Posts Tagged ‘presenting’

PostHeaderIcon Not Bullshit: Penn & Teller Launching New Product At TechCrunch50

We guard the final 50 new products and startups that launch at TechCrunch50 closely, and don’t let anyone know the final list until the day of the event (not even press gets the list). But we also generally pre-announce one of the presenting companies to give the audience a taste of what’s to come.

And this year, I’m very proud to announce that Penn & Teller will be launching a new consumer tech product at TechCrunch50.

The duo has worked together for 30 years, and in September they’ll be celebrating their fifth year as headliners in their own theater at the Rio All-suite Hotel & Casino, as well as two Emmy nominations for one of my favorite shows, their Showtime series “Penn & Teller: Bullshit!” (I even embedded a clip of their show in this post about bottled water).

Plus, Penn Jillette will be on stage showing their new product for the first time to the 2,000 or so people who will be at TechCrunch50. And I think you’re going to love it.

That’s all we’re saying for now. Get your ticket here.

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PostHeaderIcon The Naked Truth 2009 Slides: Show Me The Money

638653-20090622194016-21709-8214860Taking place tonight in Seattle is The Naked Truth 2009, a Redfin-hosted conference to give entrepreneurs advice. Michael is there participating as an expert to discuss industry trends. This year’s topic is revenue models for consumer Internet startups. The four presenting startups, Redfin, UrbanSpoon, Picnik and Animoto have some interesting information to share via their slides, which we’re posting below, pointing out a few of the highlights.

For those who want to follow along live, you can find the video of the event here.

First up, restaurant recommendation service UrbanSpoon, which was recently bought by IAC. Some highlights of their slide:

  • Of their visitors on the web, 74% come from Google.
  • Of their visitors through mobile devices, 99% come through the iPhone (they have one of the more popular apps).
  • They’re seeing more than double the revenue off of those mobile users versus web users.
  • When they were featured in an iPhone commercial, they saw 300% growth.

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Next up, online imaging editing service, Picnik (which has a partnership with Yahoo to edit Flickr pictures).

  • 80% of their revenues come from paid subscriptions, the other 20% from advertising.
  • About half of their subscribers do so on the first visit to the site, 75% of those do within 4 visits.
  • “Partnerships are not nirvana” — obviously a shot at Yahoo.

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Video slideshow maker Animoto (which recently raised a new round of funding):

  • They have 700 paid users per 100,000 users, but are already cash-flow positive with that.
  • They say their hybrid model (freemium + virtual goods) is working

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And finally, online real estate company, Redfin:

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PostHeaderIcon Microsoft’s Silverlight 3 Launches Early

Microsoft’s competitor to Adobe Flash, Silverlight, has officially rolled out the new version, Silverlight 3, today. Silverlight is a cross-browser, cross-platform, and cross-device plug-in for delivering media experiences and interactive applications for the Web. The first version was launched in 2007 and the second version was launched in September of 2008. In April, Microsoft reported 300 million downloads of Silverlight between September 2007 and April 2009, with an estimated 300,000 developers and engineers working off the Silverlight platform.

SIiverlight 3 launched a day earlier today on Microsoft’s servers, surprising the blogosphere. The new version has improved streaming capabilities, called Smooth Streaming. Here’s what Microsoft said about the new streaming function:

If the Internet bandwidth and video rendering capability on your playback device are sufficiently high, you’ll experience high-definition video playback of the sample content. You will also be able to simulate end user experiences under varying conditions by simulating drops and recoveries in bandwidth. If your actual bandwidth is below 3 Mbps, or your playback device is video-challenged, then you will experience the adaptive nature of Smooth Streaming without needing to simulate a bandwidth cap.

Microsoft is also extending Silverlight’s technologies beyond the browser by allowing developers to design and create apps that can run on the desktop. Microsoft will be announcing further details about Silverlight at its official launch of Silverlight 3 and Expression Studio 3 tomorrow morning. We’ll have all the details. And Microsoft will also be demoing some of the real-time capabilities of Silverlight 3 at TechCrunch’s Real-Time Stream CrunchUp tomorrow.

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PostHeaderIcon While Sacks Plays Poker, Yammer Burns

picture-47So, as you may have seen yesterday, Yammer founder David Sacks is still alive in the World Series of Poker. In fact, he has to miss our events tomorrow because of it. But you know, there’s something that we’re missing today — Yammer.

The service has been down for a few hours now, with no signs of coming back up. Twitter is abuzz with the failure.

So while Sacks is busy playing Poker (okay, he’s actually working today, but still), leaving comments on our blog posts, and Twittering, his startup (which we love and use everyday, by the way) is suffering. Hope you win that gold bracelet, David!

Update: It’s definitely a hardware and not a software issue, we’re told. They’re still looking into the issue.

Update 2: After several hours, it looks like Yammer is finally coming back online. Our icons still aren’t working, but messages are going through.

Here’s a video Sacks and Calacanis talking poker and their bet:

Watch Internet CEOs Play Poker at the 2009 WSOP on RawVegas.tv

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PostHeaderIcon New URL Shortener Is Kind Of Cool, Kind Of Defeats The Point

picture-211A new URL shortening service LinksPreadeR (spelled like that because the URL is l.pr) has just launched in beta with an interesting twist on the shortening craze. It allows you to tack comments onto the end of the short URL, to send messages via the hyperlink. That’s kind of cool, but it also obviously makes the short URL a lot longer.

The idea is that with the messages in the URL, you won’t need to have a separate comment in your tweet or Facebook message. The problem with that is that people the people who like to retweet comments with comments of their own will have much less space to do so.

Here’s an example of what the shortened URL with a message will look like: http://l.pr/a43v/hey,_it’s_mah_blog and here’s a slightly more ridiculous one: http://l.pr/a43w/hey,_look_it’s_my_Twitter_profile._go_take_a_look._if_you_dare.
Yeah, not sure how useful that is.

But, you can use it as a regular shortening service too. Below each message-encoded URL is an actual short URL you can use too. For example, the latter one above can also be: http://l.pr/a43w. Yes, much shorter, and nice thanks to the three letter domain.

Like most other URL shortening services. LinksPreadR also has a bookmarklet for easier use.

Update: And I just realized something, for URLs with really long messages, Twitter will re-shorten it, using bit.ly. Yeah, that totally defeats the point. For shorter messages it still works though.

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