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Our illustrious (cough, cough) White House press corps showed it could get to the bottom of a story with impressively journalistic and probative skills this week. The story that so obviously required multiple questions to President Obama on his trip to Asia? Whether he’s eating enough, and whether he’s losing weight. Oh, and his gray hair. Seriously, you can’t make this stuff up. Somebody, obviously bored on the excruciatingly long plane ride, decided they’d float the rumor that Obama was skipping meals and getting dangerously thin. Because the reporters were all trapped in the same flying aluminum can, they all decided it was a big deal, patted themselves on the back for doing so, and then took lots of valuable interview time with the president to ask him about it. Over and over again (since they all wanted the “scoop”). Obama’s response was that he was eating just fine, thank you, and he wasn’t any skinnier than he’s always been. Whew! Good thing we have such an illustrious cadre of journalists, to reassure Americans that the president is not starving himself or anything! After all, it’s not like there are any other issues to talk about, or ask the president about. Such as Sarah Palin, for instance. Palin sure ate up a lot of “news” time last week, which must have overjoyed her publicist and publisher (oodles of free publicity, in other words). Seriously, there are a few things going on in the world that are actually more important than what the president had for lunch, and what Palin’s ghostwriter cobbled together in “her” book. Such as healthcare reform legislation, to name but one. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid finally woke up from his weeks-long nap, and is moving a bill to the Senate floor for debate. It was reported this week that the bill would be introduced on Tuesday, then on Wednesday, then on Thursday, then on Friday, and (currently) on Saturday. Which pretty much sums up the last few months of waiting on Harry. But Harry will be discussed later in the program, so I’ll just move on here. I thought it was appropriate to review exactly what is left to do on the healthcare reform effort. There are a few hurdles left to clear, and it’s going to be a long and drawn-out process. The media will trumpet each one of these hurdles as it happens, but will (my guess) fail to lay out exactly what to expect next at each stage of the process. So I thought I’d fill this lack. Matt Osborne at Huffington Post also has a good overview of the 11-dimensional chess game we’re playing, if you’d like an alternate summation of where we are in the process. The first step is Saturday’s vote. Or, I should probably say, “the vote which is currently scheduled for Saturday.” This vote will be held in the Senate and is a vote to “end debate about the debate,” or to overcome a filibuster/closure attempt to block the bill before it gets to the floor for debate. The media will portray this as a “vote to move the bill to the floor,” but this is technically inaccurate, as it is a vote against killing the bill’s progress. It’s confusing, but this is the Senate we’re talking about. Democrats need 60 votes to overcome the filibuster attempt. Harry Reid thinks he’s got them, but then this is the reason why the vote keeps getting pushed back — because he’s obviously still scrambling for the final few votes before he moves ahead. But they can’t push it back much further without eating into their own valuable vacation time, because they’re all itching to fly back home for a leisurely week off for Thanksgiving. Once Democrats get the 60 votes they need (throughout this whole explanation, I am assuming Democrats will succeed at each stage, although I should point out that any of these hurdles could derail the entire process and kill healthcare reform for the year), the Senate will start debating the bill. Amendments will be offered. It’s a little unclear which amendments will require only a majority (50 votes plus the Vice President, or 51 votes), and which will require the supermajority of 60 votes. Look for lots of Republican amendments to fail during this stage, and lots and lots of grandstanding by senators who are hoping to see their face on the news. So, assuming some amendments pass and others fail, eventually Reid will move to close debate and actually vote on the bill as a whole. This is when the second major filibuster will be attempted. And getting 60 votes to overcome it will be even harder, since some of the senators who have publicly committed to killing the first filibuster attempt have pointedly not committed to moving the bill to a final vote. But, probably with some wheeling and dealing, Reid rounds up the 60 votes he needs and defeats the filibuster once again. Which brings us to the final vote. This vote only requires 50-plus-one, meaning Democrats who don’t like the bill can vote against its passage, after voting with the Democrats to kill filibusters. This sort of thing, I should add, is common. John Kerry got lambasted in his bid for the White House, for expecting Americans to know how the Senate actually works, when he said he “was for the bill before he was against the bill” (or was it the other way around?). This is called “having your cake and eating it too,” when it comes to explaining your votes to your constituents, and is common practice by both parties in Washington. But ignoring all of that, a bill passes the Senate! Woo hoo! We’re done, right? Well, no. This is the trickiest phase of the whole process — the dreaded conference committee. Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid name a limited number of negotiators (which names are on this list will be crucial) to a committee of both House and Senate members, and they get a chance to totally rewrite the bill. Their goal is to come up with a bill that can pass both houses in exactly the same form. This will be challenging indeed, since the vote margins are going to be pretty thin for both houses. A handful of Democrats from the left or the “center” could play the “I’m taking my bat and ball and going home” tantrum game at this point. Many are the bills which die in conference committee, it needs emphasizing. It’s a tightrope wire to walk that sees many, many ideas fall off the wire to perish below (no safety net down there). This will be the toughest part of the whole process. Eventually, though (assuming success at every stage, as I said), a compromise bill emerges from conference committee. Then it goes to the House and the Senate, where individual senators and the Republican Party en masse will try to derail it by adding amendments willy-nilly. But sooner or later, the House and the Senate vote on the same bill. Over in the Senate, of course, this will mean more filibuster attempts to be dealt with, but in both houses the final vote requires just a simple majority to pass. The bill, after achieving passage in both houses, then goes to the Oval Office for President Obama to sign. If this all sounds like a very long and drawn-out process, well, it is. And the new “operative” deadline (as they say in D.C.) is now the State Of The Union address which President Obama will deliver to a joint session of Congress in late January. That is not a lot of time. With so many formidable hurdles left in place, the clock running out becomes more and more of a serious possibility. In any case, while the news media will portray Saturday’s vote (or Sunday’s, or Monday’s… sigh) as a gargantuan-sized Big Deal, please keep in mind that we’ve got a long way left to go. ? A Democrat this week hit a most impressive milestone, as Senator Robert Byrd became the longest-serving member of Congress in history. This benchmark adds service in both chambers, meaning Byrd’s six-year term as a member of the House is added to his impressive 50 years and ten-and-a-half months in the Senate. Byrd’s Senate record is already the longest in history, passing Strom Thurmond’s a few years ago. So now Robert Byrd is not only the longest-serving senator in American history, but also the longest-serving member of Congress in history as well. For this, he receives an Honorable Mention from us this week. Representative Alan Grayson also gets an Honorable Mention as well (with special “strange bedfellows” oak leaf cluster), for joining with Ron Paul to win passage of language in a bill to mandate an audit of the Federal Reserve. Other Democrats wanted to water this down, but Grayson and Paul prevailed. For now. Their opponents shut down a vote on the bill after this happened, though, which the White House is reportedly not happy about. Also annoying the White House is Representative John Conyers. Conyers, however, is on the right side of this issue. He’s pressuring President Obama and Rahm Emanuel with some very blunt language : “You know, holding hands out and beer on Friday nights in the White House and bowing down to every nutty right-wing proposal about health care, and saying on occasion that public options aren’t all that important is doing a disservice to the Barack Obama that I first met who was an ardent single-payer enthusiast himself.” For pressuring Obama to stand up for the ideals he campaigned on, Conyers is also awarded an Honorable Mention this week. But our Most Impressive Democrat Of The Week award goes to Attorney General Eric Holder. I have already written twice this week (in Tuesday’s column and Wednesday’s column , in case you missed them) about Holder’s decision to hold the trial of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and his co-conspirators in a civilian federal court mere blocks from where the twin towers of the World Trade Center once stood. Now, reasonable people can disagree about Holder’s decision, but we are awarding him the MIDOTW award for how he has handled himself this week. It’s a rare thing in Washington to see a government official make a strong decision, and then defend it as the right thing to do without either (a.) trying to blame everyone else for the idea’s shortcomings, or (b.) immediately apologizing for the decision, or (c.) “walking back” or even overturning the decision at the slightest sign of political stormclouds on the horizon. All in all, Holder admirably defended his decision and admirably faced his critics when dragged before a congressional committee. So, as I said, whether you agree with his decision or think it was wrong, Holder was still impressive in the way he strongly stood up for himself after announcing it — a rare thing in Washington. And for that, we award him the Most Impressive Democrat Of The Week . [ Congratulate Attorney General Eric Holder on his Department of Justice contact page , to let him know you appreciate his efforts. ] ? So, here we are on the healthcare reform front. A bill may make it to the floor of the Senate tomorrow. But you know what? We could have been here in July. Or September. Or October. This endless series of delays and time wasted can be laid at the feet of one man — Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. Because it is an inescapable fact that a stronger leader would have moved the legislation a lot further by now. Now, in Reid’s defense, the bill he came up with is a lot stronger than a lot of people thought it would be at this point. The number of times the public option has been declared dead by serious and important people inside the Beltway is staggeringly high. And yet, there it is in Reid’s bill. No trigger (at least not yet) is in the bill either — denying yet another piece of inside-the-Beltway conventional wisdom for the past five months. Given what he had to work with, it’s not a horrible effort by Reid. Fairness dictates we point this out here. But Reid has shown over and over again that he simply does not know how to negotiate in a timely fashion. He usually begins negotiating by publicly stating he will be throwing away all his best leverage in the negotiations — making it much easier for his opponents to defeat him. He has put up with so many delaying tactics on healthcare reform that we find ourselves only moving a bill to the floor right now — just before Thanksgiving. Because the Senate is going to go home for a full week next week, it won’t be until early December that the floor debate even begins. And after such debate, and after a vote on passage, there still remains the conference committee — which is going to take a few weeks, at the very least. With the end-of-year break in there, it is already an extremely tough schedule to meet if Congress really wants to pass this by the State Of The Union speech in late January. Meaning Reid has left everyone with very little elbow room. Which makes it all the easier for opponents to defeat the whole effort — because now they don’t need to absolutely shut it down, they just need to run out the clock for a few more weeks. While Max Baucus certainly deserves some of the scorn for this situation, the buck stops at Harry’s desk, as the leader of the Senate Democrats. As if all of this weren’t enough, Reid just announced that he’s no longer even considering reconciliation as a last resort. Once again, Reid takes the most powerful weapon at his disposal and, instead of wielding it forcefully, actually chucks it over the side of the boat instead. This seems to be Harry’s standard operating procedure — surrender before the fight begins. But there’s a way to change all of this. The Democratic caucus in the Senate traditionally chooses its leadership in December. Meaning that any Democrat could soon challenge Reid for his leadership role. If a movement started among Senate Democrats to rally behind a more forceful personality, this could put some serious pressure on Harry Reid to get things moving along. Democrats could let it be known privately that if healthcare reform isn’t at least in conference committee by the time they choose next year’s leadership, then they would be handing Harry his hat, and repainting his office for his successor. There are many, many Democratic senators who could fill the void of leadership Harry Reid carries around with him. Pretty much anyone who knows how to negotiate and knows not to throw away their best leverage before the fight begins would get my support, at this point. Oh, and while they’re at it, Democratic senators could also strip Joe Lieberman of his committee chairmanship on the Homeland Security committee if he votes with Republicans to kill healthcare reform. Just a suggestion. But for this week, Harry Reid wins his fourteenth Most Disappointing Democrat Of The Week award. That is twice as many as anyone else has won. Get a move on Harry, or else stand out of the way for someone who can. Please. [ Contact Senator Harry Reid on his Senate contact page , to let him know what you think of his actions. ] ? Volume 102 (11/20/09) I’m going to remain optimistic at the end, here, and write my talking points this week for Democratic politicians (to use on the Sunday morning chat fests) while assuming that the Senate has managed to vote to bring the healthcare reform bill to the floor. That’s right, I’m going to make a leap of faith and assume that Harry Reid manages to get his 60 votes tomorrow night. Because, really, if he doesn’t, there won’t be a whole lot for Democrats to talk about this Sunday morning. Anyway, remaining cheerfully (some would say “blissfully,” or perhaps “idiotically”) optimistic, here is what Democrats should say on Sunday to bring all the pressure they can bear to their fellow Democrats in the Senate who may waver in future votes. ? ???Rushing? Um, no. The standard cry of the obstructionists in this debate is that we are somehow “rushing” healthcare reform. Attack this with the disdain it deserves. “Excuse me, did you say rushing? You think we’re rushing into healthcare reform? The effort to bring quality affordable healthcare to every American started seventy years ago . This effort has been going on currently ever since the 1960s. We’ve taken months — sometimes years — to come up with portions of this bill. We’ve debated them non-stop for the past six months. We’ve spent weeks and weeks putting together final legislation. How, exactly, is any of this ‘rushing’?” ? ???The wrong side of history Republican Senator Olympia Snowe was actually the one to use this line the best so far in this debate. “History is calling, in the form of healthcare reform. History will judge us on what we do in Congress in the next few weeks. We Democrats must make a simple choice: do we want to stand on the right side, or the wrong side of history? Do we want this vote to be a proud achievement for our party, and for all of America, or do we want to be shamed later by voting against such wide-sweeping reform? I know which side of history I want to be remembered on, and that is why I will be voting for healthcare reform.” ? ???Party unity This is a phrase which got quite a bit of scorn in last year’s campaign (see: PUMAs, or “Party Unity, My Ass” soreheads). But it needs to be picked up, dusted off, and given the proud placement it once had. “The Democratic Party needs to show some unity, for once. Party unity means voting against Republican filibuster attempts in the Senate. I don’t care whether Democratic senators vote for or against the bill on the final vote, but I think it is shameful for any Democrat to join the ‘Party of Obstructionism’ or the ‘Party of No’ in a procedural vote. It is the coward’s way out. The courageous thing to do here is to keep party unity intact, and guarantee an up-or-down vote for the final bill on the Senate floor. Robbing the Senate of that vote, and robbing the people of seeing how you would have voted on the final bill is nothing short of shameful. Party unity used to mean something in Washington, and I hope it means something in the filibuster-killing votes in the Senate in the next few weeks.” ? ???Maybe we need new leadership This one only really works if you are a Democratic senator. Although other Democrats could use it, prefaced with something like “well, you know the scuttlebutt I’m hearing is…” or language to that effect. “The end of the year is traditionally the time we Democrats caucus to choose our leadership and committee chairmen for the upcoming year. If we can’t manage to get a healthcare bill through a floor vote in the Senate, I and many of my colleagues are going to have to think long and hard about who will be the most effective leaders for the Senate next year. I’m not going to name any names, but there are quite a few of our leaders who seem more interested in causing unconscionable delays to the process rather than exhibiting true leadership. And we will be looking at that quite closely in December.” ? ???Want to get re-elected? These last three are a direct appeal to those mugwumps sitting on a fence on the healthcare reform debate. Don’t appeal to their better interests, appeal to their fear of losing power. It’s the best leverage to use in Washington, when you get right down to it. “Any Democrat thinking of voting against healthcare reforms should take a good hard look at the opinion polls coming out of their state or district. The American people want healthcare reform, they expect us to deliver healthcare reform, and if we are instrumental in blocking healthcare reform, then they are going to let us know about it. For all the so-called ‘moderate’ Democrats that I’ve heard about, when you look at the polls from their own constituents, time after time they show that people want not just healthcare reform, but actually stronger healthcare reform than is currently in the bill. These Democrats need to think long and hard about their own political future if they vote against the needs and wishes of their own constituents. Because voting with the Republicans is going to make it a lot harder for you to get re-elected.” ? ???Democrats are toast in 2010 without healthcare reform In fact, expand this to the whole party. “Democrats are going to be toast in the midterm 2010 congressional elections if we don’t deliver on healthcare reform. With huge majorities in both houses of Congress, if we can’t follow through on the biggest agenda item that got a Democrat elected to the White House, then voters are going to be disgusted with the Democratic Party as a whole come next election day. They are either going to stay home and not vote, or they are going to vote for anyone who isn’t an incumbent. Our party’s future in Congress hinges in a big way on whether we can pass healthcare reform or not. If we don’t, President Obama is going to be a lot weaker next year, and Congress is going to be universally held in contempt by the voters. And a lot of Democrats who are now sitting in office are going to be looking for jobs this time next year.” ? ???Democrats deserve to be toast in 2010 without healthcare reform This is “part 2″ of the previous point. “And you know what? We Democrats are going to deserve to be toast in the 2010 elections if we can’t pass healthcare reform. We’ve got the biggest majorities in Congress we’ve had in a generation, and the voters sent us here for a reason — to get something done . If we prove that we are incapable of delivering this to the voters who sent us here, then we will absolutely deserve to be stripped of our majorities and our power come next year. I wouldn’t blame the voters in the least if they see us fighting amongst ourselves so much, and more worried about our own egos than in producing some legislation to improve people’s lives. The voters would be entirely justified in ‘throwing the bums out’ if we can’t manage to get something done . I say this as a warning to all my fellow Democrats, and I sincerely hope they will take it to heart.” ? Chris Weigant blogs at: ChrisWeigant.com NEW! Follow Chris on Twitter: @ChrisWeigant Full archives of FTP columns: FridayTalkingPoints.com All-time award winners leaderboard, by rank ? More on Joe Lieberman

e2cef21caddotwsm.jpg 150x34 Chris Weigant: Friday Talking Points [102]    Harry Reids Glacial Progress Grinds On

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Chris Weigant: Friday Talking Points [102] — Harry Reid’s Glacial Progress Grinds On

“ Email is not going to disappear. Possibly ever. Until the robots kill us all. ” – Paul Buchheit , creator of Gmail, co-founder of FriendFeed, currently doing vague infrastructure things at Facebook. Today, at our RealTime CrunchUp event in San Francisco, Buchheit and Threadsy founder Rob Goldman sat down for a chat with our own Steve Gillmor and Erick Schonfeld. The topic was: Can We Kill Email Already? All Aboard The Micro-Message Bus. So can we kill email? Well if Buchheit’s quote didn’t tip you off, the consensus was “no.” Though there are some interesting things coming out that are helping to expand our communication, we’re just not at the point now where we can live without email. And in fact, for many of these services like Twitter and Facebook, you still need email to be notified about new followers or new messages. Threadsy (which launched at TechCrunch50 this year) is trying to help the transition away from email by integrating it with other services like Twitter, but even Goldman acknowledges that the email notification problem remains an issue because people keep relying on it. At one point, a question from the audience asked about Google Wave, another would be “email-killer,” and Schonfeld noted that he was having a hard time getting into it because he wasn’t getting notified via email when there is a new Wave message. So you can see the problem. Speaking of Wave, when asked about his thoughts on it, Buchheit noted that he hadn’t actually tried it yet, while laughing. “The invite is sitting in my inbox.” This is significant because Buchheit was instrumental in creating Gmail for Google. But Buchheit doesn’t consider Google Wave as a replacement of email or even Twitter or Facebook. Both him and Goldman agreed that it seemed more of a collaboration tool. And both felt that despite some great technology it was still a few years away from having a polished experience. When asked if there would be a mashup of social and private streams, such as email and Facebook with Twitter, Buchheit said that he felt rather than one thing killing off another that we would just keep layering on new things. Goldman noted that the next step for Threadsy is to provide better context about the messages you’re getting and who you are talking to. He also noted that being able to search across all your messages is key. So, no. Email isn’t dead yet, but it may be changing. [photo: (cc) Kenneth Yeung - www.thelettertwo.com] Crunch Network : MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.

4677cd26c208 PM.png 150x102 Gmail Creator Thinks Email Will Last Forever. And Hasnt Tried Google Wave.

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Gmail Creator Thinks Email Will Last Forever. And Hasnt Tried Google Wave.

RealTime CrunchUp: Where’s The Money In RealTime?

Posted by Giggi On November - 21 - 2009

For our last discussion at the RealTime CrunchUp, we’ve got a panel on actually generating revenue from these services. Participating in the discussion are some of the Valley’s top VCs and veterans of the space. Brian Singerman Founders Fund Ron Conway Angel Investor Dan’l Lewin Corporate VP for Strategic and Emerging Business Development at Microsoft George Zachary Charles River Ventures Paul BuchheitFacebook/FriendFeed Andrew Braccia Accel Partners Michael Arrington Editor and Founder, TechCrunch Moderated by Steve Gillmor and Erick Schonfeld ES: We talk a lot about the overflow of information. Lots of interest in geo-stream. Where do the money making opportunities lie here? We have lots of consumer use cases. GZ: That’s a broad question. We’re investors in three companies now starting to accrue rev. in this space: Twitter, Yammer, and SMSGupshup (Twitter of India). Regarding Yammer: In 0 for marketing, over 10% conversation of the install base for Yammer. The company has around 550k installed enterprise seats in 14 months. MA: It’s this insidious product where it’s very sticky and you hae to start paying. It’s a good thing. GZ: It’s a good thing for the company, and investor.. DL: Good for customer too. Company stays around. GZ: In response to Marc Benioff copying Yammer, we got lots of calls saying Chatter copied Yammer. MA: There’s 550k installed enterprise seats, over 10% of new seats convert. There’s below 100k paid seats. Near 100k paying users. GZ: Marc Benioff setting price at 50 per user gives us some room… ES: What’s yammer’s strategy to ingest other enterprise data systems. GZ: I think yammer is going to be the future of enterprise messaging. There’s going to be serious competition and we know that. ES: FriendFeed was the first sig. acqusition in this space. Wasn’t the size of what people were talking about with Twitter, but it’s a milestone. From a founder perspective you were building this system, can you tell us about, what you thought was obviously the future. PB: Facebook kept talking to us, they were very persistent. We were never looking to sell, even when we did. What happened is we started talking to them more, learning where they’re going. As we put more thought into the future of Facebook it started seeming like an intriguing possibility. The opportunity at Facebook is very substantial. Nobody has ever announced the deal. The biggest component is what is the value is Facebook. I think the value of Facebook is going to be huge. It is going to get more successful. ES: Brian can you talk about what you guys are interested in? BS: We’re also in Yammer. We’re also interested in where real time can go in non consumer/enterprise. There’s lots of room in devices, biotech. Lots of cool companies being able to figure out on the fly if there is E Coli in a substance. You can leverage tech to do lots of stuff that used to take a long time. … AB: We’re taking a wide approach. MA: Kimball Musk this morning said there are gobs of money in search. When Twitter bought Summize, I think they gave them like 8% of the company, not sure if that’s been reported, it was a huge part of the company. I think they realized it was still very hard and passed it to Bing/Google. The places where the money is with Yammer, which touches on things like Echange. And search. But where else are people making money. Where are startups making money if not one of those two buckets? RC: Those are good buckets. I agree, what you’re seeing with the programmable web. Some business is going to take off, we’re seeing things that haven’t been created yet that are going to see a huge amount of value in things being created. RC: Coupons alone to inventivize users to go to a nearby place, revenues from that alone could be massive. This is going to happen in 2010. BS: We’ve seen a huge amont of traffic on real-time coupons/offerings. ES: How does microsoft look at this. DL: he first thing for us is to build the infrastructure out, and look at the big information flows, like we did for the Twitter relationship. Some of these things will be things we’ll be interested in. We have been and will continue to be inquisitive. It’s been around 20 companies a year on avg. about 10 of those are bubble up like this and become important parts of a broader strategy. RealTime goes way back to the very beginning of data exchange. Who carries the flow, where is the value at what moment in time of the flow of information. These are all indications of inevitability of realtime. What we’ve done with Twitter/Bing those are foundations for much bigger connections. There’s a little company doing math in the cloud, seven guys optomizing POS information. 5k retail points, 20k units inventory in a warehouse. SG: What do you know about deal with Twitter. DL: Which deal?… MA: What’s the other deal? DL: They did one with us. SG: Question is licensing of feeds? DL: Why would I offer details on this. RC: Yon can tell Dan’l likes this job. MA: I feel like panelists know the answer to this. RC: The companies we’re investing in today that TC writes about are indiciation of where the market is going. COtweet. Retime search companies. That’s going to be a hell of a horse race. I think one of the real time search engines that exists today will win out. AB: Realtime search is a tough space. I think Google does a pretty good job at information retreival. Facebook has search in a different way (more discovery serendipitious). I look at it, if you go back 4 years ago, most of the companies you would see that were web enabled, you could see the same traffic refeeral chart. 30% google SEO. 40% SEM. the rest direct. Today out of nowhere Facebook/Twitter have become huge reffers. ES: Paul, you’re both a buyer and seller because you’re an active angel investor. To what extent do the companies you invest in fall in this theme. PB: I don’t know if I’ve invested in too many real time. I think real time is valuable because… basically the word relevance. Search is valuable because it’s relevant. Realtime enables that across a lot of other domains. If right now I say I am sitting right here and I get a coupon, it works because it’s relevant to me. If I got it tomorrow it would no longer be relevant. One of the companies I recently invested in. They do car sales/car business. They look for intention are you looking to buy a car, are you having trouble, that’s a good opportunity to contact them. MA: There’s another angle to FB search. Forget where you are, what you’ve done. I found when I look people I know, search results are really good. Reason is because they are ranked based on people who have mutual friends. Google doesn’t address that at all. Applies to more than just people. Who you are is really relevant to almost all searches. PB: Relevance has multiple dimension. Google got keywords. There is time relevance. All are opportunities. ES: As we look forward at where all this is going. Seems like there are a lot of different approaches. Is there danger of confusion here. Do I build on top of Twitter/Facebook, quasi open systems Google is pushing. MA: Stocktwits built on Twitter and now they’ve moved almost completely off it. Zynga is doing it with Farmville now. BS: If you need to move off, all startups pivot. They can pivot. But I suggest starting with something, pick best thing for the job, and don’t be afraid to pivot. RC: Start with one with cheapest cost, highest number of users, off you go. AB: I think good entrepreneurs will find their way. Omar at AdMob.. even before iPhone launched he was focused on that as an opportunity for a business. They’ll find their way. DL: Big question is whether company that rises as a company like Twitter. Or one like Facebook becomes core platform. Pick starting point but it’s hard to argue that anyone can anticipiate which one is going to get lift like a Twitter. Why Twitter and not someone else. ES: George, maybe you can answer that. Twitter, Facebook, Google each platforms taking different approaches. GZ: The concept of a social network has been around for a long time.The one difference is twitter is unlike geocities etc. Twitter is an example of a horizontal network. They own namespace, let third parties build it out. ES: FriendFeed was ultimate twitter client. Paul, you built it partially on back of Twitter. But then when you sold to FB you bet on FB model. PB: I think both companies have promising future. I don’t see it as once vs other. I don’t know how the future will play out. They’re both incredibly well positioned. I’d love to own either (or both). FB had all these features, for API had to allow access to each, more complex. Twitter only had a few features so it was very easy to build a Twitter client. Set up this whole ecosystem of twitter apps. Everyone filled in the little pieces by themselves. I’m curious if anyone else can do this. They’ve managed to outsource this. SG: Does anyone have an opinion if lists, RT, etc are going to be plus or minus. RC: Huge plus. People have been screaming for ecosystem for lists for a year. Whole ecosystem of companies built off lists themselves. Twitter is building a platform. in the next year there will be 100 apps built off twitter lists. DL: I think most of the money will be made in enterprise communications. ES: What will be the biggest real time exit next year? DL: I think a number of things sub 100, 50. One thing that will be a billion dollar thing. Not even sure there will be exists. It think opportunities for big things will be able to stand alone. GZ: I can’t even predict what’s going to happen next year. I think most of the companies in this space in terms of revenue are fairly immature with the exception of FB. I think more likely for big exists in 2010/2011. RC: This market is in its infancy. I think a couple max in 50-100. Acquisitions in 2010 will be for IP and great teams. MA: Do you think Zynga is doing more monthly rev than Facebook? RC: Interesting question. PB: I’ve heard rumors of Zynga IPO. AB: I agree with the panel. Crunch Network : CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.

e2831e2b92money.png 150x108 RealTime CrunchUp: Wheres The Money In RealTime?

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RealTime CrunchUp: Wheres The Money In RealTime?

RealTime CrunchUp: The Rise Of Geo Streams

Posted by Giggi On November - 21 - 2009

Today at the RealTime CrunchUp , representatives from some of the top companies involved in location based services came together to talk about the current state and future of geo-based services. Participating in the panel were: Matt Galligan, co-Founder of SimpleGeo Ryan Sarver, Director of Platform at Twitter Tristan Walker, VP of Business Development at Foursquare Steve Lee, Group Product Manager Google Maps for Mobile and Google Latitude Justin Shaffer, Founder of Hot Potato Elad Gil, CEO of Mixer Labs Moderators were our own Erick Schonfeld and MG Siegler. Video by Ustream Early in the panel, the conversation turned to SimpleGeo , the new infrastructure for location that was revealed earlier this week. Shaffer spoke about how excited he was about the new service. When asked if anyone could copy what Foursquare was doing, Walker talked about Foursquare’s efforts to filter content (which is harder to reproduce). MG then steered the conversation toward bridging the gap between social networks and the real world, noting that mobile devices are paving the way for this change. But he wondered how services other than Foursquare (which has a game mechanic) would entice users to share their location on a regular basis. Lee addressed concerns over Latitude’s continuous location sharing, explaining that you can share your location with certain people who you specify, but that Latitude’s approach to constant tracking leads to the ability to offer interesting services. He says that without continuous sharing nearby alerts wouldn’t be possible (or at least as effective). He says that the check-in model and the continuous model will likely coexist (and that check-in can even help give more context about where you are) but that there’s things you can’t do without continuous tracking. Regarding Checking in verus continuous mapping, Elad Gil says he’s seeing about a “nine to ten” relationship between them. Galligan chimed in by saying that there will be a point when we know where everyone is, but that the context won’t necessarily be known. Galligan then revealed a new technology they are working on involving four dimensions of geolocation that SimpleGeo has created, which allows them to compress location and time stamps into a datapoint, allowing apps to look into the past for the same location. Sarver talked about why Twitter was interested in location, describing how it would help filter through the noise. He mentioned TrendsMap.com as a great way to visualize geotagged tweets. Shaffer said that HotPotato is looking to integrate location into their service, but that another key element is what brings conversation together. He says that just location data isn’t necessarily enough (he points out that people watching a baseball game may actually be at the game, or watching on TV.) In terms of advertising, there seemed to be a broad consensus that geo-based advertising had the potential to be extremley successful. Galligan brought up the potential of special ads and deals, pointing to Yowza as a great example. Saffer later commented that there’s a fine line that these services have to work with it would be a negative for ads to actually feel like ads (instead it would be better for them to feel like deals). Crunch Network : CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0

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The last time we saw Stantum, it was blowin’ minds with its PMatrix technology — and here we are, a mere ten months later, and the company’s back with its proof-of-concept Slate PC. Based on the Dell Mini 10 platform, this bad boy features a 10.1-inch “unlimited” touchscreen and new, compact case. In order to save space, the company did away with not only the keyboard and trackpad, but the webcam, WiFi, Bluetooth, and one of the USB ports (bringing the total down to two) as well — which just might limit the appeal for resellers. You never know. Feel like diving in? Hit the read link to contact the company, and tell ‘em Engadget sent you. [Thanks, Adam] Filed under: Laptops , Tablet PCs Stantum’s unlimited multitouch meets Mini 10 in a fight to the death originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Nov 2009 01:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Read ?|? Permalink ?|? Email this ?|? Comments

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Xobni Updates Its UI, Gains Monetizable Extensions

Posted by Giggi On November - 17 - 2009

Tonight, Xobni is selectively allowing users to download a new version of its client with a number of UI enhancements. This launch coincides with Xobni’s new Salesforce extension. This is notable because it marks the launch of premium extensions for the first time, that give the company a new potential revenue stream. Here are a few of the bigger UI changes: As you can see in the screenshot, there’s a new set of horizontal tabs to better filter content. Xobni is also now surfacing links exchanged between contacts for the first time previously, there was just a way to do this for files exchanged. Also new, the Twitter extension element now includes a direct message (DM) option. LinkedIn support has been improved, as has some of the analytics. There are a half dozen or so other enhancements to the client such as extensions now being resizable, and better drag and drop support. There’s also finally a way for users to easily open a folder that emails reside in. Basically, if you’re addicted to Xobni, there’s a lot of little tweaks (and some bigger ones) to try out. But again, the big news is that Xobni is opening premium extensions to users and not just business users, all Xobni users. If Xobni is able to effectively convince users to buy these (as well as get more beyond just Salesforce), it could be a decent new revenue stream for the company. Back in July, the company introduced ‘Xobni Plus’ , the premium version of their product. Revenue streams can be addicting when turned on, it seems. Crunch Network : MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.

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Love it or hate it , there’s no doubt that “citizen journalism” the trend where ‘regular people’ record video, snap photos, and tweet live from breaking news events is quickly gaining steam. One of the biggest catalysts for the trend has been YouTube, which gives people an easy way to upload and share the video footage they shoot from the heat of the action. And while we’ve seen some media sites, like CNN’s iReport, attempt to take advantage of this user submitted content, many news sites haven’t found a good way to integrate it. Today, YouTube is launching a new application that looks to make this easy for all media organizations. Dubbed YouTube Direct, the new open source application will allow news orgs to integrate a video upload tool directly into their sites, where they can accept and review user uploaded footage. The new tool will allow news organizations to screen video uploads as they come in, and use the best clips for their broadcasts and on their websites. Of course, news organizations will still be responsible for actually curating the content to ensure that it’s accurate, which isa task that will require additional manpower for the more popular news sites. All video content uploaded through these tools will be available on YouTube proper as well. My biggest concern with this kind of reporting is always credibility oftentimes you’ll come across videos on YouTube that seem like they’re relevant to breaking news, but are unable to determine who uploaded the clip. Fortunately, as an open source tool YouTube Direct allows organizations to customize their submission process. Hopefully the more credible ones will require (or at least encourage) uploaders to leave their contact information, so that fact checkers can follow up on their video reports to ensure their validity. News organizations aren’t the only sites looking to accept user generated videos, eitherYouTube Direct will work that any site that wants to upload video content, so we should probably expect to see some more creative uses in the future. The feature is not live quite yet, but should be up by tomorrow morning. Update : You can see an example implementation at 7NEWS of Boston (scroll towards the bottom of the page). Image by quinn.anya Crunch Network : CrunchBase the free database of technology companies, people, and investors

afce97ccf8camera.png 150x112 YouTube Direct Gives News Orgs A Way To Accept User Submitted Videos

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Google Sites Become Prettier With Templates

Posted by Giggi On November - 17 - 2009

Google Sites, which launched a little under two years ago, have given businesses and consumers a way to quickly build their own websites with no HTML knowledge required, making it relatively easy for anyone without a technical background to build a simple website. Now, Google is making it infinitely easier for anyone to create sleek, attractive websites with new feature Templates. For those that aren’t familiar with this product, Sites is the reincarnation of Jotspot, which Google acquired back in 2006 (though the two products look totally different). The product is Google’s easy-to-use website and wiki builder that’s widely used by businesses, though there’s a consumer option available. Google Sites now has a fully stocked gallery of public templates that can be used by both consumers and businesses. Google has also created templates that are targeted for business use. Templates let you quickly start a new site with pre-built content, embedded gadgets, page payouts, navigation links, theming and more. And Businesses using Google Apps will also have a private area where employees can share proprietary site templates, which can be made via Sites’ recently launched API, with coworkers. This is actually useful to organizations, such as the Boy Scouts of America, which wants to share templates for chapters over the nation to launch as their platform. Sites will be free for all Google Apps customers (both paid and free) as well as for consumers. While Sites’ templates can be easily used for collaborative workspaces like employee intranets, project tracking sites, team sites and employee profile pages. Though templates isn’t a monumental additions to Google Sites, it is a complimentary, easy-to-use and free feature that’s included in Google Apps. The tie-in between the two only reinforces the strategy Google has of continuing to make Google Apps more appealing to businesses to perhaps take a significant bite out of Microsoft’s market share. Crunch Network : CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0

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Ari Herzog: Do You Care That President Obama Does Not Tweet?

Posted by Giggi On November - 17 - 2009

The blogosphere is abuzz in the wake of President Barack Obama’s statement in Shanghai Sunday night that he doesn’t use Twitter, nor has ever typed a tweet. MG Siegler at TechCrunch reacts and opines : This is interesting considering the Internet, and social media in particular, was considered a large part of his ascension to the Presidency. Obviously, he had a killer team around him that was able to embrace the web without the then-Senator getting too much involved. Still, it’s somewhat surprising that he never sent any of his own tweets during the primaries. The Presidency comprises more than the person elected to the office, but also includes aides and assistants and directors and managers. Macon Phillips is one. Vivek Kundra is another. Bev Godwin is a third. They are individuals appointed to roles that (in)directly support the President and are allowed to speak on his behalf — or the Presidency’s behalf. Should it matter that Obama never tweeted? Pay attention to the following comment by Brian Ahier , an Oregon city councilor: As an important clarification to an error in the article, the Whitehouse communications team only send tweets from the official Whitehouse Twitter account. There are very strict rules that regulate the mingling of official accounts with campaign and personal accounts. @BarackObama is the account of the Obama political campaign. @WhiteHouse is the account of the Whitehouse. I wrote about the connection between social media and the presidential election 12 months ago, and compared the number of Obama and McCain followers on various social media sites between August and November 2008. It’s no more surprising that @BarackObama’s Twitter followers jumped from 111,000 in November 2008 to over 2.6 million today, than to read about the President not tweeting himself. It’s also not important that he doesn’t tweet. He has more important things to do. Your thoughts? The above previously appeared here on AriWriter . More on Barack Obama

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I am currently in Miyazaki /Japan, attending the Infinity Ventures Summit (IVS), one of Asia’s most prestigious web industry events. Organizing VC company Infinity Venture Partners reserved some hours of the program to give a total of twelve 12 Japanese start-ups the chance to present their services onstage to a panel of judges and an international crowd of over 300 people. A speech recognition and transcribing service called Moji Moji TV was selected as “Best Startup” of the IVS Fall 2009 Launch Pad (that ended just now). Here are short profiles of all the services that demo’d at the event. (Please note some of the companies have yet to launch homepages in English, but some do offer globalized services, too.) One Winner and five runners-up: Moji Moji TV by Catalog (winner of the demo pad) Best of show went to Moji Moji TV , which appears to be a very powerful speech recognition and transcribing service for videos launched in private alpha last month. The engine supports Japanese only, but English and Chinese versions are in the works. Moji Moji extracts audio from a video (self-made movies, YouTube clips etc.) and automatically displays the spoken words as text, which then can be edited by the users. The text can be used to tag and sub movies, and it’s also possible to search for certain words or expressions within them. There’s also an iPhone app called Shabetter that automatically transcribes what you say into the iPhone mic and posts it to Twitter. More information on Moji Moji TV in English can be found here . This video (in English) shows how Moji Moji TV works: V-Sido by Wataru Yoshizaki (runner-up) Most robots used for entertainment, in research and other areas have one common problem: They can only move in a slow, mechanical and chopping motion. Developed by robot fanatic Wataru Yamazaki, V-Sido is a software-based, real-time control system for humanoids that helps make them move smoother. Spysee by Ohma (second runner-up) Spysee is a person search engine whose English version launched at TechCrunch 50 this year (Spysee was a demo pit company ). A Chinese version is in the works. The service pulls information and media on individuals from the web and presents them on a person-specific page (example: Barack Obama ). Spysee’s original Japanese version went live last year and has gone through several iterations since. One example is the way Spysee monetizes its service now: It allows users to donate real money to individuals who need help in funding their personal goals ( Cheering Spysee ), getting a cut of the donation in return. m-police by milog (third runner-up) m-police is a fully automatized site monitoring system that’s able to detect profanity, insults and “legally problematic” sentences on the web and subdivides relevant expressions into 16 different categories. The company says about 5% of all posts in the Japanese blogosphere can be regarded as being relevant for m-police, and 22% of those can be called potentially dangerous. Some Japanese social networks employ up to 300 “surveillance officers” to keep their sites clean. m-police can push down costs from 6 Yen (7 cent) per post monitored by human beings to 3 Yen. AEGISGUARD by KLab (fourth runner-up) AEGISGUARD is anti-virus software that’s not only free to download but also completely available in English. The main purpose of the program is to protect your important files and folders from viruses (of which more than 5 million exist today) and malware by granting only white-listed programs access to them. AEGISGUARD developer KLab says this way, unknown or new viruses are effectively fenced out. The solution can be installed with conventional, blacklist-based antivirus software on the same PC. Symphonic Motion by AITIA (fourth runner-up) Symphonic Motion is an augmented reality-based entertainment engine that’s not designed for mobile devices for a change but rather for large-sized displays (that can be several meters in diameter). The technology uses “physical” AR, meaning you can get in front of the camera and move CG elements you see on the screen around by moving your arms, for example. Maker AITIA is marketing the solution as interactive, fun digital signage applications to corporations, exhibitions and event organizers ( demo movie ). The six other demo companies: OpenSocial Host by HeartRails OpenSocial Host is an integrated platform for developing, distributing and managing OpenSocial applications, e.g. for sites like MySpace , hi5 or Japan’s biggest social network Mixi .(which opened its site for external developers back in September this year). OpenSocial Host supports mobile apps, offers paid and free options, but it’s Japanese only. Location Amplifier by Koozyt The key idea behind Location Amplifier is to “amplify” the real world by pushing “rich”, location-based content onto mobile phones, for example location-based games or guides. At IVS, maker Koozyt demonstrated how a person’s movements can be tracked even inside buildings (where GPS regularly fails). It’s also possible to use Location Amp to walk from exhibit to exhibit in a museum and let your mobile device tell you what you’re currently looking at ( demo movies ). The technology is based on PlaceEngine , a service that relies on Wi-Fi to estimate your location, even when there’s no GPS. Zeke CMS Social Game Kit by Ubiquitous Entertainment Ubiquitous Entertainment CEO Ryo Shimizu demo’d Zeke CMS Social Game Kit , a (Japanese-only) platform for developing games to be deployed in social networks like Facebook or Japan’s biggest social network Mixi . One of the games that was built using the system is called “Tokyo Treasure”, a scavenger hunt, which combines AR elements with the real world, using the iPhone camera (”It’s game over when you’re tagged!”). Droidget AR by GClue Droidget AR was described as the world’s first widget framework for augmented reality services on Android. These widgets can be “picked up” at the physical place where they’ve been left by other people and used instantly, without the user having to access the web. Example: When you’re in a restaurant, switch on the camera on your Android phone, point it at the door and click on the AR tag you see to instantly access the menu ( demo movies ). Jitsu Kuukan Toushi Keitai by KDDI au one Labs KDDI , Japans second biggest telecommunications company, presented an augmented reality application that launched in June this year for a limited number of Japanese cell phones. Their Jitsu Kuukan Toushi Keitai app (which roughly translates to: cell phone that allows real space transparency) works just like many of the other mobile AR apps out there. It uses GPS, the phone’s camera, 6-axis sensor and screen to locate where you are and point you to where you want to go through tags. But if you point the phone to a wall or a human being, you can also “see through” them, meaning the app will display tags located behind them. This video shows how Toushi Keitai’s “see-through” function works: Odette Solution by ORSO Odette Solution lets you create mobile Flash sites (nearly 100% of Japanese mobile phones have Flash Lite installed). The Japanese-only, cloud-based ASP service offers various templates whose elements you can edit in various ways, for example by drag and drop. But you can also create mobile web pages by putting together different elements. Odette Solution will be launched next spring. Crunch Network : CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0

alt : http://www.aitia.co.jp/showcase/movie/restir.movhttp://www.aitia.co.jp/showcase/movie/restir.mov

89e8e2dd1bl 2009.jpg 150x112 Infinity Ventures Summit In Miyazaki, Japan: 12 Demos From Japanese Startups

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The list of Roger Corman protgs is amazingly long and stuffed with goodies of all persuasions. There are the famous men: Scorcese ( Box Car Bertha ); Demme ( Caged Heat, Crazy Mama ), Nicholson ( Little Shop of Horrors ), Joe Dante ( Cockfighter ), Francis Coppola ( Battle Beyond the Sun ), Ron Howard ( Grand Theft Auto ) Sylvester Stallone ( Death Race 2000 ), Bruce Dern, Robert De Niro ( Bloody Mama ) Peter Fonda ( The Wild Angels ), Peter Bogdanovich ( Saint Jack ) Curtis Hanson ( Sweet Kill ) and Jonathan Kaplan ( Night Call Nurses ) and those are just a few of the guys who wrote to the Motion Picture Academy to advocate for the award that Corman is finally getting this weekend. Corman with Jonathan Demme. They said, “it is virtually impossible to separate our various entries into the film industry from Roger Corman and his obsession with working with newcomers.” Or how about the European auteurs whose films might not have been seen in the United States without his advocacy: Bergman, Fellini, Kurosawa, Schlondorff, Truffaut, Wenders? Or The Intruder, The Wild Angels and The Trip — three films that took on tough, important, politically charged subjects? Fonda in “Wild Angels.” Shatner in “The Intruder.” The weight of the world should have been on his shoulders . But the beauty is: It never was. Instead, he is the unbearable lightness of being a director, producer, actor, mentor. He is the most effervescent of gentlemen, one who has that gene for making it all look easy even though we know how hard he worked, on what a shoestring, how hard he made them work, on an even shorter shoestring, and how they are eternally grateful. Many of them are talented and one presumes they would have been in the firmament. And yet. Corman movies had their very own silk-purse-from-sows-ears ethic. And Roger led the way. If he could make Little Shop of Horrors in two days, well, then anything was possible. Genre, exploitation, first time directors, imports, call them what you will: He was absolutely fearless and seems to have had a good time doing it too. I lobbed a few quick questions at the honoree: CZ: You practically invented the lemonade-out-of-lemons school of filmmaking. Directors talk about the famous lunch they have with you before they go to work–apparently once a couple of hours and then about ten minutes, where you gave them speed film school. Would you tell a young filmmaker now to go toward the Internet or would you advise learning how to make movies the old fashioned way? RC: I believe young filmmakers should learn the basic techniques of filmmaking so that they can adapt them either to motion pictures or to the Internet. CZ: Women-nurses, teachers, mothers, prisoners, molls and swamp creatures have all been given the traditionally male roles in your films. You have a strong and independent wife and two accomplished daughters. You have also launched the career of a few female directors — Penelope Spheeris and Katt Shea among others. How is it that women still seem to be so lost in how to make Hollywood work for them rather than the other way around? RC: Women are fighting against thousands of years of subordination. Their battle is being won but it will not be won quickly or easily. CZ:Your wife Julie has given the high concept of Roger Corman as conservative meets outrageous . You seem to have made peace with living the life of a gentleman, cherishing school ties, encouraging your children to do well academically with a down and dirty way of getting work done. Wouldn’t Freud have had a field day with you? And hey, maybe is there an idea for a new movie in there? RC: An educated rebel can accomplish more than an uneducated rebel. CZ: I last heard you were making a film called Dinoshark . What’s the status of that? How active are you in producing and are you ever planning to step behind the camera again? RC: Dinoshark is in the final stages of post production for the SyFy channel. I remain active as a producer but after all these years I would only return to directing if i found a project that truly interested me. CZ:You are someone who is passionate about liberal politics who has supported the causes you believe in. Is it possible for creative people to still have an impact in a country faced with such pervasive Washington gridlock? RC: I believe that creative people can have only a slight impact on Washington gridlock but a slight impact is better than none. The Motion Picture Academy is long overdue in giving Roger an award. I tried to think why this might be. I ‘m sure I know. It’s because he’s a different kind of tentpole — one that’s not just about money but also about the long view. The Academy tends to honor its own, and Roger is not one of its own, but rather our own, a maverick. Someone who has given to audiences — without constantly looking over his shoulder at what the other guys were doing. That thing about marching to your own drum? Roger has been marching to his own symphony. Okay, I’m calling him Roger and so I have to say, Roger’s a friend not a colleague and my vantage point is one of friendly fan and not objective journalist. But to see directors smile and tell their ” how I got my start with Roger ” stories is a genre unto itself: basically, you take the ball, or whatever thing is the room at that very moment, or the set or location that was left over from yesterday and you go ! Ron Howard calls him a businessman and audience advocate. He says Roger’s thrill came from how far he could stretch a production dollar. Shooting 10 days or 18 days, can you make it happen? Can you find a formula that makes sense but still keeps it fresh? Can you put real people in a movie beside actors and make it work? Can you work backwards from the last scene of a shooting script because the light is better? Can you go non-union? Can you write, produce, direct and act in the same film? Can you do it for a price? Robert Towne once apparently said to Roger, “Making a film is not like a track meet, it’s not how fast you go.” But maybe it is. Because clearly we see that sometimes taking your time and fretting and adding layers of stuff you don’t need doesn’t work either. Restriction breeds creativity. I would like to get a PhD in the Corman women and I’m sure somebody has. Roger, who has a fiercely independent wife and two talented daughters, has delved into the psyches of teachers, nurses, molls, swamp creatures and big bad blood crazy mamas. They should seem exploited. Instead, they rock! Mothers who say things like “A mother still got some rights in this country,” and a voice over narrator who says, “Enter the female jungle where bodies behind bars ache with hunger for a man, any man,” and just about every iteration of the female condition in between. Gale Anne Hurd says she was shocked when she left the University of Corman and found out that the rest of Hollywood did not champion women in quite the same way. And it’s not just behind the camera. Actresses too found something they could sink their teeth into: Jane Asher ( Masque of the Red Death ), Nancy Sinatra ( Wild Angels ), Shelley Winters ( Bloody Mama ), Charlotte Rampling ( Target: Harry ). Roger is legendary for his penny pinching, for his generosity, for his martinis, for his courtly manner, for his sense of humor, for his ability to vamp. The model for filmmaking that we have today in Hollywood is working for only very few films. Certainly it is not bringing new young people with fresh ideas into the business. And in the down economy, it’s getting even worse. Is there no one out there who can be the Roger Corman of today — for the next generation, for posterity? Hey Roger?! More on The Oscars

7eae168986DDEMME.jpg 150x101 Patricia Zohn: Culture Zohn Off the C(H)uff: Roger Corman and His Oscar

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Voxeo Raises $9 Million For VoIP And IVR Technologies

Posted by Giggi On November - 13 - 2009

IVR and VoIP provider Voxeo has raised $9 million in funding from North Atlantic Capital and the Florida Growth Fund. Voxeo develops technologies in unlocked communications, including VoIP platforms, Interactive Voice Response, text and instant messaging, and unified communications. The startup has made numerous acquisitions over the past year, buying Motorola’s Motorola’s VoiceXML browser business, IM platform developer IMified, application server Voiceobjects, and VoIP platform Micromethod. Voxeo says that the new funds will be used to make additional acquisitions ad well as further internal development of technologies. It’s not surprising that Voxeo has been able to secure a large amount of funding. The startup has seen 1000 percent revenue growth over the past five years. And while Voxeo has steadily growing, the startup has flown under the radar since its founding in 2000. The company, which claims it serves half of the Fortune 100, but doesn’t publish a list of customers. Crunch Network : CrunchBase the free database of technology companies, people, and investors

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Nothing gets the right wing all riled up like a good phony fight. Think “death panels.” Think of the coming “War on Christmas.” Think of all the bile directed toward the extinct Fairness Doctrine, which the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) repealed in 1987. The Obama Administration has said it won’t bring it back, but that didn’t stop conservative legislators from introducing, and prodding their colleagues in Congress to pass, legislation to stop the Fairness Doctrine from being re-instituted – and then claiming victory. What would be even more gratifying than to ban an extinct policy would be if the people railing against it had a better idea of that policy against which they campaigned. Because if they truly understood the Fairness Doctrine, then they wouldn’t go around using it as a justification for opposing Net Neutrality – the idea that the companies which run the telecom networks to your house shouldn’t play favorites. The two ideas are polar opposites. The Fairness Doctrine is one of those hot-button issues sure to raise right-wing temperatures, from the most prominent broadcasting bloviator to the most rabid obscure web site. For the conservatives, the Fairness Doctrine is a government plot to curb right-wing radio. Glenn Beck told his audience that, “They are going to do everything they can to silence our voices.” “They” of course are the Obama Administration and Congressional allies, who have said they won’t bring it back. Sen. Jim DeMint (R-SC), who introduced the legislation to ban the Fairness Doctrine, said, “Democrats want to impose an unfair doctrine that destroys talk radio and silences the voices of millions of Americans who disagree with their vision for America.” As a general matter, it’s a shame that “fairness” has become such a pejorative expression to conservatives and it’s too bad that in their paranoia they view any discussion of bringing the views of progressives or liberals to the mass media as a plot to shut them up. FCC Commissioner Robert McDowell was one of the first to suggest that Net Neutrality is a latter-day version of the Fairness Doctrine, thus combining one flash point with another in a speech in January when he said the Fairness Doctrine “could be intertwined into other communications policy initiatives that are more certain to move through the system, such as localism, diversity or net neutrality.” Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) picked up the theme more recently. Kim Hart reported in The Hill on Blackburn’s October 20 speech in which Blackburn said, “Net neutrality, as I see it, is the fairness doctrine for the Internet.” The Fairness Doctrine was an affirmative obligation given to broadcasters by the FCC. As then-U.S. Supreme Court Justice Byron White wrote in the 1969 Red Lion opinion upholding the Doctrine, “The Federal Communications Commission has for many years imposed on radio and television broadcasters the requirement that discussion of public issues be presented on broadcast stations, and that each side of those issues must be given fair coverage.” In its original 1949 order setting out the Fairness Doctrine, the FCC said that broadcasters needed to play a “conscious and positive role in bringing about balanced presentation of the opposing viewpoints.” Net Neutrality is different. Perhaps the best legal expression of Net Neutrality so far was the condition the Commission imposed in its 2007 order approving the AT&T takeover of BellSouth. The FCC said the new giant company had agreed “not to provide or to sell to Internet content, application, or service providers, including those affiliated with AT&T/BellSouth, any service that privileges, degrades or prioritizes any packet transmitted over AT&T/BellSouth’s wireline broadband Internet access service based on its source, ownership or destination.” Another version is the legislation (HR 3458) introduced by Reps. Edward Markey (D-MA) and Anna Eshoo (D-CA). Their bill provides, in part that Internet Service Providers (ISPs) shall “not block, interfere with, discriminate against, impair, or degrade the ability of any person to use an Internet access service to access, use, send, post, receive, or offer any lawful content, application, or service through the Internet.” ISPs also could not “provide or sell to any content, application, or service provider, including any affiliate provider or joint venture, any offering that prioritizes traffic over that of other such providers on an Internet access service.” Net Neutrality, then, is the polar opposite of the Fairness Doctrine. One, the Fairness Doctrine, requires active participation by a broadcaster in determining content. The other, Net Neutrality, requires the service provider to stay out of the way. Is that a “government mandate?” as some conservatives claim? Perhaps. But it’s a mandate to let traffic flow without attempting to judge the worth of one person’s traffic over another. They have no relation to one another. People who opposed, and oppose, the Fairness Doctrine should support Net Neutrality. That said, however, what both ideas have in common is the notion, which goes back to the beginnings of our telecommunications law, that the interests of the public trump those of businesses or government. The idea that clear in the earliest days of broadcasting, just as it should be clear today. Herbert Hoover said in 1925 that there has to be a “public benefit” to broadcasting. U.S. Supreme Court Justice White in the Red Lion opinion also, said: “It is the right of the viewers and listeners, not the right of the broadcasters, which is paramount.” That’s why when DeMint and his colleagues had it backwards when their legislation to prohibit the Fairness Doctrine is called the “Broadcaster Freedom Act of 2009.” Under our system, the freedom of the public trumps the freedom of broadcasters. In the Internet age, we can do nothing less. The freedom of the public to hear what it wants to hear, to see what it wants to see, and to create what it wants to create should not be subject to the business plans of the telephone and cable companies. That’s what our traditions and laws demand; that’s what the public deserves. That’s why Net Neutrality is so important.

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Art Brodsky: Those Who Hate The Fairness Doctrine Should Love Net Neutrality

While it’s busy trying to rebuild market share on the backs of Android-powered devices in North America and Europe, Motorola’s already got a bustling business in China, so it makes sense that they’d want to contribute some Google juice over there as well. That dovetails nicely with China Mobile’s Android-based Open Mobile System — which runs those so-called OPhones — and Motorola has yet to bring an OPhone to market, so that’s where this little beast appears poised to come into play. The MT710 is said to feature an 854 x 480 display clocking in at 3.7 inches and 3G support (using China Mobile’s up-and-coming TD-SCDMA network), but beyond that, little is known; it’s said that Motorola will intro a total of seven Android models in China over the next year, though, and this is clearly one of them. Shave three or four millimeters off the Droid’s girth with this puppy, and count us in. [Via PMP Today ] Filed under: Cellphones Motorola’s MT710 OPhone for China makes us dream of Droids without keyboards originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 12 Nov 2009 22:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Read ?|? Permalink ?|? Email this ?|? Comments

2f825f7daeone qq.jpg 150x112 Motorolas MT710 OPhone for China makes us dream of Droids without keyboards

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Motorola’s MT710 OPhone for China makes us dream of Droids without keyboards

Facebook: Please Back Developers vs iPhone

Posted by Giggi On November - 13 - 2009

In July of last year, I wrote about The New Apple Walled Garden . The post was about the irony of developers and advocates who were otherwise open standards and open source champions being absolutely pro-iPhone, a platform that is closed and proprietary in every sense. Since that post, the horror that was foreshadowed by some has been realized – rejected apps , rejected apps , rejected apps . We documented the troubles here at Techcrunch and the overall response was nothing more than long comment threads, complaints, and a few wise people changing their minds . The complaints to date are from some bloggers and a small number of application developers, incidents that Apple are able to write-off as being minor, as they have a dedicated fan base and growing market share to fall back on. That was, until yesterday. Yesterday, a high-profile iPhone developer became fed up with the nature of the platform and decided it was time to call it quits . Joe Hewitt of Facebook not only pronounced that it was time for him to move onto ‘other projects’, but had the courage to state that his reason was because of the closed nature of the iPhone platform and his frustration with the approval process. Joe is not just the guy who wrote the Facebook application, within 12 hours of the first iPhone launching he released a library for app developers to create iPhone-like applications. This was back in the first generation, when iPhone ‘applications’ were nothing more than websites. Without any documentation from Apple, and with sheer enthusiasm for the new-born platform, Joe created a library for other developers that would help them build applications that would mimic native iPhone applications built by Apple. As somebody who downloaded the very early releases of Joe’s library, I could immediately see that most, if not all, of the first iPhone applications were built on, or at least inspired by, the iUI library he released. The credibility that Joe has and the work that he did not only inspired developers, but it gave them an easy path to developing the first generation of software for the iPhone. With the statements that Joe made yesterday, Apple has not only lost another developer that it can write-off, but has lost somebody who was an early adopter of their platform and an impetus for others. Most iPhone and Apple fans would retort that “Apple make great products, and it is winning in a market where the consumer has free choice”. I agree that they make great products, I am writing this post on a Macbook. I was beside myself with excitement when I found out about Rhapsody, about OS X, about the new Mach kernel, about FreeBSD code being used for userland (my code is in there, somewhere). I was so enthusiastic about the second coming of Jobs that I had an email exchange with him about incorporating OpenSSL, amongst other things, when the early dev previews were out. I was totally sold, because an operating system was being built and released that combined the best of UNIX with the best of great interfaces. Finally, the open source on desktops conundrum had been solved, I cheered. The biggest non-Microsoft company had adopted what we knew was good, as a way to compete against the standard. It validated my belief in the BSD license, and I was completely spellbound and a fan (although not in the more recent fanboi sense). It was not until the iPhone was released that I felt let down. I felt betrayed . I wanted to hack , and I wanted to do so standing on the shoulder of a giant who was gaining market, a giant who was my old friend. I hold a very strong belief in the open market, a concept which at a theoretical level is difficult to argue against. The iPhone took advantage of a market where the competition was completely clueless. It took an intelligent and smart outsider to recognize that. What has shaken my belief in the open market is that an otherwise good company can enter a market, show them how it is done – but do it in a bad way for the overall ecosystem, and at the same time win the support of people who would otherwise philosophically disagree with them, completely on the basis of that company being not-Microsoft and, well, being sexy . I never believed that Microsoft were evil, first because as a user and developer I had a choice. Second, Microsoft gave me free tools to learn how to code. And last, despite the position Microsoft were in on the desktop they never asked me to send them my code so that they could test it against their black-box of what is ‘compliant’. Microsoft never sent me a letter to say that speech bubbles can not be used in my application. Microsoft platforms let me run whatever-the-hell voice provider I wanted . Microsoft, as far as I can recall, also never told me that I could not have a sense of humor (the ironic 1984 reference has already been done, thanks Jon). Developers today also have a choice with mobile applications, and the sooner more developers raise their blinkers and realize that the popularity of the iPhone is built on the applications they are building, the sooner we can either get rid of this mess and see Apple change, or see a new more open alternative thrive. Hewitt’s statements, as a model iPhone developer from a large company, can be the tipping point. The only thing holding this back right now are Facebook themselves, who seem keen on preserving a business relationship and casting Hewitt off as a rogue. Facebook came out today , and in a more official capacity (ie. somebody with ‘communications’ in their title, as opposed to ‘developer’), said that “Facebooks relationship with Apple and our commitment to the iPhone platform remain strong”, and that “Theres been a fair amount of confusion and speculation about Joes comments” ( chuckle, chuckle ) and that “Facebook has a great team of engineers taking over iPhone related development”. Joe is probably taking some heat from his employer right now, and he probably knew he would before he made any comment. Facebook could have simply shifted Joe to another project (Android, I hope), and many wouldn’t have noticed – but he stood up for what he believes in, and what many have been thinking, and he deserves the full support and credit from everybody who believes in transparency and free opinion, regardless of which side of the iPhone debate your opinions may reside. If it comes down to Facebook vs iPhone, Facebook wins. If Apple hold to their position on being the gatekeeper for everything on their platform, we only win if the developers say no. An iPhone platform with applications only from Apple and no third-parties is no longer a viable platform, and no longer a device that consumers will purchase because they are making decisions based on applications and access, not on the brand or suburb engraved on the back of it (I hope). Facebook should recognize this and back Joe all the way. If they do, it will show that that interest of what they want to do takes precedence over what a handset manufacturer wants to do. Apple can squash small developers, but if a big developer were to set aside short-term business interest for a moment, they will win in the longer term. If only we could all do that and not be blinded, perhaps, well, the free market could work again. Crunch Network : CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0

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Facebook: Please Back Developers vs iPhone

Safety Engineers Help Colorado School (Insurance Journal)

Posted by Giggi On November - 10 - 2009

One day while visiting a construction site operated by a client’s vocational technical school, American Society of Safety Engineers’ (ASSE) Colorado Chapter member Mark Semonisck, CSP, assistant …

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Safety Engineers Help Colorado School (Insurance Journal)

For the past several weeks, we’ve been making improvements to CrunchBase to build a more engaging product for the people that drive it – which is to say, “everybody”. Since it was launched , Crunchbase has always been a freely editable repository of information about technology companies. Since February 2008, we’ve received over 100,000 edits from anonymous users in addition to the copious amounts of information that TechCrunch writers funnel to it on a regular basis. We’re excited to announce that these contributions no longer have to remain unattributed. Starting today, anyone with a Facebook account can sign up for an account on CrunchBase by using Facebook Connect. Edits will still be moderated (after all, this is the Internet we’re talking about here), but users who prove themselves to be trustworthy will, with time, start to see additional privileges associated with their accounts. All of these edits represent a treasure trove of information, so we’ve also been working on ways to better present the edits as they occur. Visitors to the CrunchBase homepage will now notice a list of recent milestones – a “stream,” if you will – that represents the most recent changes to the database. We’ve filtered out the more trivial edits in an effort to make this the kind of real-time information that even Paul Carr could love . These funding rounds, acquisitions, investments, IPOs, and other major milestones will now also appear on the individual pages that they relate to. Lastly, since it’s always better to let individuals choose what news they care about, we’re providing a way for people who sign up for a CrunchBase account to see a summary of these milestones only from the products, people and companies that are interesting to them. Logged-in users now have the ability to follow entries in the database and have relevant updates appear on their home page (sound familiar?). If you are a developer and want to use CrunchBase data, we’ve got a very open and flexible API . And make sure to let us know when you build an app that uses CrunchBase data , we like to highlight them. We hope you enjoy the new features, and are always taking suggestions for ways to make CrunchBase better. And if you like what we’re doing, by all means, be our friend . Crunch Network : CrunchBase the free database of technology companies, people, and investors

28738e4082e logo.png 150x25 Connect To The CrunchBase Firehose: Sign Up With Facebook Connect

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Connect To The CrunchBase Firehose: Sign Up With Facebook Connect

Color Code Your Life With Tom’s Planner

Posted by Giggi On November - 10 - 2009

Netherlands-based Startup Tom’s Planner is launching their dead-simple web-based project management and planning system lets users create and visualize an online planning schedule. The application is meant to be used by a broad spectrum of consumers, from project managers, event and wedding planners to busy soccer moms or personal assistants. Tom’s Planner lets you create color-coded project plans and schedules, share them anyone in a team or groups, embed project schedules, and export to Microsoft Project. To help users get started, Tom’s Planner provides project planning templates for website designers, construction projects, event and wedding planners, vacation home rentals and personnel schedules. And users can save their projects to their hard drives instead of storing the file in the cloud. The startup faces competition from Microsoft Project, LiquidPlanner, Primavera, and others. But the beauty of the application is that it’s simple to use, even for those users who aren’t particularly tech-savvy. And it’s free (for now). Toms Planner is offering a free, one-year account to all new users who sign up for the public beta launch by December 31. Crunch Network : MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.

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Color Code Your Life With Toms Planner

As health information managers and professionals across the country celebrate the health information & technology industry this week, the Association for Health Care Documentation Integrity (AHDI) and the Medical Transcription Industry Association (MTIA) announced their support for a healthcare reform package that improves electronic health records (EHRs) as well as patient safety.

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Medical Transcription Industry Celebrates Health IT Week (Medical News Today)

ASUS to dizzy eyes with G51J3D and G72GX 3D laptops

Posted by Giggi On November - 6 - 2009

Well, lookie here. ASUS has just jumped in on the 3D bandwagon . Just a few weeks after the 5738DG was unveiled, two more 3D laptops are now said to be on tap. Yeah — as if the planet really needs another duo of laptops that require glasses to fully enjoy. All misplaced bitterness aside, the 15.6-inch G51J3D and 17.3-inch G72GX both tout a fairly respectable NVIDIA GPU (the 1GB GeForce GTX 160M was specifically mentioned in the former), and while the tester was indeed stuck looking like the dude above ( exactly like that dude, in fact), he felt that the 3D playback was nothing short of incredible. Both machines will also be equipped with a Core i7 processor, oodles of HDD space and the ability to show off 3D content to up to 15 people who circle around it. We’re told that the G51J3D will ship out next month, while the G72GX won’t land until Q2 2010. Filed under: Laptops ASUS to dizzy eyes with G51J3D and G72GX 3D laptops originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Nov 2009 07:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Read ?|? Permalink ?|? Email this ?|? Comments

b803cc70bdlaptop.jpg 150x100 ASUS to dizzy eyes with G51J3D and G72GX 3D laptops

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ASUS to dizzy eyes with G51J3D and G72GX 3D laptops

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