Windows: The Cadillac Of Operating Systems


It wasn’t that long ago, as far as history goes, that the ideal car was a hulk of convenience, a bench-seated, chrome-plated, three-ton luxury missile. This ideal had many aspirants, but perhaps the one who most embodied it was the Cadillac, perhaps even the ’59 pictured. That’s more of a matter for vintage car enthusiasts, but it occurred to me that this particular car has a lot of things in common with Windows 7.

Bear with me here.

The pace of advancement in technology is such that ideas are often outpaced in just a few years. Formats, applications, and services pass by the wayside, having grown, bloomed, and withered at a speed which some years ago would be considered ludicrous. It’s a bit like the fins, wings, grilles, and other flourishes that increasingly decorated cars in the 50s. They sold, they were outdone, they were forgotten as the next version came along. And critically, at the time, the competition was between flourishes, not between cars. Yet at some point, that whole type of car would no longer be relevant. Are you picking up what I’m putting down?

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180 Apps Launch At Rails Rumble 2010: Our Five Favorites

Astute readers may have noticed a common thread between some of the apps that have been appearing on TechCrunch this past week – namely, that they were built in 48 hours. It’s not just a coincidence: those apps were just two out of nearly 200 that were built in 48 hours this past weekend during the fourth edition of the Rails Rumble coding competition.

Each team of up to four people was given a server from Linode and a private GitHub repository. From there, it entirely up to them what to create. There were 180 teams that made it through to the end of the coding session. From there, an expert panel of judges pared it down to 24 finalists who are currently being put through their paces by anyone who wants to head over and check them out. You can vote on your favorites and help determine who will win the grand prize – the Rails Rumble Championship Belt. No, really, it’s a belt. The winners also get a Chuck Norris autographed photo – though they might prefer a Ron Conway autographed term sheet instead. It might not be that far off – 38 of the projects from last year are still up and running, and some have even become pretty polished applications with revenue streams.

I’ve picked out five of my favorites below, but it was extremely hard to choose just five. Go check all of them out and vote for the winner before tomorrow at midnight.

WarSquare: This app reminds me of what FourSquare used to be like – an all out war for mayorships – but taken one giant step further. Instead of turning the city into your playground, WarSquare turns it into your Risk board. You’re given tanks, infantry, and other armaments that you can use to do battle and “capture” venues, and then reinforce them against defenders. For instance, I just took over Twitter HQ (looks like Dick Costolo’s reign turned out to be short-lived):

Beer Checkin: Keep track of what you’ve been drinking. Pulling data and images in from FreeBase, this app keeps your beer “collection” in a central location and lets you share it with other beer connoisseurs. It’s currently in the lead as well – wonder what the team will do to celebrate if they win?

GitWrite: Pitched as “blogging for nerds,” GitWrite delivers a simple, clean interface for managing an entire blog from within a git repository (if you don’t know what ‘git’ is, you’re not the target audience). This app managed to split the vote between people who think it’s amazing and people who are asking why anyone would want to blog like this. I’m definitely in the former camp – this thing is awesome. Who cares if there are lots of other ways to do something already. It’s okay to build something just because it’s cool. When I set this up for myself, it was immediately obvious what to do – the timestamps serve as evidence to that point. Plus they have robots as mascots.

Go vs Go: Fans of the addictive board game Go will want to check this one out – it’s a really easy way to play online against either a computer or your friends. It’s remarkably polished and responsive for something that was put together in 48 hours – kudos to the team for what must have been some well-disciplined hacking.

Commendable Kids: Geared towards parents and teachers, Commendable Kids brings the gold star into the digital age. Kids earn badges for just about anything that they might need motivation for – babysitting, cleaning their room, doing well on a test, etc. Another app that really has some nice graphic design:


Android Fans Rejoice: The Gingerbread Man Just Landed At Google HQ

Yes, the rumors were true: the newest version of Android, codenamed Gingerbread, is imminent. How do we know? Because there’s a new, massive treat that just arrived at Google headquarters: the Gingerbread Man.

Google hasn’t said anything about the release of the new version of the OS, but they’ve posted a video to the Android developer YouTube channel that shows the arrival of this much-anticipated treat. He joins a variety of other gigantic sweets, including an eclair, a cupcake, and a bowl of frozen yogurt.

Each of these desserts represents one of the code names of Android OS, and they’ve historically been positioned in front of the Android building on Google’s campus a few weeks before the company releases the source of the latest version of Android. In other words, expect some big Android news soon.

Little is known about the upcoming release, other than that the Android team has paid a lot of attention to improving the user experience. Aside from a few blurry screenshots, little has been seen of the new version, but we don’t have to wait much longer.


Keen On… Yossi Vardi: Why He Likes To Exploit Child Labor (TCTV)

Earlier this month, I had the great pleasure of spending some time at the Stream unconference in Athens, Greece with the legendary Israeli entrepreneur and investor Yossi Vardi. As the original investor in ICQ, Israel’s best known technology investor and a global networker par excellence , you’d think that Vardi would have regaled me with tales of his investment prowess. But no. Instead of stories about his ability to see the future before anyone else, he insisted that his only talent was the ability to “write checks very fast.”

That’s Yossi. Whereas most investors are a lot less intelligent than they appear, so Vardi is much smarter than he seems. Behind all the self-deprecating jokes about his wife, his robust physique and his sartorial inelegance (he was just voted one of the five worst dressed people in Israel, a badge he wears – to excuse the pun – with great honor), Vardi is one of the very few wise men of tech. And that wisdom is derived from his refusal to take himself or his manifold achievements too seriously.

Beyond his wisdom and humor, what strikes me most about Vardi is his generosity of spirit. Here’s a guy who makes bets on people rather than businesses. So if he likes you, he’ll invest in you. That’s Yossi – an unselfish man in a selfish world.

Yossi on why he likes to exploit child labor

Yossi on why he goes to 163 events each year

Yossi on why Americans are parochial

Yossi on the cloud, the iPad & the future of TV


CoverPad For The iPad Makes Your Blog Feel Like Flipboard

PadPressed, the WordPress plugin that makes your blog feel like an iPad app when accessed from a native browser, today launches its CoverPad, which takes the “browser to iPad app” concept one iteration further and recreates the paginated feel of Flipboard in the iPad browser with HTML5/CSS3.

Says founder Jason Baptiste on the motivation behind launching the app, “We thought, what’s the craziest thing we could do to push the browser? And this was it.” Baptiste hasn’t actually spoken with anyone at Flipboard about this.

CoverPad features include the Flipboard-esque 3-D page flipping, accelerometer resizing based on landscape or portrait mode, HTML5 caching for faster loading and the ability to add the your blog’s app as a native to the homescreen. All PadPressed integrations now have a full loading screen, removing the browser bar so you virtually can’t tell the difference between your blog’s web page and a native app.

Baptiste tells me that PadPressed is currently profitable, with over 150 customers (including GE and Dictionary.com) using the plugin to make blogs look like iPad apps on the iPad browser. He also tells me that since it first came out three months ago, the New York Times began charging $50,000 up front to license their tablet CMS-viewing technology, versus $50 for the PadPressed plugin which includes both the original app and CoverPad.

CoverPad is PadPressed’s last WordPress-only play, as Baptise wants to transform its core business into a hosted service focusing on easy tablet publishing for all CMS and ebook publishers i.e. if someone accesses your Posterous blog from an iPad it automatically switches to PadPressed.

You know tablets are here to stay when people start offering tablet-specific publishing as a service.

Information provided by CrunchBase


Video: The First Ever Foursquare Check-In From Space

Earlier today, we wrote about the first ever ‘check-in’ from space, when NASA astronaut Doug Wheelock used Foursquare from the International Space Station. And now we’ve got video footage. Remember, he’s 220 miles away from Earth, and he’s floating in zero gravity. He’s also effectively the Mayor of Space. Not too shabby.

Upon checking in, astronaut Wheelock unlocked a special NASA Explorer Foursquare badge, and received the following message:

“You are now 220 miles above Earth traveling at 17,500 mph and unlocked the NASA Explorer Badge! Show this badge and get a free scoop of astronaut ice cream.”

The nifty video was created by JESS3, which also helped make the Foursquare/NASA partnership a reality.


John Doerr Talks sFund And iFund But Not fbFund Or aFund

Earlier today at Facebook’s headquarters in Palo Alto, CA, venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers unveiled their latest massive fund: the sFund. This $250 million fund has one mission: to find the best startups in the social space out there and fund them. But Kleiner Perkins partner John Doerr has a better way of putting it: “I’m thinking of it like it’s a quarter-billion dollar party.”

Fair enough.

I sat down with Doerr after the announcement and subsequent press conference with partners Facebook, Zynga, and Amazon, to talk a bit about the new fund. Doerr noted that the fund itself bubbled up from an idea he put out there at our own TechCrunch Disrupt conference this past May: the “Third Wave“. That is, Doerr believes that the “First Wave” was in the early 1980s with the microchip and the PC. The “Second Wave” was in the mid-1990s when the web came along. Now it’s time for this Third Wave: social, mobile, the cloud, and commerce all coming together.

Prior to this sFund, Kleiner Perkins launched the iFund (and subsequently doubled-down on it), the mobile part of this equation. More specifically, that fund was aimed at the iPhone and later the iPad. But Doerr is quick to note that the intention is not to tell entrepreneurs what to do with these funds. That’s why this sFund is not called the “fFund” or the “fbFund” (obviously, for Facebook), he says.

I also asked about Android. Might we see an “aFund”? Again, Doerr sort of danced around this question by saying again that the goal is just to help entrepreneurs here, not to tell them what they should be working on. The implication there is that as long as the startup is focused on social, Kleiner Perkins doesn’t care which platform they’re working on.

At the same time, Doerr notes that the key to all of this is mobile. “The Internet is moving mobile. And that’s where all the action is,” he says as we discuss our shared love for the iPad.

Another thing he wants to make very clear: “We’re just getting started. This is the early innings, if you will, of social and I can’t wait to see how far it goes over the next decade.” Play ball.

Below, find the video of my talk with Doerr.


Adobe’s New HTML5 Video Player Widget, It’s Kind Of A Big Deal

“I wouldn’t say we’re reacting to HTML5. We see whatever people are using to express themselves. … We’re going to make great tooling for HTML5. We’re going to make the best tools in the world for HTML5.”

– Adobe CTO Kevin Lynch, at the Web 2.0 Summit this May.

Adobe, which has been at the focal point of what seems like the never ending Apple induced saga surrounding Flash plugins vs. HTML5 <video> tags, announces its entry into the HTML5 space today, just in time for the new initially Flash-less MacBook Air.

In addition to its Flash products, Adobe offering up a widget that enables the creation of HTML5 videos using the Kaltura HTML5 media library, which allows browsers that don’t have HTML5 support to fall back on Flash.

From the Adobe blog:

“The limited browser support for the HTML5 tag has forced web designers to scramble for a solution that would work across platforms as well as browsers.

To help customers overcome these challenges, Adobe has released an easy-to-use, totally CSS-customizable solution that shifts gracefully from the HTML5 tag to the Flash Player when the tag is not supported. The shift takes place regardless of the screen—from phone to monitor to TV.”

The widget is available both through and independent of Adobe developer tool Dreamweaver and can be accessed in one two of ways, either through the Adobe Widget Browser if you have Adobe Air installed or through Dreamweaver itself via its “Customize Widget” function.

It seems like with this most recent product step, Adobe is making a noble attempt at straddle both sides of the fence, as well as trying to ensure that it has a future supporting web video and media in light of Apple’s ongoing anti-Flash efforts.

Image via: Randy Humphries


New MacBook Air Teardown Reveals Disappointingly Few Apple Design Secrets

In classic iFixit fashion, the latest Apple laptop has been torn to pieces a mere day after its release event. How exciting! Now we get to find out how Apple managed to cram so much of 2007′s technology into that gorgeous case.

Unsurprisingly, Apple has made the new MacBook Air nigh-impossible to service on your own. Not only is the interior secured by five-sided Torx T5 screws, but most of the parts are so customized (not to say obscure) that you’d be unable to find them in even the most extensive part store.

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Hands-On With The HP Slate 500, A Windows 7 Business Tablet


It’s been a long, hard road but it looks like some of the big boys are finally figuring out tablets. To wit: the new HP Slate 500, a business-only tablet designed for retail, hospitality, medicine and anything else that isn’t all about having fun. Let me explain.

The Slate 500 is a very nice tablet. In fact I’d say the Samsung Galaxy Tab and the 500 are close cousins in terms of style and usability. The iPad may be the gold standard, but someone needs to think of the legacy applications! That’s what the 500 is here for.

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Music Startups CAN Work: MOG CEO David Hyman Responds To imeem’s Dalton Caldwell

This guest post was written by David Hyman, a self-proclaimed music junkie and CEO and founder of MOG, a startup that offers both a premium music service and a portal of music content. Before starting MOG, David served as CEO of Gracenote, the world’s largest music database and music-identification service, which sold to Sony for $260 million in 2008. Previously, he was SVP of Marketing at MTV Interactive, and he co-founded Addicted to Noise, the webzine that pioneered multimedia music reporting and around-the-clock music news. In 2008, he founded Musica Tecnomica, a regular gathering of music-focused innovators in San Francisco.


Dalton Caldwell, founder/ex-CEO of imeem, recently gave a presentation at the Y Combinator Startup School on the impossibility of creating success in digital music. I’d like to provide an alternate point of view and make it clear that, like in any business, “making it” requires know-how, hard work, diligence and passion. Having significantly contributed to the successes of four companies that have guided themselves through the muck including Addicted to Noise, Sonicnet, Gracenote, and now MOG, my perspective is quite opposite from that of Dalton’s and I see great opportunity for those playing in the space.

Dalton’s takeaway from his experience appears to be that the entire music market can’t work, perhaps because imeem did not work. Yes, digital music seems to be a game that every 20-something wants to try and play, and it’s almost as if creating a digital music product is a rite of passage for millions of young buck programmers. It’s unfortunate that because it’s a sexy space, and because there are tons of entrants into the field, all of the noise creates an impression that winning can’t be done. It certainly can.

Like being a paid musician, an actor, a rocket scientist, or a media mogul, success and whatever you do requires years of commitment and unbridled passion. For those that put in Malcolm Gladwell’s 10,000 hours, the rewards can be significant. Rewards realized by countless success stories: from Winamp and Spinner, to Last.fm, Pandora, Gracenote, iTunes, MySpace, Facebook, Tumblr and all the popular blogging platforms, YouTube, VEVO, ringtone companies, lyrics sites, music-oriented games (Guitar Hero, Tap Tap Revenge, etc.) and many, many more.

To Dalton’s point, providing music content is a smaller-margin business. But, the addressable market is massive. Music consumption is at an all-time high and is most likely the second biggest leisure activity in the world behind watching television. It’s an industry in massive flux. Those with models that work can reap massive rewards through its tumultuous evolution. There are countless phenomenal businesses built on providing services and products on a massive scale with a small margin.

It’s hard work getting deals done with the labels. They have limited business development resources and can’t make thousands of bets. Contrary to what Dalton conveyed, the labels don’t require you to do deals that make no economic sense. For example, MOG is very happy with the realistic minimum guarantees that were set, all of which we’ve hit. You have to come to the labels with a great idea, a great product and a model that works.

MOG started out providing tools to music bloggers. We successfully morphed that into the fastest growing music network, providing ad sale resources to over 1,300 blogs and music sites, reaching over 35 million monthly uniques (see comScore). We are a fast-growing, solid business. We recently launched a cloud-based online and mobile music subscription service, heralded by press and users.  It’s a low margin business, yes, partially offset with improved margins from our ad business, but a great business on its own.  Our model does not have unknown variable costs. We have built a team that can execute with great cost efficiencies, and are prepared to take our business globally.

Historically, subscription businesses were hindered by lack of ubiquitous access. But mark my words, with open-platform smart phones, 3G (and soon LTE), digital services quickly coming to television (wait until you see all the TVs coming with MOG inside), and most importantly, IP-based services in the car — often tied to established billing relationships consumers already have with carriers and others — it’s the future of music (along with free radio).

As for Congress getting involved with statutory rates, it’s my opinion that these rates and not letting the free market dictate how this area evolves will be the death of the music industry. Can you imagine, Congress coming up with how much a label (and ultimately an artist) can make by placing caps on the industry? I assure you that would be the industry’s quickest decline, as it would become impossible for labels to make bets on new talent.

It’s a massive global market and there will be a handful or more of players. Dalton says to stay out because it’s saturated. People told us to stay out for the same reason. But, we believed in our core we could build a better mousetrap and we did. And who knows, perhaps so could you! It’s a damn big market coming. It won’t happen overnight. But it’s inevitably coming.

So, to those of you who love music, and can’t think of spending your life doing anything else, diligence, unbridled passion, commitment, and common sense can not only provide a lifetime tied to music, but a healthy reward. Like my father always said to me, “You don’t get something for nuthin’, kid.”


Will Legalizing Pot Solve Every Problem that Ails California? No, but Cute Viral Video

It’s not surprising how much San Francisco Web companies are in the middle of this Proposition 19 debate. Prop 19 would legalize, regulate and tax marijuana in California, and advocates hope if it passes the trend would spread nationally.

It’s a cause straight to the heart of the increasingly libertarian streak of Silicon Valley. But beyond that, you’ve got companies like WeedMaps hoping this is the next billion dollar market — not only for the farmers and the dispensaries but for Web and mobile apps. A rare– forgive the pun– greenfield opportunity in our over-developed world.

And while everyone is trying to use the Web to push their issues this election season, when the tech community is behind an issue, they just do it better. (See: Obama) It’s similar to the steller “I’m a Mac/I’m a PC” spoof PSAs from the “No on Proposition 8″ campaign last year.

Witness this adorable video for Prop 19 below, much more compelling than Paul Carr’s favorite “MEG MEG MEG!” video, which somehow makes me just feel sorry for her. As discussed earlier this week, there’s no sure-fire way to make a successful viral video. But making something this awesomely cute is a good bet. Of course, winning at the polls is another matter. [Video Below]


Shotgun Duel for iOS: It’s Just Like Actual Dueling… Minus, You Know, Getting Shot

Is some Bad Egg trying to bark at your ol’ Buckle Bunny? Some Bunko trying to make off with your new Bangtail? Or, more likely, is some punk from accounting trying to say you’ve snagged his stapler?

Now you can settle things just like they would in the old west: with a good ol’ fashion duel — sans bullets, a criminal record, and the risk of gangrene, of course. First, you’ve got to pick your weapon: iPhone, or iPod Touch?

Read the rest of this entry at MobileCrunch >>


Is YouTube Play A Sign Of Things To Come?

YouTube Play is some artsy partnership between YouTube, HP and the Guggenheim Museum in New York that highlights 25 most creative YouTube videos in something called the Biennial of Creative Video. Apparently muy respected art world figures like Laurie Andersen, Takashi Murakami, Marilyn Minter, Stephan Sagmeister sifted through 23,000 submissions from all around the world and will reveal the winners at 8 p.m ET, 5 p.m. PST.

While this art stuff is great PR and street cred for aging hipster YouTube, the caliber of artists taking part is not the most amazing thing about YouTube Play. A visit to YouTube.com/play reveals a stunning custom Apple-like interface, where you can actually search for individual videos on a visually appealing video wall like with Cooliris or TechCrunch Disrupt finalist Gunzoo’s Fabric Video.

The buttons on the Play interface are also different, there are “Next,” “Previous,” and “Back” buttons and the ability to reload videos when you pause. The video sharing options are also streamlined on a bar below the video itself, with the added options to share and change country at the top right. Comments and video description have been moved to the video’s direct right. And I’m not even going to get into the quality of the content.

After playing around with Play, I have to agree with TechCrunch reader Deepak Vadgama when he asked, “Why can’t YouTube be what it is now?” The design sense and talent is definitely there, as evidenced by YouTube Play. Is this some kind of elaborate QA?  I’ve emailed Google to see if YouTube Play is a sign of things to come, and will update this post as soon as I get more information.


The New MacBook Air Will Be The Death Of Either The MacBook Or 13-inch MacBook Pro

Apple’s consumer strategy has always been centered around clear, concise choices. The new, less expensive MacBook Air seems to change that. The line between consumer and pro, between entry level and top-tier is gone and it means that something is going to change in the Apple line-up sooner than later.

Let’s look at the pricing. The new MacBook Air starts out at just $999. That’s the same entry level price as the white MacBook, ostensibly Apple’s “cheap” computer. Sure, the specs are slightly different with the MacBook blowing away nearly all of the base-level MacBook Air’s specs. But it’s a mere $300 jump up to the least expensive 13-inch MacBook Air and things level out a bit more. The MacBook still beats it in raw processing power and storage space, but Apple has never been about hardware specs anyway. It’s about the entire experience and the MacBook Air will quickly overtake the MacBook in this department.