Posts Tagged ‘TechCrunch’

Michael Arrington conducts Don Dodge’s exit interview for Microsoft

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

TechCrunch’s Michael Arrington sits down with the recently laid-off Don Dodge and conducts an unofficial exit interview with the former director of business development for Microsoft’s Emerging Business Team.

Dodge, who said he was in Silicon Valley “just visiting friends,” to Arrington’s disbelief, said he might have been “too visible,” as the company’s startup liaison, and that might not have gone over too well with some at the software giant.

In an earlier post, Arrington called the move a “huge mistake,” and others expressed similar sentiments. Dodge himself wrote on his blog the layoff “left me with a cold feeling…but only for a minute or two.”

TechCrunch picks Whiz Kid Mark Bao as entrepreneur to watch

Monday, October 12th, 2009
mark bao

Mark Bao

TechCrunch has named 10 entrepreneurs to watch, and among them is Mark Bao, the 17-year-old entrepreneur MHT talked to in May.

In August, Bao sold his first startup, Avecora, and launched a new company called AtomPlan, which makes a business contact management application. He has also co-founded Ramamia, a photo-sharing service for families.

Bao told MHT about his goals in May: A personal net worth of more than $5 billion, to help people who can’t help him, to enjoy life without boundaries and to change the world. For more proof he’s not messing around, check out his enjoyably profane Twitter stream. From the Startup Bootcamp @ MIT:

Chatting with a speaker afterwards? Keep your f______ chat to < 3 min and < 3 questions. G__ damn. #sb

That was quick: Twitter, Oneforty talking acquisition?

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

TechCrunch posts an uncomfirmed, “PURELY speculative” — note the all caps, that’s seriously speculative — rumor that Twitter is talking to Cambridge-based Oneforty about buying it.

The blog lists a few reasons: Twitter’s recent funding, and the obvious overlap. Buying Oneforty would save Twitter the effort of building its own app store.

Maybe most importantly TechCrunch notes that by acquiring Oneforty, Twitter would be buying itself a business plan, or at least part of one.

That would mean a pretty quick exit for media consultant Laura Fitton who founded OneForty earlier this year.

In a four-minute-old tweet, Fitton seems to be giving an Oscar speech — thanking people like Chris Brogan who believed in her early on, etc. Clearly she sold the company, or happened to feel like expressing spontaneous gratitude for no reason. It could be anything, really.

NVCA report starts VC/entrepreneur slapfight

Monday, September 21st, 2009

The National Venture Capital Association has released its report on VCs’ impact on the U.S. economy. The report says in 2008, VC-backed companies generated about $3 trillion in revenue and employed about 12 million people in the United States. The report also says VC backed companies have out-performed non-VC-backed companies, and that VCs create whole industries more or less out of thin air.

That all sounds good, but Vivek Wadhwa, a researcher at Harvard, Duke and UC-Berkeley (a hat trick I would have thought to be physically impossible) calls B.S. at TechCrunch, saying the NVCA is trying to justify tax breaks and bailout dough for VCs:

How’d they come up with these numbers? They added up all the revenue generated in 2008 by any company a venture capitalist ever invested a dime in. So if John Doerr bought Bill a lunch in 1985, they’d count Microsoft as part of their empire. Maybe I’m exaggerating a bit. But seriously, the NVCA numbers aren’t even remotely credible.

At PEHub, Dan Primack issued a 14-word, parenthetical reaction:

(grating veneration of entrepreneurs as immaculate purists, forced to suffer the indignity of investment)

On his Startable blog, former Atlas VC Healy Jones splits the difference and calls Wadhwa thoughtful but takes exception with his claim that VCs “go where they smell blood,” rather than funding innovation. Jones says VCs are looking to duck capital gains taxes, but aren’t looking for a bailout. 

FastIgnite CEO Sim Simeonov calls the NVCA’s claims “outlandish,” but strikes a different chord than Wadwha:

My two cents are that if VCs are guilty of claiming or receiving too much credit when things go well, they certainly get too much blame when things go poorly. And I certainly think it’s foolish to only blame VCs for investing too much money in companies. It takes two to tango.

Candy.com opens its doors

Monday, July 20th, 2009

TechCrunch notes Candy.com, a web site owned by a Weymouth-based company which bought the super-literal domain for $3 million earlier this month, is open for business:

According to the website, Candy.com even ships internationally but I think they just left out the word ‘not’ by accident (seriously).

The new owner of the candy.com domain name is G&J Holdings, a Weymouth, Massachusetts-based Internet candy retailer that has been in business since 2005. The $3 million question for them: how quickly, if at all, will they make up for the price it paid for the admittedly attractive .com domain name?

Berkman Center’s Sam Bayard on TechCrunch publishing hacked Twitter info

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

Sam Bayard, assistant director of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society’s Citizen Media Law Center, weighs in on the stink caused by TechCrunch’s publication of information hacked from Twitter CEO Evan Williams and others. Among the stolen info:  A projection the company would be profitable in Q3 2009 and that it would reach 1 billion users by 2013; and a pitch for a Twitter-themed reality TV show called Final Tweet, which needs to be stopped — privacy, First Amendment or whatever other laws be damned. 

TechCrunch says publishing hacked information is no different than publishing old-fashioned leaked information. Bayard says the blog is likely on solid legal ground:

In the current scenario, it is fair to say that a good deal of information about Twitter as a company is fair game given its immense popularity and newfound cultural significance. Twitter’s financial projections probably fall safely within the public concern category.  The TV pitch might be a closer call, but still probably falls on the safe side of the line …

… I’m not sure how the First Amendment would impact a possible prosecution for receipt of stolen property because it is receipt of stolen material, not publication, which is criminalized.  But it seems unlikely that First Amendment concerns wouldn’t also limit criminal liability in this context. 

Via Robert Weinberger.

Breaking News: Fluent Mobile launches iPhone app, Semilab restructures, Yahoo shuts down Maven

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

Staff writer Galen Moore breaks the news that Post Office Square-based Fluent Mobile, founded by a former UMass professor, has launched  its news aggregating iPhone app. 

The application is a news search engine and aggregator designed to find only news content that is optimized for reading on mobile devices …

Adler said he started Fluent to apply some of the search capabilities developers discovered while building CourseAdvisor, an online course catalog tool for students. Adverplex, a second company Adler helped found, is still a going concern, he said.

Meanwhile, one cube over, staff writer Rodney Brown breaks the news that Hungarian chip-maker Semilab has merged its three US subsidiaries into one company called Semilab USA.

Semilab USA has 57 employees, with about 21 in Massachusetts, according to [CEO Chris] Moore. Semilab, founded in 1990, makes technology used to measure primarily materials used in the manufacturing of chips. It serves three major customer areas — academic and institutional research, semiconductor manufacturers and photovoltaic and solar cell manufacturers.

TechCrunch, citing an unnamed customer, has the news that Yahoo has shut down Maven Networks, which it acquired less than a year and a half ago.

Ray Ozzie compares Google Wave, Groove Networks

Friday, June 5th, 2009

TechCrunchIT liveblogged Microsoft chief software architect and former tech-industry townie Ray Ozzie’s Q&A session at  the Churchill Club’s Potential of Cloud Computing event in Palo Alto, where he talked about Groove’s technology being used in Microsoft’s Live Mesh, and Google Wave.

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