demand for its research and services and expand its business development. James Pettit, Managing Partner of Navitas Capital, will join SR Inc’s board of directors.


Hands-On Video: Surface V2 At CES

We saw the Surface V2 (as they’re calling it) soft-launched at the press day before CES, then demonstrated briefly by Ballmer in his keynote, and at last given official status with pictures and all the next morning. And then we got the the chance to try it out in person at the Microsoft booth. We’ve got video, some hands-on pictures, and our first impressions of the device.

One thing I should make clear right away, which is of course slightly disappointing, is that this is definitely not a consumer device. It’s too expensive and development is very much aimed at commercial deployment. That said, they hope to make the devices ubiquitous enough that having one at home would be redundant. You may form your own opinion of that strategy.

Continue reading…


Ask a VC: Why SaaS Is More than a New Business Model, Plus Salesforce v. Yammer v. Jive (TCTV)

Who cares about enterprise software? Apparently you do. Even though I posted this solicitation for Ask a VC questions late on a Thursday, I woke up this morning to one of the better inboxes of questions since the show began.

Our guest in your virtual hot seat was Jason Green of Emergence Capital. Like a lot of things in tech, Green is a believer that the hype in software-as-a-service may have over-promised in the short term, but has underestimated how big this trend will get over time– and how big companies can get. His LPs certainly hope so. There are few firms who have bet so heavily on this single trend.

Readers asked most of the hard questions like, “If cloud is the future why are companies like Oracle, SAP and IBM doing so well?” and when– if ever– a billion dollar revenue enterprises would be confident enough in SaaS providers to have absolutely no servers in the back room.

We talk about Yammer– Green’s investment– and Salesforce– the investment that started Emergence– and which of them will win the social enterprise, and whether Jive could be a spoiler. We also discuss how the trend plays globally, both with startups and customers.

Video below.


There’s A Verizon Event. Apple Fanboys Are Invited. See Where I’m Going Here?

Hmmm.

Earlier today, BGR published a story that Apple is looking to launch the iPhone on Verizon’s network as soon as February 3. That’s in line with an earlier report about no-vacation windows for Apple retail employees. And now something curious has just appeared in my inbox. An invite to a Verizon event, taking place in New York City on this coming Tuesday, January 11. Could it be?

Well, for one thing, I don’t typically get invites directly from Verizon to anything. At least not that I can recall. They usually send those directly to the MobileCrunch and CrunchGear guys. But this invite appears to very specifically be for me — it’s non-transferable. Would Verizon send me such an invite unless it was specially about Apple?

But that’s the other thing. Would it be Verizon and not Apple running such a high-profile show? And would they do it in New York City instead of near Apple’s home base in Silicon Valley? Certainly someone from Apple would have to be there — and you’d think it would be Steve Jobs. But there’s no mention of Apple at all on the invite.

So what is Verizon inviting me to exactly? Is it some silly USB card or the iPhone 4 on Verizon? I don’t know. But color me intrigued.

Update: Jim Dalrymple of The Loop (which exclusively covers Apple) confirms that he got the same invite. Something is definitely up.

Update 2: Another sign: Gizmodo (of iPhone 4 prototype fame) was not invited. And they note that they’re normally very friendly with Verizon.

Update 3: This probably has nothing to do with anything but is just kind of cool: the event is on 1/11/11 at 11 AM.


Announcing Your 2010 Crunchies Finalists

The finalists for the 2010 Crunchies Awards have been chosen. Over 243,000 votes were made across all categories and many outstanding achievements were discussed. Along with our partners GigaOm and VentureBeat, we are very proud to announce this year’s finalists for the best in technology for 2010.

Categories range from Best Social App and Best Mobile App to Best Angel of the year and Best New Startup or Product. Even Wikileaks founder, Julian Assange made the list, as well as first time nominees Quora and Instagram. Mobile apps dominate throughout and last year’s overall winner Mark Zuckerberg is up for CEO of the Year.

Voting begins now. Everyone is eligible and encouraged to vote. You may vote once per day, per award category, until voting closes on January 19, 2011 at 11:30pm PST. There are 20 award categories open for voting, recognizing the top accomplishments across a variety of fields and roles. If you are a finalist, create a badge and get your community excited about this honor and to vote for you as a winner.

To commemorate today’s announcement of the Finalists, we are excited to release our next set of tickets through Eventbrite. The release begins at 1pm PST so please act fast and get them while you can.

Here are your Finalists:

Best Internet Application
Chartbeat
Greplin
Pandora
Rdio
Ujam

Best Social App
Cityville
Dailybooth
Foursquare
GroupMe
Twitter

Best Social Commerce App
Blippy
Groupon
Jetsetter
LivingSocial
One King’s Lane
ShopKick

Best Mobile App
Bump
Chomp
Google Mobile Maps for Android
Hashable
Instagram

Best Location Based Service
Facebook Places
Foursquare
Gowalla
SimpleGeo
Uber

Best New Device
Boxee Box
Google Chrome Notebook
iPad
iPhone 4
Kno
Xbox Kinect

Best Technology Achievement
Blekko
Google Self-driving Cars
Hunch
Palantir
Qwiki
Word Lens

Best Design
1000memories
about.me
Airbnb
Flipboard
Gogobot
Qwiki

Best Touch Interface
Flipboard
Fotopedia Heritage iPad app
Osmos
Pulse
Sencha Touch
Swype

Best Bootstrapped Startup
Addmired (iMob)
Beluga
Easel
Fast Society
Instapaper
Techmeme

Best Enterprise
37 Signals
Buddy Media
CloudApp
Indinero
Millennial Media
Salesforce

Best International
Crivo
PCH International
Soluto
Viki
VNL
Wonga

Best Clean Tech
Coolerado
Kopernik
MicroGreen
Puralytics
Smith Electric Vehicles
Solar City

Best Time Sink Application
Angry Birds
Cityville
Netflix streaming
Quora
StumbleUpon

Angel of the Year
Jeff Clavier, Softech VC
Ron Conway, SV Angel
Michael Dearing, Harrison Metal Capital
Chris Dixon, Founder Collective
Mike Maples, FLOODGATE
Paul Graham, Y Combinator

VC of the Year (individual)
Marc Andreessen & Ben Horowitz, Andreessen Horowitz
Roelof Botha, Sequoia Capital
Jim Breyer, Accel Partners
John Doerr, Kleiner Perkins
Yuri Milner, DST
Fred Wilson, Union Square Ventures

Founder of the Year
Julian Assange, WikiLeaks
Dennis Crowley, Foursquare
Jack Dorsey, Square
Kevin and Julia Hartz, Eventbrite
David Karp, Tumblr
Mark Pincus, Zynga

CEO of the Year
Dick Costolo, Twitter
Reed Hastings, Netflix
Drew Houston, Dropbox
Andrew Mason, Groupon
Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook

Best New StartUp or Product of 2010
Flipboard
GroupMe
Instagram
Quora
Square
Uber

Best Overall Startup or Product of 2010
Facebook
Groupon
Quora
Twitter
Zynga

The awards will be held at the Palace Of Fine Arts Theater in San Francisco on January 21, 2011 at 7:30pm PST, with the after party following at the Exploratorium. As always, the tickets include access to the amazing after party until 11:30pm PST. We will have a fully-hosted bar, unlimited hors d’oeuvres, a fun gaming room, and many other exciting surprises.

If you would like to sponsor or support our events, please contact Jeanne Logozzo regarding sponsorship opportunities.

Good luck to all the Finalists. Let the voting begin!


Quora Answers The Question: How Will You Avoid Becoming Yahoo Answers?

As we’re all well aware by now, the Q&A service Quora is exploding with growth. And while that may seem like a good thing, there are two distinct downsides. First, Quora is a pretty complex site and so scaling to accomodate huge user growth is difficult. And second, there has been a belief since the site launched to the public that as it grew more popular, the less useful it would become. Put another way, there’s a fear that it will turn into Yahoo Answers. Quora addressed the first issue a couple days ago. The second, co-founder Charlie Cheever addresses today on the service.

In a post entitled, “Commitment to Keeping Quora High Quality“, Cheever outlines the steps Quora is taking to ensure that the community remains the same great place for knowledge as it grows in size. So what are the steps? The biggest and most immediate one Cheever highlights is a better on-boarding process. Cheever notes that it can be difficult for new users to understand how to properly ask questions on the site. So they’ve created a tutorial quiz that walks them through the process before they submit the first question.

So far, we’ve found that the quiz has helped make more of the questions that new users post conform to the site guidelines and require less editing from experienced users,” Cheever writes. He also notes that changes were made to both the homepage feed and the notification system yesterday to make both more manageable for new years (though he doesn’t detail what those changes are exactly).

In terms of the next few months, Cheever writes that resources are being put into:

  • Educating new users about site policies and guidelines
  • Improving the feed and voting ranking mechanisms
  • Changing the core product to accomodate a Quora with many more users and many more questions and answers and topics
  • Building special tools to support the efforts of reviewers and admins to improve the site and maintain civility and generally make it more fun to make Quora better

He also says that they’ll be working with site admins to help them deal with the growth as well.

All of that sounds good and addresses some of the issues that Mathew Ingram at GigaOM laid out yesterday in a post. Of course, Quora still has to execute. And fast. My new follower notifications don’t appear to be slowing down.

Information provided by CrunchBase


Twileshare – File-Sharing On Twitter The Way It Ought To Be

We’ve become used to the idea of sharing photos on Twitter (from Twitpic to Instagr.am), video (YouTube to Qik) and audio (Cinch to Soundcloud). But have we done much file-sharing via Twitter? Not to date.

There’s Tweetshare, Filesocial and Tweetcube but they are not something you will see in the average user’s stream – or at least not mine, and I follow nearly 4,000 accounts.

Twileshare is still in beta and launched just before Christmas but already it’s seen a lot of viral traffic from what I can see. There are now 24,000 mentions of it on Google.


Camera+ Records An App Double-Double: 1 Million Downloads, 1 Million In Revenue

Increasingly, you hear about huge download numbers of popular mobile applications. But few give out actual revenue numbers that are equally impressive. The reason for this is obvious: most simply don’t have impressive revenues. And part of the reason for that is that many of the biggest apps are free. But TapTapTap long ago decided that model wasn’t for them when it comes to their app Camera+. And that decision is paying off — literally.

As they’ve announced on their blog today, TapTapTap has hit both one million downloads of Camera+ and one million dollars in revenues from the app, the rare double-double in the app world. Revenues include both sales of the app itself (which currently sells for $0.99) and in-app purchases, co-founder John Casasanta writes. And what’s perhaps most impressive about the two milestones is that TapTapTap hit them despite being pulled from the App Store for a four-month stretch last year (something they illustrate humorously in the graph above).

But since Camera+ came back a few weeks ago with version 2, revenue has been up 2.7x when compared to the first version, Casasanta says. And it has only been a couple weeks since they announced their 500,000 total sale.

Casasanta then uses the rest of his post to go off about a few things on his mind — namely: VCs, business models, competition, and Android vs. iPhone. While he notes they’re actively being courted by VCs, Casasanta makes his overall disdain for many of them prettty clear. He simply thinks they’re too focused on pushing for a free, ad-driven model — something which TapTapTap doesn’t want to explore.

He also takes a swipe at some of Camera+’s competitors, namely Instagram, downplaying their 1 million download milestone. “Numbers for free apps aren’t nearly as impressive as the press is making it sound. The recent darling of Silicon Valley and one of our competitors, Instagram, has been lauded for getting one million downloads of the app in 10 weeks. But in reality, this number is pretty tiny compared to what high-ranking free apps are doing on a daily basis,” he writes. ”The Facebook app, which usually isn’t even in the top 10, will typically get a million new users every week or so, and these are active users, not just downloads,” he continues.

As for Google vs. Android, Casasanta cites Google’s lack of an effective equivalent for Apple’s payment structure as the reason why the platform doesn’t interest him. And he thinks Google doesn’t have that in place simply because they don’t care too much about it. Instead, they’re all about selling ads. He does conceded that both the Apple and Android models will probably thrive, they’re for “two different kinds of users… and two different kinds of developers.”

Basically, we’re sticking with exactly what we’ve done so far… we’ll continue to create high-quality paid apps with no ads, exclusively for iOS,” he says in conclusion.

You can find Camera+ in the App Store here.

Update: Instagram co-founder Kevin Systrom has responded:

“We like Camera+ and would love to support their growth as a paid app – internally we don’t see them as a competitor. Many of our users use Camera+ on a daily basis to post over to Instagram, just like they use Hipstamatic, Camerabag, etc. Our goal is to create a platform for sharing these images, not to supplant the myriad of apps out there that let you take and transform photos.”

“He’s right that it’s wrong to quote the number of downloads as a success metric. We don’t do that — our announcement was that we had hit 1 million registered users, not the number of people that have downloaded it.”


CrunchGear’s Live CES Video Stream Is Live Once More


The live stream is up and we’re planning to keep it live for the next six or seven hours. Today’s plan is to start in the north hall with the A/V equipment and car gear, then work our way through the central hall and end up in the top half of the south hall. We’re hoping to get some special appearances today, perhaps an interview or two, and I’m hoping to get a look at one of the only RED Scarlet cameras in the world.

As always, you can communicate with us via Twitter by using hashtag #crunchgear. Head over to the CES site to start watching, and come back throughout the day to see the latest news and new, unexplored regions of the cavernous Las Vegas Convention Center.