
Sat, 21 Nov 2009 21:59:03 +0000

Skype CEO
Josh Silverman can't stop smiling in this video interview we recorded in Menlo Park this morning. And no wonder - despite
serious legal and spinoff drama, Silverman has managed to
close his multi-billion dollar spinoff of Skype from eBay. His legal troubles have
evaporated. Skype is growing like a weed. And he's managed to keep his job running the business. Life is good.
All he has to do now is manage board meetings with two of the more forceful personalities on the planet - new investor
Marc Andreessen and cofounder/new investor
Niklas Zennstrom.
Well, that and keep this train
on the tracks. Skype has exploded to over half a billion users, and is adding 300,000 new ones every day, Silverman says in the interview. 1/3 of usage is video, despite the fact that video calls can only be 1-1. Voice calls are multi-party. And revenue is cruising along at $185 million/quarter with 24.2% margins. Up to 20 million people are using Skype at any one time.
Full video is below:
Sat, 21 Nov 2009 21:57:49 +0000

Google Callendar is testing out a new feature that should make scheduling events a tad easier than it used to be by allowing you to see at a glance if the event you're creating will conflict with the schedules of the people youre' inviting. Dubbed "Sneak Preview", the feature's name is perhaps more exciting than its actual function, but it should prove to be quite useful. The feature is apparently in a limited rollout right now, so don't be surprised if you don't have access to it.
Once you've activated Sneak Preview (assuming you have access to it), whenever you create a new event you'll see a new viewing mode that displays a calendar alongside your event details. This calendar will show the schedules of each of the people you've invited to the event (provided you're a friend or coworker with access to that information), and the proposed time for your event will appear as a semi-transparent blue box so you can quickly see where you might have conflicts. You can click each guest's name to show/hide them on the calendar if some are more important than others.
Sat, 21 Nov 2009 21:52:52 +0000

Most TechCrunch readers have never heard of
Tracking202. But affiliate advertisers love the service, which manages advertising campaigns on Facebook, MySpace and other platforms. In fact, Tracking202 was at the center of the
Facebook click-fraud issue that we reported on earlier this year. Tracking202 users saw a certain number of clicks on ads via the Tracking202 interface, and far more on their Facebook admin pages.
The company is self funded and has a number of customers who pay for the premium hosted version of the service. Today they've announced they're selling the business to
Bloosky, an affiliate ad network. Here's the email sent out to users this morning:
Sat, 21 Nov 2009 21:31:57 +0000
Editor's note: More and more mobile app developers are deciding to make apps for Android, even though it still doesn't have the same reach as the iPhone. In this guest post Kevin Nakao, the VP of Mobile for Whitepages, makes the argument for taking the Android plunge now (as he is preparing to with a new Whitepages Android app launching next week). Follow him on Twitter @knakao
Mobile games publisher
Gameloft might have thrown in the towel on Android, but that is a mistake. I certainly understand why they gave up on Android. Since launching in February of this year, our own Whitepages Caller ID app has become a
top ten grossing Android application, and yet we've seen less than $54,000 in revenue. While our iPhone app download counts are in the millions, our Android app downloads are a mere 17 percent of this volume.
Despite our meager return on investment this year, I believe that the real potential for Android app developers lies in the New Year. Here's why:
Sat, 21 Nov 2009 20:43:36 +0000

10 days ago, Facebook developer
Joe Hewitt rocked the iPhone development world when he
announced that he would stop making iPhone apps because he was
fed up with the way Apple is running the App Store. This is significant since Hewitt was pretty much solely responsible for one of the most popular (
and best) iPhone apps out there: Facebook's. And now, just a little over a week later, we may be seeing the downside of Hewitt's decision.
The Facebook iPhone app is broken, and has been for a while now. Every single user profile page contains zero updates or posts. Instead, each loads a stream that reads "USER has no recent posts." Judging from Twitter
searches, tips coming in, and a Facebook
thread, this has been the case since at least yesterday, and possibly before that.
Sat, 21 Nov 2009 20:14:10 +0000
Google Voice was GrandCentral before Google
acquired that company back in 2007.
Like most Google acquisitions it took a long time to fully rebuild the service on Google's infrastructure, and even today Google Voice is still in private beta.
But lots of changes are coming. Google Voice should roll out publicly shortly. Users may be able to
port their existing phone numbers to Google if they choose. Google's
acquisition of Gizmo5 will give the service a client soft phone plus enhanced VoIP capabilities. And who knows what part Google Voice
will play in in the upcoming
Google Phone.
So a little housekeeping is in order. And the first item on the checklist is to shut down the GrandCentral website on December 31, 2009. Users were upgraded to Google Voice earlier this year, but old GrandCentral messages are still on the old site. So if you want to keep them, Google suggests you download them soon.
The email:
Sat, 21 Nov 2009 19:45:06 +0000
Editor's note: Today, being a news junkie requires not just the ability to keep up with hundreds of breaking stories a day, but the ability to redistribute those stories to your followers and news sites. To get some insight into the modern news junkie, we asked Mrinal Desai to share with us how he screens the news in the guest post below. Desai is the co-founder of CrossLoop, but some of you may recognize him more from Twitter or Techmeme, where he tips stories every day—580 of those tips have appeared as headlines since the beginning of this year. You can read his last guest post here.
Like many out there, I have been, am and always will be a news addict. For many news junkies, it is the fleeting, current fix of information about a breaking topic that interests them, only to be replaced by the next headline. They jump from headline to headline, forgetting the one they just read as they move on to the next one.
For me personally, news is not only timely information on the current state of affairs but also a way to take a deep dive, to connect analysis and information together and learn through application. I am looking for insight. It could be patterns, it could be knowledge about an industry or it could be an opportunity to become introspective and ask questions.
Keeping this in mind, here is a snapshot of my consumption and distribution of news both offline and online. I'll divide the way I screen the news by the screens on which it comes to me.
Sat, 21 Nov 2009 18:31:35 +0000

Good afternoon, readers! What does Santa have in his bag for you today? Interestingly enough, he was unable to bring his bag because this printer is far too big for it. We present, for your inspection, the Kodak 5250 all-in-one: a scanning, printing, faxing, photofinishing machine that can best the big boys in the printer race.
Best of all, the 5250 has built-in WiFi so you can stick the printer on your network and print from any computer in the house. Take a look at
Kodak's 5250 product page and then click through to figure out how to win.
Sat, 21 Nov 2009 15:45:35 +0000

When pitching to VC’s, entrepreneurs hype the heck out of their ideas, years of experience and management teams. But I’ve never heard of anyone touting their luck or connection to God. After reading the posts on TechCrunch, one could easily get the impression that God doesn’t play much of role in Silicon Valley. But ask any successful entrepreneur in private what made them successful, and you might just hear a different story. In a research project my team just completed, the majority of 549 company founders told us that their most important success factor, after “experience” and “management team”, was “good fortune”. Many respondents wrote in comments stressing the extreme importance of faith and God.
You didn’t think that successful entrepreneurs were this pious did you? Neither did I. After all, what did God have to do with Google aside from Jeff Jarvis stealing his book title from fans of Jesus and their much copied meme? Did God build the Internet? Did he build the microchip? I’ve never been religious myself and have always believed that with hard work and determination, you can surmount just about any obstacles. But I also learned the hard way that you can do everything right and fail. Sometimes you do just about everything wrong and make it big. My belief: success is 51% luck and 49% execution. You need to execute with precision, but a little luck goes a long way. It is always good to have God on your side. So it was interesting and illuminating (pun intended) to see what other entrepreneurs thought about this.
Sat, 21 Nov 2009 15:33:50 +0000

The sudden surge in interest in Android (largely due to all of the hype surrounding the
Droid) has caused a
lot of developers to reconsider the platform. Atleast one major development house, however, isn't impressed.
Earlier today, Alexandre de Rochefort, Finance Director of Gameloft, told an investor conference that the company had "significantly cut [their] investment in Android platform, just like ... many others". Gameloft is one of the largest mobile games companies around, having pulled in roughly
$132 million in the last three quarters alone. While there are plenty of fish in the developer sea, this can't be one that Google is happy to see swim away.
Sat, 21 Nov 2009 14:46:11 +0000

Do a search for Google Wave on the App Store from your iPhone or desktop client, and you'll see an application called just that pop up, ready to be installed as soon as you fork over $0.99 (or €0.79 in my case). One caveat: it's not built, authorized or in any way endorsed by Google.
Spotted by
Stuart Dredge over at
Mobile Entertainment, the unofficial Google Wave iPhone app seemingly slipped past Apple's usually and notoriously rigorous quality assurance and trademark compliance team and made its way to the App Store (
iTunes link - up to you to decide if this is something you want to pay for).
Sat, 21 Nov 2009 12:50:19 +0000
This is our third guest post written by a London-based VC. To allow them to speak plainly without jeopardising their fund or their career in the small village that is the London VC scene, I'm allowing them to post anonymously. FYI, LondonVC is a genuine VC and TechCrunch Europe has met them face to face.
One of the biggest challenges for any investor (regardless of the stage/type of investment they target) and founders alike is hiring great talent. In early stage investing the team may be the single criteria upon which an investment decision is based (considering how many times when that's all there is to go by) and even in later/growth stages, while the founding team has been historically crucial, bringing someone new in to help "get the company to the next level" can be the difference between investing or not.
Something I've realised and have to admit is that while obviously the absolute pool of talent is smaller here in the UK/Europe than it is in the U.S. (and that cannot be disputed nor is it anything more than a function of population) another factor. It is one which I keep hoping will change, because if it doesn't it threatens to make a small pool even smaller. And that is a cultural and behavioural issue: work ethic.
Sat, 21 Nov 2009 09:55:01 +0000

Last week, it was
reported that
AOL - amid
restructuring efforts in the lead-up to the imminent Time Warner
spin-off and IPO - was putting its instant messaging service unit
ICQ on the block and had hired bankers Allen & Co. and Morgan Stanley to assist in the sales process.
According to the reports, AOL was looking to offload the asset for $300 million and talking to a pair of non-US companies about an acquisition (likely in a part cash, part stock transaction).
Question is: who are those potential buyers?
Sat, 21 Nov 2009 05:00:02 +0000

Peripherals, they say, are the spice of life. Well, maybe they don't say that, but they do say it about variety, and peripherals add variety to your computing life. If you're reading this on a stock HP desktop, clicking on links with the mouse that came with it, and trusting your data to that 512MB USB stick they gave you at work, then you should consider accessorizing.
Sat, 21 Nov 2009 04:30:15 +0000

Honestly, it's impossible to work in these conditions. I'm writing this from the
TechCrunch Real-Time CrunchUp; a one-day event in San Francisco celebrating the joys of the 'real-time' web. Sounds awesome, right? It is.
I've been on stage, heckling participants on the marketing panel, I've been Tweeting from the audience, I've been following the live-blogging of the panels. Generally I've been living the real time dream - which probably explains why I haven't done any actual work all day. And now I'm twenty minutes away from my deadline, and I still have to read a week of TechCrunch and figure out everything that's happened this week.
Oh, and to make matters worse, Arrington has filled my work room with
dogs.
Welcome, then, to a completely - and appropriately - real-time edition of This Week On TechCrunch.
Sat, 21 Nov 2009 03:33:50 +0000
Keith Teare was hanging around the Real-Time CrunchUp today showing off his newest project -
Speedi.ly.
What does Speedi.ly do? One thing, very well and at scale. Speedi.ly takes a piece of content, or grabs the content from a URL, and analyzes it. It does this very fast and it outputs some key data. Speedi.ly tells you the language of the content, categorizes it (topics, keywords), and additional metadata. This metadata payload is exactly what Robert Scoble is talking about with his
SuperTweet idea.
Here's what Speedi.ly returns for
this story we wrote on the Skype/eBay sale:
Sat, 21 Nov 2009 03:30:57 +0000

Extracting meaning from the Web is a difficult undertaking. Keyword search skims the surface of contextual meaning that is locked in Web pages, Tweets and feeds. That's where semantic search comes in. The semantic web deals with looking beyond simple links that make up the web to understand a deeper meaning and context behind that content.
The Ellerdale Project, which launched in alpha this past week, is hoping to add context to search by using semantic technology to power a real-time search platform.
Ellerdale mines the real-time stream, including Tweets, RSS and the, to identify topics, messages and articles that link together based on content, not keyword. So If you looked up Sarah Palin on Ellerdale's site, you'd see a semantic graph of related content, such as Oprah Winfrey (Palin just appeared on Oprah a few days ago), The Republican Party and John McCain.
Sat, 21 Nov 2009 01:30:37 +0000

"
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?
Sat, 21 Nov 2009 01:15:54 +0000

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 Buchheit — Facebook/FriendFeed
Andrew Braccia — Accel Partners
Michael Arrington — Editor and Founder, TechCrunch
Moderated by Steve Gillmor and Erick Schonfeld
Sat, 21 Nov 2009 00:36:38 +0000

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.
Fri, 20 Nov 2009 23:22:22 +0000
Rippol, the video discovery site that combines both complex algorithms with user suggestions to surface interesting content, has launched to the public at today's
RealTime CrunchUp.
We recently took an
in-depth look at the service, but for those who haven't seen it yet, here's a recap: Rippol looks at your video watching activity on the site, as well as that of your friends and people in your demographic. It then looks at meta data from video content ingested from sites like YouTube and Hulu, and uses machine learning to identify videos it thinks you'll like. From there you can browse through various genres to look at recommended videos
Fri, 20 Nov 2009 23:13:29 +0000

At our
Real-Time CrunchUp today in San Francisco, we are hosting a panel titles "Media Streams: Are These The Utlimate Marketing Vehicle?"
Panelists include
Sean Rad, CEO of
Ad.ly;
Ryan Amos, co-founder of
DailyBooth;
Jesse Engle, CEO of
CoTweet; Robin Bechtel, a celebrity agent and Philip Nelson, SVP of strategic development for NewTek.
Below find my live notes (paraphrased):
Fri, 20 Nov 2009 23:03:01 +0000

Today at the RealTime CrunchUp we saw the launch of
VideoLobby, a new service founded by Peter Urban that's looking to make it easier to create professional-looking webcasts, complete with custom branding. The service is an extension of Urban's "sales software for real people" service
Smibs.
Urban says that while some other services offer embeds, you're generally responsible for building your own branded site to insert those in. That's where VideoLobby comes in: the site helps you build your own custom video portal, and then allows you to include streams from services like
Qik,
Ustream and
Justin.tv. The company calls itself the "Blogger for real-time video".
The service doesn't just make your page look nicer, though — it can automatically pull in comments from Twitter and Facebook, and also allows users to submit questions directly from the show's page. Stream administrators can use a management system to heck off their questions as they answer them. And the service is completely free.
Fri, 20 Nov 2009 22:56:36 +0000
Rotten Tomatoes is a great site because it takes all the movie reviews from around the web and condenses them into an easy-to-understand aggregate score. But let's be honest: Most movie reviewers suck. Why not instead rely on people in your social circle to recommend movies to you? That's the idea behind
FlixUp.
This new iPhone app unveiled at our Realtime CrunchUp event in San Francisco today essentially scans Twitter for what people are saying about a movie and shows you a rating based on that. It can return a general score from across Twitter, or the tweets about the movie from people you follow on Twitter.
Fri, 20 Nov 2009 22:35:29 +0000

You know the retweet button you see on content spread throughout the web? You can thank
TweetMeme for that. Long before Twitter's new Retweet functionality existed, this button was the way to share on Twitter. And it still is for content not on twitter.com. But now it's time for TweetMeme to think about making money. And they've come up with a way that people are either going to love or hate.
At our Realtime CrunchUp in San Francisco today, TweetMeme founder
Nick Halstead has unveiled AdTweets. As you might expect, this involves ads that appear on your site — but with the addition of a retweet button. Yes, you can also retweet these ads just as you would any piece of content.