Abine Launches To Help Web Users Regain Control Over Their Privacy, Acquires T.A.C.O.

Online privacy is a hot topic at the moment, especially when it comes to the browser and social networks. Online privacy company Abine is launching today to provide consumers with comprehensive tools to control and protect their personal information online. Abine has also acquired Firefox privacy add-on T.A.C.O., which is short for “Targeted Advertising Cookie Opt-out.” TACO allows any Internet user to opt-out from personally targeted advertising.

TACO will become part of Abine’s suite of privacy tools. The new version of the add-on has been upgraded both to allows you to opt-out of even more ad-networks and to block hundreds of other Web tracking technologies used by companies (including Google, AOL, Yahoo!, Facebook, and Microsoft), to collect, store and sell extremely personal information about individuals’ Internet activity. TACO 3.0 also added support for Internet Explorer.

Abine’s other privacy apps in its suite include a secure log-in app, a plug-in to protect your email and phone number, and an automatic form filling app. Privacy is a huge consumer concern at the moment, so Abine’s launch and acquisition of TACO is timely.

Information provided by CrunchBase


Treehouse: Maybe The Perfect App For Bros Icing Bros

I love simple apps that do one thing and do it well. That is the definition of Treehouse, a new iPhone app made by the Y Combinator startup Fliggo. So what is Treehouse? It’s right there in the title: “Share Moments With Friends.”

Treehouse may be the most simple app I’ve seen yet to allow you to share photos (and videos) from your iPhone with your friends. You start up the app, take (or load) a picture/video, and upload it. From there, it will be placed into your friends’ Treehouse timelines where they can comment on it and “like” it. Each photo/video is also tagged with the location where it was taken.

Again, yes, it’s very basic, but it’s also very well done and fast. Sure, you could do this on Facebook, but your stream there likely has hundreds of other things going on — this is tailor-made for visual sharing and interacting. Treehouse also has a nice notification system to let you know what activity you’ve missed when you open the app — and yes, you can be notified through Push Notifications.

It strikes me that this kind of app is the perfect thing to share humorous photos with friends — such as Bros Icing Bros photos. If you have no idea what that is — well, just go here.

Treehouse reminds me of Radar, the photo-sharing service from Tiny Pictures (which was acquired by Shutterly in September of last year). But it’s even simpler and for now, iPhone-only. The plan is to eventually extend to the other mobile platforms though. Just as with Radar, the question will be how you make money with this kind of service. For now, the hope is just to build a strong user-base, obviously.

If you’ve heard of Fliggo before it’s likely because you’ll been following the story of Twitvid.io, which then became Vidly. Founder Chrys Bader had been trying to perfect the art of sharing video over Twitter (using things like HD video and even Chamillionaire), but while developing a Vidly iPhone app, he realized that it was time to branch outside of being Twitter-centric — probably a smart move given the recent upheaval in the third-party developer community. So he went back to his initial angel investors, got some more money, and built Treehouse.

Bader isn’t disclosing new new amount of money raised, but has confirmed that it’s an extension of their initial seed round from August.

You can find Treehouse here in the App Store. It’s a free download.


Hands-on With The AT&T’s First Decent Android Phone, the HTC Aria

June 20th. That’s when AT&T gets the HTC Aria — a phone which, at least in my mind, is AT&T’s first to be powered by Android. What’s that you say? The Motorola Backflip was the first Android phone on AT&T? Sorry, I guess my mind has a tendency to block out tragic events.

With past sins forgiven, I was pretty anxious to check out AT&T’s second venture into Android territory. Our friends from HTC just so happened to be making a trip through my part of town. One quick jaunt over to their hotel lobby later, and I walked away with an Aria in tow. Expect a full review within a few days — but in the mean time, pop behind the jump for my first impressions.

Read the rest at MobileCrunch >>


First Impressions And Hands-On: Nintendo 3DS


There’s not a lot to say about Nintendo’s new handheld, unfortunately: our demos are limited to one minute, the lighting is bad, and of course the 3D effect doesn’t translate to pictures or video. But here’s how it felt to me.

The 3D effect doesn’t feel to me to be one of things popping out of the screen, but of depth behind the screen. Things certainly seemed to protrude a bit depending on how you looked and what the scene was, but by and large it felt like the 3D screen was a sort of window into a room, inside which everything was 3D. The 3D effect certainly is real, though.

Read more…


The White House To Hold Oil Spill Q&A On YouTube Tonight

Tonight at 8PM EST, President Obama will be holding a special press conference to discuss the ongoing Gulf oil spill crisis. The event will be broadcast on all major TV networks and live streamed on YouTube’s White House Channel, and will be followed by a special twist: White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs will be taking to YouTube to answer questions that have been submitted by the nation.

The White House has just embedded a Google Moderator form into its YouTube Channel, inviting users to submit their questions about the oil crisis. Through Moderator, you can vote up the best questions, and Gibbs will respond to them fifteen minutes after President Obama’s speech tonight ends.

This isn’t the first time the White House has turned to YouTube to more directly respond to the nation’s questions — in February it held a special interview with President Obama, where he was asked questions submitted by the YouTube audience.

OnLive Cloud Gaming Service Goes Live June 17


Take that, naysayers!

OnLive, the cloud gaming service designed to allow you to play almost any game over the Internet is going live on June 17 and, thanks to a partnership with AT&T, the service is free the first year and $4.95/month after that. You can attempt to sign up here.

OnLive has also released a roster of games including hits like Asassin’s Creed II, Dragon Age: Origins, and Just Cause 2. How do you access it? The service will run in a browser on a Mac or PC and will be available to stream via OnLive’s
MicroConsole TV adapter.

Click through for full release.

Read more…


Confirmed: Zynga Raises $150 Million More From Softbank – Asian Invasion Imminent

News broke yesterday evening that social gaming giant Zynga has raised $150 million from Japanese firm Softbank Capital, bringing the company’s total funding up to a whopping $366 million. We’ve confirmed the funding from sources close to Zynga.

The investment from Asia will likely pave the way for Zynga’s expansion into the Japanese market. Zynga already has interests in the Asian market. The company just bought Chinese gaming company XPD Media and opened up an office in Beijing. And earlier this year, Zynga set up shop in Bangalore, India. According to a report by VentureBeat in April, this latest investment is likely part of a larger partnership with Softbank in Japan.

The social gaming market in Asia has potential both in terms of a massive user base and talent. But as Zynga expands its footprint to these areas, the company will also encounter a number of worthy competitors in the region, including Japan’s DeNa group and China’s Tencent and Shanda.

Last fall, Zynga raised $180 million in funding from DST and others. More recently, the company’s valuation was estimated around $4 billion.

Update: Revision3′s statement: “Kevin will be wrapping his involvement as a regular co-host of Diggnation at the end of 2010. The future of Diggnation will be determined sometime in the Fall. We have been talking to Kevin about fforward for some time now and are very excited about this new and very innovative project.”

Information provided by CrunchBase


Kevin Rose Announces fforward, A Weekly Tech/Geek Culture Show

Digg founder Kevin Rose, after confirming that he’s leaving Diggnation at the end of this year, is now announcing his new show. It’s fforward – pronounced “forward” – and you can sign up to be notified of the launch now.

The new show will be launching in a couple of months, Kevin tells me, “as a weekly live streaming tech/geek culture show.” Rose says he’ll be the primary host of fforward, but will have guests on to debate topics and demo new products.

Here’s what Kevin has to say about Diggnation: “It’s been five years, Alex and I still have fun doing the show, but I think we’re both ready for less travel and something new (Alex currently lives in LA). ffoward is going to be unlike any show I’ve ever done, I’m excited to try some new ideas w/a live streaming audience. Diggnation will continue till the end of this year, we’ll be having a huge final live show sometime in November or December.”

Maybe someone should tell Revision3, which is still claiming no final decision has been made on Diggnation (see update to our post last week) and slammed us for having “incorrect information” when we wrote that Rose was leaving the show. The good news for them – fforward will be on Revision3 as well.

You can follow fforward on Twitter here.


Twitter Reacts To Nintendo’s E3 Press Conference With Love, Revelry

What’s the hottest story on Twitter right now? Cristiano Ronaldo and Portugal in the World Cup? Nope. Brazil? Sorry. Work or shoot: Bryan Danielson and WWE? Nein. No, friends, the hottest story right now is the goings-on over at Nintendo. The company is on stage giving its E3 presentation, and people are sorta all over the place. Has Nintendo’s fan service worked this time around?


TubeMogul: People Watch Facebook Videos Longer, And Click On More Ads

Facebook is now the fifth largest video site by audience size. ComScore estimates that 41 million people a month watch videos on Facebook, which is more than on Hulu, CBS,, or Microsoft’s sites. What is remarkable about Facebook’s rise as a video destination is that it isn’t even trying very hard to be a video site. “I don’t think Facebook has video strategy per se,” says TubeMogul CEO Brett Wilson.

TubeMogul tracks video analytics across the Web, and it just released some interesting data on how videos and video ads perform on Facebook compared to other sites. On average, people who click on a video from Facebook are more engaged.  They tend to watch longer than viewers who arrive from other sources— 1:45 minutes per view versus !:32 for Google (Twitter users are almost the same with 1:44 minutes per view).

This higher general engagement translates into higher completion rates for video ads.  Roughly 40 percent of Facebook video ads, give or take, are watched all the way through across different video ad types.  On the Web in general, video ad completion rates hover around 25 percent.

There are all sorts of video ads on Facebook—banner ads on the side of your feed that take over the page wen you click on them, video ads on app pages, interstitial ads which show a video when you are navigating in between pages. But the best performing video ads on Facebook are in game apps and linked to virtual currency (players watch the ad to rack up points).

“The click-through and sharing rates appear to be higher on Facebook,” says Wilson.  The click-through rate for ads in Facebook games linked to virtual currency is 5 percent, and about 2 percent of those video ads are shared on Facebook and Twitter.  In comparison, video ads across the rest of the Web have click-through rates just above 3 percent, and social sharing rates just below 1 percent.  Even Facebook banner video ads show higher sharing rates (but lower average click-throughs) than on other sites.


Product Review Web Site

I am looking for a web site created that has features of both book reviews and list creation/management.

I am looking for a LAMP based site, not .NET. I assume Apache, PHP, AJAX, MySQL, CSS, and HTML. HTML 5 is ok as I don’t need to support all browsers or anything.

Cost is important as this is a project for myself not a business. That said, I want the developer to spend extra time on making the software maintainable and extensible. I have experience in desktop software development (years ago) and value creating software that is designed well. So looking for a good balance here.

If you are interested, I would like some examples of web sites you have created, e-commerce or social networking ideally. In browsing around ScriptLance, I did see some nicely designed web sites. I did notice that some of the web sites, do a full page refresh even if only part of the content needs to be updated (based on clicking a link for example. I am not sure how/why a site is designed this way, but I am definitely looking for something that doesn’t do that.

There will be a main page and about 6 other “detail” pages. As soon as I can get a scanner, I can post my mockups that I did on graph paper. There are also the standard sign-in, create account and profile pages. Not a huge site, but there is some complexity in keeping track of users and their reviews.

On the design, I do want the program to be what I call “layered”, so that the GUI is separate from the database, so that changes can be made easily. One of my goals is to start working on the site myself for fun and I want to be able to jump in easily and use a well designed code base. Efficient code comments are a plus.

For project acceptance, I would expect all source and scripts necessary to install and run the software on my server. Especially for the database schema, I want a script or have it in the program. I want to be able to do a clean install with a setup document and scripts.

As I mentioned, I once I start to get some interest, I will be able to send you the mock up screens (need to borrow a scanner!). I am flexible on the GUI pages and do value your feedback, so I expect that we will be exchanging a few messages as you review each screen and determine how the whole system should operate.

Look forward to finding a great programmer!

And please don’t just reply “…sounds like a perfect job, we are ready to start…”…ask me some questions, show me an example of a project you did and why you liked it…show me that you read my project details 😉

thanks,
-john

Long Term Cms Designer Experts

Hey,

We have a company located in NWI Indiana, USA. We are looking for experienced Joomla professionals to work with us long term. We currently do 3-4 CMS (Joomla & WordPress sites a week)

We need someone to…
– add/edit joomla & wordpress modules/components/plugins.
– take static webpages and convert them into CMS sites/systems.
– long term designer to take on out sourced projects.
– Would like to work with someone within the USA (or speak good English)
– Programming knowledge would be great.
– logo design
– At least 10 Sites completed with examples.
– Hosting knowledge a plus too

We will build a long term relationship with designers and designers familiar with CMS.

Thanks for looking!