понедельник, 23 мая 2011 г.

How Jack Dorsey's Square Is Accidentally Disrupting The Entire Payments Industry

Square reader

Most Creative People in Business 2011

The new payment system that Squarelaunched todayis going to have a profound effect on how people pay for stuff in the real world—perhaps as profound as the iTunes store has had on the distribution and sale of digital media. And in the process, it will likely upend the entire payments industry.

The interesting thing, though, is that it turns out founderJack Dorseynever really planned this. His initial goals were much more modest: help people who were cut out of the mainstream payments business accept credit cards. To that end, Square’s story holds some important lessons about how entrepreneurs trying to solve a simple problem can sometimes find themselves stumbling onto a huge opportunity.

Square’s origin storyis well known: Dorsey’s former boss and good friend (and eventual co-founder) Jim McKelvey lost a sale for his hand-blown glass because he had no way of accepting credit cards. The problem was one many people had--the barriers to setting yourself up through conventional processes to accept credit card payments were too high for many people. So Dorsey set about seeing if he could create a better system.

The result was the Square reader, which launched a year ago and which allows just about anyone to set themselves up to take credit card payments. Even you. Planning a garage sale and want to enable people to pay for your gerbil cages and Shawn Cassidy LPs by credit card? No problem. Square's for you.

But, Dorsey tellsFast Company, the company was surprised at how many businesses took to it as well, like food carts selling street food and bands selling merchandise at their shows. 

"As they started taking more and more payments, they started getting bigger and bigger, as you’d expect them to,"he says."They were beginning to get more sophisticated about what they needed, and they started asking us for more tools."

At the same time, Dorsey says, the iPad was emerging on the scene, providing more real estate to work with on than on the iPhone. Which got Square to thinking about a complete point-of-sale solution for businesses, rather than simply a reader for individuals.

This is where Dorsey’s design sense kicked in. Dorsey wasn’t interested in simply providing a direct replacement for existing point-of-sale systems. He wanted to revamp the entire payments experience--making it simpler and, as COO Keith Rabois puts it toFast Company,"more delightful."

"That’s how we think about our strategic goals,"Rabois says."We’re using software to create magical experiences."

Square card holderSquare started thinking about receipts: Why should you get a paper receipt for a credit card--a digital--transaction? Why shouldn't the accounting be sent to you electronically? And what about all the data that gets recorded in the transaction: What you buy and when you bought it? Wouldn’t both the vendor and the customer be interested in that data, if you could shape and present it in ways that were meaningful to each?

The result is the new system. Not only are payments easier: Customers don’t have to pull out credit cards (or cash) anymore, and vendors don’t have to swipe anything. (A complete description of how it works ishere.) But now both sides are also getting insights and experiences they never had before.

Square is providing an analytics system to vendors so they can track buying patterns and use the information to make adjustments that benefit their businesses."How many cappuccinos did I sell, and how many of those customers bought biscotti?"Dorsey says by way of example."So next week, if I move the biscotti jar, what happens to those sales?"

As for customers, the Square digital"card cases"they carry on their phones (pictured above) allow them to track their entire history with the businesses they frequent. Open up the case,"take out"a card, and there's a list of everything you’ve ever bought from that particular vendor. That, Rabois says, isn't just useful information--it actually forges stronger emotional connections between customers and their favorite stores.

"Payments have been about mechanics and functionality utility,"Rabois says."But now, I have in my phone, the brands and businesses I love most. They’re brought with me every day."

It's easy to see how a system like this might appeal to both vendors and customers. And it's also easy to see how it could become a player in the heated-up"local"space, which has largely focused on"deals"as a means of letting businesses market themselves and get new customers in the door.

And since the new Square system enables some vendor content to appear on customers' phones--for example, customers can see a restaurant's up-to-date menu on their"cards"--the logical next step would seem to be to enable vendors to advertise deals to their customers through the Square system.

Put that question to Dorsey, however, and he challenges the whole concept of deals in the first place.

"I don't think people are necessarily want discounts,"he says."They just want great experiences."

And that, Square believes, is where the real opportunity lies in the payments industry.

"I don't think a lot of financial institutions have spent a lot of time thinking about design,"Dorsey says."Design is not visual. It's about simplifying and getting something down to its essence."

Which is what Square has done as it has reimagined what a payments system would look like in a mobile, connected, iPhone/iPad world. And which is why, just as the iTunes store completely upended the sale and distribution of digital media, Square just might upend the entire real-world payments industry--whether it meant to or not.

Read More:Most Creative People 2011: Jack Dorsey/ Square

E.B. Boyd is FastCompany.com's Silicon Valley reporter.Twitter.Email.


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воскресенье, 22 мая 2011 г.

Web Anonymizers And The Arab Spring

Twitter revolution

Fast Companyrecently had the opportunity to speak with David Gorodyansky, CEO ofAnchorFree, on the use of his company's popular Hotspot Shield software during the Arab Spring. Although Hotspot Shield is best known as a product used to access services such as Hulu and the BBC iPlayer across national borders, it alsoplayed a crucial rolein organizing uprisings in Egypt, Tunisia, and Libya. Users put a series of web anonymizers to work toaccess Facebook, Twitter, and other servicesduring uprisings throughout the Middle East.

Can you give a short history of AnchorFree?

“We started AnchorFree in late 2005. The idea was to enable free products that millions could use to be secure and private online. We wanted to create a system which is totally private, totally secure, and where the user is in control. As you surf the web, obviously, every site tracks your behavior. Our early users were primarily in North America and Western Europe.

But in 2008, we noticed an interesting trend. People were getting online and using our products in emergent markets. At first, we were wondering what was going on since that wasn't the original intent of our product. But people in emerging markets found another use for Hotspot Shield: Besides being secure and private, it could also bypass any censorship or any blockages in this region. We found out that out of 2 billion Internet users worldwide, more than 600 million live in places that censor the web--primarily in China and the Middle East. That's a serious number. We look at our market as containing 1.5 billion potential users--600 million that are censored and another 800 or 900 million who live in the western world but need private browsing.

Today we have around 9 million unique monthly users who...visit about 2 billion pages per month through AnchorFree Hotspot Shield. We encrypt and secure every page they visit. Users' IP addresses, which are linked to their identity, are thrown out by the service and AnchorFree creates a new address. Even we don't know the user's identity--which protects them from the good guys, the bad guys, and ourselves.

So how then is the advertising on Hotspot Shield targeted?

Advertising is targeted through a series of patents. To summarize the secret sauce, the user's identity remains secret but if they are looking at pages for cars or for furniture, then they could be targeted with car ads or furniture ads.Googlecan target ads with cars or furniture (to the secret user) and so could anyone else. Basically, we anonymize the user's identity but we do not prevent any tracking based on cookies or so on. If a user is really interested in stopping this, they can also turn on private browsing in Firefox or another browser so no one can ever see the searches that they are doing. That's up to the user, but we do make their identity private. Even if someone asked us, we don't know who the user is. But pages can be broken down into categories, and we can target ads according to which of the 2 billion pages users are looking at--we just don't know who the user is.

Can you tell us about how your product is used in regions with web censorship?

During the uprisings in the Middle East--and even before that, during the Iranian elections--whenFacebookandTwitterwere getting all this press for helping people to organize, a lot of people got onto those two services through us. In China, users are able to access any kinds of pages they want through us. We also put 5 million users a month onto Google and 2-3 million a month onto both Facebook and YouTube in regions where those services are censored in places like Turkey and China.

We are also a huge enabler for Skype. The monopolies that control the mobile phone companies in many regions don't like Skype and restrict access to the service in many parts of the world. But for us, we see ourselves becoming a social business that helps people and helps the world. We're fascinated and encouraged by the fact that we are running a consistently profitable business that grows 200% a year in page growth and revenue, but that also makes a very real social impact. We allow users to access information that they normally would not be able to.

Where besides the United States do you have the biggest number of users?

We have users in 100 countries. We have around 1.5 million users in China, many in Western Europe. The Middle East is huge, especially places like Dubai. So far, it's not so much places like Iran (that give mass numbers of users). But Egypt saw a huge jump from 100,000 users to a million overnight during the uprisings. Looking at our traffic, we can see when news is happening around the world. We know when people are sleeping, praying, and eating in the Middle East due to traffic patterns.

So there's a lot of traffic from Dubai and the United Arab Emirates, right?

There is. I think one of the reasons for that is the expat community there. We have another product called ExpatShield that is specifically geared towards expats (who cannot see firewalled sites in the Emirates). But in Libya, Tunisia, and Egypt, our traffic jumped.

We could also see things no one else was reporting. In Libya, we could tell that the Internet would come up in the morning and completely shut down at night. We didn't see that in the press; to the best of my knowledge, no one reported that anyway. We have usage in 100 countries, but nowhere does traffic drop to zero at night--but in Libya, that is exactly what happened. My guess is that they would turn on the Internet in the morning so oil companies would function, but they would shut it off at night so people couldn't organize after work. But that's my guess.

Were there any problems dealing with additional traffic from the Arab Spring?

We didn't have problems dealing with the traffic. We're very well-funded, profitable and scale extremely well. Our infrastructure is distributed in nine data centers around the world and we have a whole team of engineers devoted to scaling infrastructure according to scale. As a result, we didn't cap bandwidth.

Are there any markets you had difficulty working in?

Yes, some places try to block our services. It's interesting--our website was blocked in China, but since then, usage quadrupled. What we found was users emailed the product to each other, so we set up an email autoresponder that would send a message with the product attatched. Hotspot Shield was spreading almost virally, but the censorship was still a pain in the ass, of course.

We had one attack on our servers around two or three years ago, but since then nothing. We go through 2 billion pages a month, which requires huge amounts of servers. In terms of scale, we deal with almost as much bandwidth as eBay. Taking that down would be very hard.

Any plans for the future?

Our plans are to continue growing organically; our goal is to go from 9 million unique monthly users to 100 million. We hope to get there by 2014--that's our real vision. We are also now selling an ad-free paid project in conjunction with Webroot as well.

Note: This interview was edited for length and readability.

{Image: Flickr userAhmadHammoud}

For more stories like this, follow@fastcompanyon Twitter. Email Neal Ungerleider, the author of this article,here.

Read More:Syria's Facebook Wars


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суббота, 21 мая 2011 г.

The Federal Government Wants To Help You Name Your Kid

baby with pacifier

Sure, there are a plethora of baby-naming apps on the iPhone. But how many of them were created by humble bureaucrats toiling away in the deep, dark recesses of the Social Security Administration?

As of this week, one--now that the SSA has released its new app,Baby Name Playroom, which reaches into its databases to serve up the most popular baby names from the past 130 years. It also includes links to troves of useful information on the SSA website, like disability benefits for children and how to file for a Social Security number for your baby. It's cuddlier-looking than one might expect from an app created by a government agency (though we're not sure we'd recommend naming your kid based on its"Shake to get a random name!"feature).

Baby Name Playroom app

While Baby Name Playroom doesn't necessarily include some of the features other baby-naming apps, like the origins of particular names, SSA CIO Frank Baitman tellsFast Companythat part of the idea behind the project was simply to test drive the app-building process.

"We recognize that the mobile platform is going to be hugely important to Americans--and to government and business to be able to get their jobs done in years to come,"he says.

Braitman should know about looking ahead. A former business-strategy consultant in the private sector, he was once a director at the Palo Alto-based Institute for the Future, helping Fortune 500 clients understand how emerging technologies could impact--and disrupt--their industries.

Part of Braitman's long-term goal is to help the SSA move more services online--and raise awareness about them among the general population. Apps, Braitman says, can help deliver some of those services.

"There are not an insignificant number of people who don’t have access to the Internet, but they have a mobile phone. If that’s the best way to reach them, we want to do so,"he says.

{Image: Flickr userKitt Walker}

E.B. Boyd is FastCompany.com’s Silicon Valley reporter.Twitter.Email.


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пятница, 20 мая 2011 г.

5 Tips To Separate Personal And Professional Life Online

"My life and biz is so intertwined in every way that it's hard to make that clean separation on and offline."That's what Candace Alper (@NameYourTuneCDs) said on Twitter when I asked about the importance of separating your personal and business life on Facebook. As an entrepreneur who runs a made-to-order children's CD company, she is comfortable mixing business with pleasure online. Monica Roddey (@MicaR) agrees. She says"my online persona = my 'real life' persona ... what you see is what you get."

I fall into Alper's and Roddey's camp. When I signed up for Facebook years ago, I opened it up to anyone and everyone. Although I now also maintain a fan page, it's still hard for me to refuse friend invites that make their way into my personal account. However, the majority of the responses I received disagreed with this approach. Matt Hall (@mattwiter) writes that"you simply don't combine the two to begin with ... that is a sure mistake."For Kathy Dabrowska (@_katdee), she says"you can't be ON all the time ... you need a place where marketing yourself is not needed."

In theory I agree that separation is a good thing. With more employers lurking on social profiles and more people oversharing online, it just makes sense to keep some things private. However, the reality is that sometimes the tools make it difficult to split up your networks. Here are five tips to help you get closer.

1. Use different networks for different purposes

Jon Lax (@jonlax) uses LinkedIn for business and Facebook for personal. This seems to be a pretty safe and standard approach for a lot of people. After all, LinkedIn just doesn't lend itself to the more personal information that is expected on Facebook. If you do this, it's important to warn people in your professional life who are expecting to be accepted as a Facebook friend. In other words, let them know gently that LinkedIn is where your like to do business.

2. Create a Facebook personal profile AND brand page

Mike Frey is a fan of separation, so he maintains a private account and a company page. This way it's clear that the latter is for professional networking only. To create a public page simply go to thePagessection on Facebook. You have the option to create a page as a Business, Company, Public Figure, Brand, or Community Cause. One thing to note, until you have 25 fans you cannot get a custom URL for your page (an important part of your overall branding).

3. Push your business contacts to Twitter

Maury Estabrooks (@maurye) thinks using Twitter as a professional networking tool and Facebook for personal relationships is ideal. Since Twitter works best as a public forum, this is a solid approach. The only downside to this option is that your tweeting profile lacks the infrastructure to expand on your business information and history, so it's limited as a professional tool.

4. Tweak Facebook privacy settings

Ross Simmonds (@TheCoolestCat) believes that toying with your settings on the world's number one social network will help you to maintain separation. With these new-ish Facebook options you are able to decide which group of friends sees what. To do this go into your Privacy Settings and adjust the options within"Sharing on Facebook."This way you can adjust who can see what.

5. Take your private life offline altogether

As Chris McLachlin wrote me on Facebook, we have given up a lot of our privacy already. He mentions that everything we share is in the"public domain,"so people might as well get used to it or limit what they say. Out of the above tips, I most closely agree with this statement. While I have a personal Facebook account, I never share any photos there that I wouldn't be comfortable showing publicly. I also refuse to broadcast my phone number or address with anyone, and I more or less just assume that privacy settings won't help me that much if someone in my network decides to breach my trust.

Read moreWork Smart:

4 Painless Ways To Avoid Being A Digital Pack Rat

The 5 Best Free Tools For Making Slick Infographics

{Image: Flickr userKevin N. Murphy; homepage image: Flickr userMel B.}


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четверг, 19 мая 2011 г.

iFive: Cloud iTunes Imminent, Microsoft Argues With Intel, U.K. To Revamp IP Law, Google Against Face IDs,"Like" On 33% Of Web

1.Apple's cloud music service (possibly to be called iCloud) is looking more like a done deal--"multiple"sourcesare sayingApple's just signed a deal with EMI and is close to signing Sony and Universal too. Considering we've heard a while back that Warner is already on board, this means that unlike Google's or Amazon's attempts, Apple's cloud iTunes will, when it arrives, have very broad industry backing...which could let it sew up the market.

2. Microsoft has made anofficial attemptto rebuff Intel's claims that Windows 8 will be fragmented and lack backwards compatibility: Intel's words were"factually inaccurate"and"misleading."We don't know which bits in particular, nor what MS's plans actually are...so this story now has an even more unusual angle--Intel and Microsoft have been close allies for decades. Are they now falling out?

3. The U.K. authorities seem set to supporta revampof the nation's 300-year-old copyright laws, in a move that may set a global precedent. An independent review has this week concluded that IP protection laws were founded in a century when most of today's innovations weren't even conceivable--and the U.K.'s creative industries,"high technology businesses,"and smaller enterprises needed new laws so their progress wasn't"impeded."

4. Google's Eric Schmidt haswarned againstfacial recognition technology being used in certain ways online--such as automatically scanning faces in imagery to aid its search systems. The tech has extreme privacy-violating risks, and it's"surprising accuracy"makes it more worrying--to the point it becomes"creepy"and it's unlikely, Schmidt says, that Google will be doing it soon."Some company"will though, he warned, intimating Facebook.

5. In a study commissioned by theWall Street Journal, the social media"Like"and share phenomenon has spread very far across the Web: One third of the top 1,000 most visited websites have Facebook's"Like"button in place, 25% have an option from Google, and 20% bear Twitter's code. Meanwhile TV shows have received1.65 billion Likeson Facebook--suggesting that Facebook may be more important to the TV industry than we had thought.

Chat about this news withKit Eaton on TwitterandFast Companytoo.


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понедельник, 16 мая 2011 г.

Amazon's Android March: PopCap Games Signs An Exclusive Deal

PopCap Games

For any of the 50 million app downloaders who've racked their brains or thwapped their thumbs on an iPad or iPhone touch screen full of digital jewels, PopCap Games--or at least its runaway hit,Bejeweled--willring a bell. The company recently expanded its operations intosocial gamingwith the acquisition of ZipZapGames. Now it'ssigned a dealwith Amazon to make its first two Android-compatible games in the U.S. market exclusively available through the Amazon Appstore--not the official Google app market or any other Android app clearing house.

Chuzzlewill arrive in the appstore for a two-week period exclusivity starting May 17th, andPlants vs. Zombieswill be joining it later this month. In an extra boost for PopCap, and one that'll swing a bright spotlight onto Amazon's Android code house, the games will be free for the first day of their availability--then $2.99 after that. In its press release, PopCap mentions its senior director of global product Giordano Contestabile's remarks on using Amazon:"We'll significantly extend the reach of our top franchises to legions of new mobile customers,"and Amazon's category leader Aaron Rubenson is noted as saying"PopCap is a brand synonymous with great mobile apps."

But there's a far more interesting story here: Amazon is really trying to make its Android app store the one major go-to location for apps on Google's smartphone platform, with its curated approach that's highly reminiscent of Apple's stance on its own path-breaking App Store. In fact, Apple defends against alternative marketplaces popping up for its iOS devices, whereas Google does not--which has opened up the space for Amazon, which neither designs Android code nor sells an Android phone or tablet.

And there you get to the crux of it all. By signing up companies like PopCap with such clever deals, Amazon is building up the powers of its Android appstore and, sure, earning some income. But it could be really all about building a footprint for its rumored up-comingtablet.

{Image: Flickr userianlamont}

Chat about this news withKit Eaton on TwitterandFast Companytoo.


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воскресенье, 15 мая 2011 г.

Mike Tyson, App Maker:"I Don't Want To Be A Dinosaur"

Mike Tyson

"I never hung around geeks much,"Mike Tyson tellsFast Company. But when Tyson met John and Sam Shahidi, founders ofRockLive, and they flew him out to South By Southwest in Austin, Texas, to meet a herd of techies, many of whom grew up playingMike Tyson's Punch-Out!!, the champ was smitten."Afterward, when I dropped him off at the airport, he was literally teary eyed,"John Shahidi says. The heavyweight champion of the world had just been surrounded by enthusiastic gamers, programmers, and nerds."He looked at me and said, 'John, I've never done anything like this in my life.'"

In the Shahidi brothers, Tyson says, he found the perfect partners. They'd started with a silly app calledRunPee, which told you what moments in movies were safe for you to miss when you had to go to the bathroom. Itcaught Chad Ochocinco's eye, and the brotherssoon became expertsin getting big-name sports stars to collaborate with them on apps and games--without major sponsorship deals.

Mike Tyson: Main Eventis their biggest hit to date. Without any marketing, the game became a Twitter sensation, garnering tweets from Ashton Kutcher, Charlie Sheen, and dozens of other celebrities. It shot to the No. 2 slot in the Apple App Store within 72 hours; it reached the top slot in the U.K.; and it has been downloaded in over 90 countries. When I first spoke to the Shahidis a month ago, the game was just two weeks old, but players were already playing a collective 10 million minutes per week.

Fast Companycaught up with Tyson to talk about his new love for geeks, why this app is so meaningful to him and, how his game could soon let you take your aggressions out on Charlie Sheen, Tea Partiers, and even President Obama.

Mike, why did you decide to get aboard with this app?

I met John, and he's just a great guy, and I met his brother, and we decided to go forward with this, full speed ahead. They're just amazing guys.

How'd you like going to South by Southwest?

I never hung around geeks very much. That was amazing. I just think those guys were uninhibited, they were in their own world. It's just beautiful stuff, something you never experience before. You have this opinion about geeks. My brother comes from the geeky world, he played hockey with the other guys."What you doing playing hockey in Bed Stuy, Brooklyn?"Your mind didn't go that far back then. You thought hockey was just isolated to one race of people.

How have your fans liked the game?

Yeah, some of them thought it was a little complicated. I guess we had to make it a little simpler. I think it's awesome. It's got updates.

John tells me you take an active role in shaping the game. How did being boxing champion prepare you to be a game designer?

Common sense. And what you think people may like. It's all about catering to the people, believe it or not. That's what life's about, being in service to the people, people who are less fortunate.

What's the part of the design you're most involved with? Coming up with the bad guys?

Absolutely, 100%. Especially characters like Charlie Sheen. I see that, it makes me want to smash Charlie's face. As a matter of fact we should get some of the people from the Tea Party in there. Might want to put President Obama in there, get those guys in there too, for if you have a pugnacious attitude towards somebody in the Obama Administration.

Are you a gamer?

I play PlayStation. My game, I just started playing, really, believe it or not. I'm a late starter, I started playing games in 2008.

What took you so long? Why didn't you play games in the past?

Most of time I was training for a fight or had to go to court for something, so I didn't have time to play these games.

Fair enough. You joined Twitter over the summer, and your game has really taken off through Twitter. What do you think of Twitter?

Hey, Twitter's pretty outrageous. Like I was saying earlier, it's just the future, and I want to be part of the future. I don't want to be a dinosaur all my life.

You feel like a dinosaur?

It appears that way. You're just stagnant sometimes, you become a dinosaur. It becomes difficult to broaden your horizons.

This game helps you not stagnate, you're saying?

100%, man, this is some good stuff. I'm just enjoying this time of my life, middle age. I'm enjoying it more than I anticipated enjoying it.

What do you think about the future of technology?

I think technology is going so far that we have to hold it back some. Technology can be used to spy on us 24 hours a day. Every home, every igloo, every private place can have a bug in it.

When I was a kid I really liked to playMike Tyson's Punch-Out!!at the arcade.

Yeah, but it's nothing like this game. It's like night and day!

Can we talk about money for a second? My understanding is that there is, actually, some revenue share on the back end, but it's tied solely to the performance of the game.

I don't know anything about it. If there is, I haven't heard of it yet. I'm sure whoever has my back knows about it.

Most games, celebrities get a big up-front sponsorship deal. Why didn't you insist on that with this game? You could be making a killing!

Hey man, it's not about making a killing. It's about serving the people. It's about serving the people.

I have a business venture that will serve the people. Would you sponsor it for me?

Long as you got my man John with you.

FollowFast Companyon Twitter.EmailDavid Zax, the author of this post, orfollow himon Twitter.

{Images: Flickr userssorawoemerille; homepage image: Flickr user-Bert23- www.aerosolplanet.com}

Read More:How Mike Tyson and Chad Ochocinco Made the Ballsiest App on the Planet


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суббота, 14 мая 2011 г.

This Is What It Really Looks Like When The Coal Industry Targets Kids

kid with coal briquettes

We recently looked atCoal Cares, a parody site that imagines what it would look like if Peabody Energy--the world's largest private coal company--launched a pro-coal website for kids (Bieber-themed inhalers for everyone!). But the coal industry's actual marketing for kids is much more insidious, and markedly less funny.

Friends of the Earth launched a campaign this week asking Scholastic to"stop selling elementary school students on coal."What exactly is Scholastic doing? The American Coal Foundation recently hired the company to produceThe United States of Energy,a set of pro-coal materials intended to teach fourth-grade kids about the different energy sources used to power the U.S. The materials were distributed to classrooms around the country.

At first glance, the coal-sponsored worksheets seem benign enough. But the materials fail to mention any of the disadvantages of coal--like the fact, for example, that coal burning is linked to numeroushealth problems, including asthma and bronchitis. Take a look at the map below (larger PDFhere).This would be fine for coal marketing materials. It's less acceptable when it's what we're teaching our kids as fact.The map seemingly runs through all the benefits of different energy sources. But Bill Bigelow, Curriculum Editor of Rethinking Schools magazine, reads between the lines (PDF):

The map’s subtext is that we’d be lost without coal:"Coal is produced in half of the 50 states, and America has 27 percent of the world’s coal resources. In fact, America has more coal than any nation has any single energy resource... Coal is the source of half of the electricity produced in the United States..."The only solar icon on the map is in the Mojave Desert, implying that solar may work in deserts, but the rest of us need to rely on more conventional sources of power, like burning coal. The mapping exercise treats all sources of energy as fundamentally equal: One is as good as another, except that coal is a lot better, students will infer, because we have so much of it.

TheRelated Resourcessection of the United States of Energy website is even more blatant, recommending that teachers supplement their curriculum with information from the American Coal Foundation, Women in Mining, the Colorado School of Mines, and the American Coal Council, among other similar sites.

It's not surprising that the coal industry would attempt to spawn a generation of coal-cheerleading kids, but why is Scholastic getting on board? The company emailed us a statement explaining that it works with a number of non-profits, government agencies, and corporations on supplemental educational materials; a program with the National Institute on Drug Abuse, for example, teaches teens about the science of drug addiction. Which would be comparable if it taught them that all drugs, from aspirin to heroin, were roughly the same.

As for the ultra-simplified explanation of the coal industry in the United States of Energy, Scholastic says:

Since the program is designed for elementary schoolchildren, the materialsdo not attempt to cover all of the complex issues around the sourcing andconsumption of energy. Rather, they focus on grade-appropriateinformation about the geography of energy sources in the U.S. and provide links toadditional resources, including those provided by the federal government, forteachers who want to pursue a deeper, more complex discussion aboutenergy.

Kyle Good, Scholastic's Vice President of Corporate Communications, tells us that there are no plans to repeat the program. But in ablog postfrom late last year, Alma Hale Paty, Executive Director, American Coal Foundation, seems enthusiastic about the prospect of turning kids pro-coal through educational materials:"We are in the third year of our commitment to the partnership with Scholastic. Our success is the result of taking significant risk to substantially increase our outreach--to reach that 'critical mass' of teachers."This success includes an increase in traffic to the American Coal Foundation website from about 8,000 visits per month before 2008 to over 24,000 visits in late 2010. Paty's post suggests that this is the result of its partnership with Scholastic.

The Scholastic program is probably not the last we'll see of the coal industry attempting to preach the wonders of its toxic product to kids. Can we at least have theBieber inhalersinstead?

Update:Scholastic offered up another statement today admitting that it wasn't"vigilant enough"when thinking about the potential effects of the sponsorship:

"Scholastic's children's books, magazines, reading programs and website content are used in most American classrooms - a responsibility and trust that we built through painstaking work through 90 years of service to teachers and schools.  A tiny percentage of this material is produced with sponsors, including government agencies, non-profit associations and some corporations. This week, Scholastic came under criticism for an 11"x 16"poster map which displays different sources of energy--coal, nuclear, hydroelectric, solar, wind and natural gas--not so much for the content of the poster but primarily its sponsorship by the American Coal Foundation.  We acknowledge that the mere fact of sponsorship may call into question the authenticity of the information, and therefore conclude that we were not vigilant enough as to the effect of sponsorship in this instance.   We have no plans to further distribute this particular program. Because we have always been guided by our belief that we can do better, we are undertaking a thorough review of our policy and editorial procedures on sponsored content, and we will publish only those materials which are worthy of our reputation as 'the most trusted name in learning.'"

 

{Image: Flickr userTimothyJ}

Reach Ariel Schwartz viaTwitteroremail.

Read More:Coal Cares Site, A Brilliant Hoax Of The Coal Industry


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пятница, 13 мая 2011 г.

iFive: LimeWire Pays Out For Piracy, Square Hires Apple Engineer, Cisco's Worst Job Cuts, Sony's Sales Suffer, Winklevii Sued

1. AttentionGoogle--this is what happens when you anger the record labels: LimeWire and its former CEO Mark Gortonhave agreed to pay$105 million to close a legal suit alleging LimeWire encouraged users to share pirated music. It's a result of a court ruling last year that the P2P service and CEO could be liable for the illegal sharing actions of its users, and is one of the biggest music settlements yet.

2. Square, the novel mobile credit card reading solution, haspulled offa small hiring coup. It's confirmed that Mike Thole, previously anAppleengineer with responsibilities for the UI of Safari on the Mac desktop and in iOS implementations, has now joined Square's team. Thole also developed a search app called iSeek, available on the iOS App Store. and though we don't know what he's doing at Square, we can imagine its user experience may get a lot slicker.

3.Ciscois braced to deal with the worst everround of job cutsin its history. To meet an ambitious goal of slashing $1 billion in costs, up to 4,000 jobs may go in the next few months--or about 4% of its workforce. The company has been mismanaged, according to its CEO, and ventures in expansion like the ill-fated Flip camera purchase need to be more controlled in the future.

4. Sony's ongoing PlayStation Network outage, after a series of high-profile and potentially damaging hack attacks, is having anunfortunate halo effect: It's now reported that retail sales of PS3 consoles are suffering, and more users than normal are returning them to stores to swap for Xboxes. Game-buying habits are also changing, with more sales seen on non-Sony systems. The pressure to get the PSN back alive is mounting.

5. The ongoing IP and compensation lawsuit overFacebook, driven by the Winklevoss twins just took an interesting twist: Boston developer Wayne Chang hasbeen granted court timefor a suit alleging his company is owed a share in the $65 million settlement the twins were awarded by Facebook. Chang says he had an MoI for 15% of ConnectU, the Winklevoss' company, thanks to code work he did for them.

Chat about this news withKit Eaton on TwitterandFast Companytoo.


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среда, 11 мая 2011 г.

Google Would Like To Wirelessly Control Your Lightbulbs With Android@Home

LED bulb

Googlehas already made its intentions to dive bomb into the energy spaceclear, but so far, it has left out how this relates to its Android phones. But at this week's Google I/O developers conference, the company announced its new Android@Home technology will allow users to control appliances directly from their phones--starting with a wirelessly connected LED bulb next year.

This is not entirely new territory. Companies likeControl4already allow users to control appliances--lights, sprinkler systems, air conditioning, and more--from their cell phones and in-home touch screens, but the technology is pricey. Google and its thousands of Android developers will presumably bring prices down to Earth and make remote appliance control cheap, or perhaps even free. The company is relying on its thousands of developers to make accessible home automation a reality.

First up for Android@Home: a wirelessly connected LED bulb from Lighting Science Group that can be controlled via an Android phone or tablet, all using Google's own wireless protocol to connect home devices. The bulb will be released later this year, according toEarth2Tech.

This isn't just a boon for the lazy among us; it also makes it easy to save energy at home. If you forget to turn off the air conditioning while you're at work, for example, you can quickly do it with your phone. The same thing goes nearly every other home appliance. You'll never have to get up from your couch again--but if you want to, you'll probably control that from your tablet, too.

{Image: Lighting Science Group}

Reach Ariel Schwartz viaTwitteroremail.


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вторник, 10 мая 2011 г.

The Human Genome Project: How 23 Chromosomes Made An $800 Billion Economic Impact

Human Genome Project

The Human Genome Project--a $3.8-billion international human genome mapping project that ran from 1988 to 2003--wasn't just a money-sucking vanity initiative that only reaped profits for personal genetic testing companies like23andMe. The project has, in fact, driven $796 billion in economic impact and generated $244 billion in total personal income, according to a new report fromBattelle. Sometimes, pricey long-term science projects are well worth it.

According to the report, the nascent genetic research industry generated $67 billion in U.S. economic output and created 310,000 jobs in 2010 alone."We were surprised by just how large the economic impact had been,"says Greg Lucier, CEO of Life Technologies (the foundation that sponsored Battelle's research)."What was even more interesting for me is that we're just getting going. The ability now to read genes quickly and economically is opening up entirely new vistas of opportunity."

Lucier points out that it is already commonplace for pharmaceutical companies to do DNA sequencing for developing new drugs, and companies likeMonsantoare using gene-mapping technologies in crop development (which may or may not be a good thing). The HGP evenhelpedauthorities to confirm Osama Bin Laden's death with DNA testing.

And that nearly $800 billion is just the start of the money that will start rolling in as technology improves."In my view, DNA sequencing will become as ubiquitous as the stethoscope in medicine,"says Lucier. This could happen sooner rather than later; the same sequencing services that cost billions of dollars 10 years ago cost only thousands of dollars today.

"Companies like ours have been investing hundreds of millions of dollars in development {of DNA sequencing technology. Our knowledge of chemistry and computing have been combined to where you can do things at the molecular level quickly,"explains Lucier.

This may mean radically improved drugs targeted at patients with specific genes--or aGattaca-like future where everyone is judged on their genetic makeup. At the end of the day, we'll bet the $3.8 billion turns out to be a fantastic investment.

{Image: Flickr userMichab37}

Reach Ariel Schwartz viaTwitteroremail.


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понедельник, 9 мая 2011 г.

SCVNGR, American Express Make It Less Awkward To Redeem Daily Deals

Have you ever had the experience of buying a deal from Groupon or LivingSocial, getting to the merchant (a restaurant, let's say), and awkwardly giving the server a crumpled piece of paper to prove that you deserve $20 worth of food for just $10?LevelUp, a recently-released app from Google Ventures-backed game platformSCVNGR, wants to lower the daily deal embarrassment factor, courtesy of a partnership with American Express that allows users to redeem deals without having to show a printed-out piece of paper or hold up their cell phone to merchants.

LevelUp is similar to other daily deal sites, but with one big difference: instead of providing one-off deals, the six week-old service provides three levels of deals (good, better, and best). So a user might unlock the first deal at a rock-climbing gym, for example, by purchasing a discounted introduction to rock-climbing class. Once that deal has been unlocked, the user would gain access to a second deal (an intermediate class and gear rental), and once that is purchased, the user gets the level three deal of a discounted membership to the gym.

Whereas sites like Groupon and LivingSocial get a 50% commission when a user cashes in a deal, Scvngr gets no commission from users who unlock a level one deal--instead, the company gets a 25% commission from both the level two and level three deals."If we can't get customers back on time two and three, we haven't done our job,"  Seth Priebatsch,Scvngr's founder and"chief ninja", tellsFast Company.

Enter LevelUp's partnership with American Express. In addition to the promise of getting ever more enticing deals from merchants, LevelUp users can now paperlessly redeem their deals. In practical terms, this means that users can send purchased deals directly to their American Express cards through a one-time linking process, give the card to a participating merchant, and get an instant digital receipt via email and a cell phone push notification.

"For a card member, this means no more coupons, no more printing anything out, no more showing your phone at the point of sale,"explained David Wolf, Vice President of Global Marketing Capabilities at American Express, at a press conference. It is, in other words, the end of the awkward print-out. And for merchants, it means no more dealing with the hassle of daily deal coupons at the point of sale--AmEx does all the dirty work behind the scenes.

The AmEx partnership is only available at the moment for a LevelUp deal at select Levi's stores in San Francisco, Philadelphia, and Boston (one store in each city)--and the LevelUp app itself is only active in Boston and Philadelphia, with the exception of the San Francisco Levi's deal.

But LevelUp is expanding to new cities this summer, and if all goes as planned, the American Express partnership will also expand in the near future.

{Image credits: Scvngr}

Reach Ariel Schwartz viaTwitteroremail.


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воскресенье, 8 мая 2011 г.

Facebook Director Of Local:"We're Not In Direct Competition With Groupon"

Reach for the Sky Happiness

WhenFacebooklaunched their new Deals service last week, they were inevitably accused of tromping onGroupon’s territory. (Groupon likely saw it that way.) But Facebook Director of Local Emily White said that's not the case. Facebook wasn’t so much interested in deals for deals’ sake, she said. Instead, the company was interested in deals that enabled people to do things together. This is the company, after all, who says its mission is to make the world more connected.

Fast Companycaught up with White on Thursday to learn more--and understand what Facebook’s entrance into this space does indeed portend for Groupon and others in the deals industry.

“For us it’s around sharing commerce experiences with your friends online and off,” White toldFast Company, sticking close to Facebook's vision.“We are going for social experiences that are distributed, and shared, and happen in a social manner. We believe that people come to Facebook to interact with their friends. To the extent that we can make that happen even more easily is really cool for us and for the users.”

White described how placing Deals in the Facebook ecosystem creates a cycle, the company believes, that both produces high-quality experiences for users but also benefits merchants.

The system does a lot of filtering for users, White said, so that, when a user decides on a deal, they have greater confidence that it’s one they’re going to like. While some users rely on Deals emails to learn about opportunities, most discovery, White said, happens either in the Newsfeed--when a friend posts a Deal they took advantage of--or when a friend shares a deal with another friend--both of which offer a measure of validation. (It's the sharing power, we'vesaidbefore, that's the true power behind deals.)

“The best conversions for us are when I find a deal, and I share it with my friends. Which is not a surprise, because that’s what people come to Facebook to do,” White said.

Added to that, when a Facebook user runs across a deal at a merchant that a friend of theirs already frequents, that friend’s check-in will appear in the deal message (assuming they’ve given permission for check-ins to be shared)--providing further validation that this might be a worthwhile experience.

White also said the social nature of the deals that Facebook offers increases the chance that merchants are going to reap users with the potential to become loyal customers, rather than people solely on the hunt for a discount.

“Maybe you like a restaurant and you see a deal for it, and you want to go,” White said. “And you bring {two other friends} who have never been there before. What better new customers to bring to a restaurant than the friends of a fan?”

“And then it’s about taking a photo at that dinner, of the three of us, eating together and uploading it {to Facebook}, and eventually tagging the business, and that showing up on the business’s Wall, and the owner being able to see that and get that feedback,” she continued. “And it builds on itself. Another friend of yours goes and looks at that {business’s} page and sees that you had an interaction with that place.”

Given Facebook’s focus, White said, the company isn’t necessarily competing with other deal companies.

“If you look at the deals that we are running and the way we’ve constructed it, you can tell that this is not in direct competition with Groupon,” White said. That compay is in a wide variety of spaces, including “Home& Garden, selling window cleaning. That’s just not {what we’re focused on}.”

Read More:Most Innovative Companies 2011:FacebookandGroupon

{Image: Flickr userqianshuo}

E.B. Boyd is FastCompany.com's Silicon Valley reporter.Twitter.Email.


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суббота, 7 мая 2011 г.

Face The Nation: How Sensory Logic Sees Secrets In Candidates'Mugs

GOP pres candidates faces

Although President Barack Obama is substantially boosted by the killing of Osama Bin Laden, and a relatively unknown fewRepublicans debatedlast night in Greenville, South Carolina, Campaign 2012 nevertheless is starting totake shape. During the campagign, many Americans will meet GOP contenders for the first time. Butwhatthe presidential hopefuls say may not matter that much. Their faces may be doing the heavy lifting. A scientific, emotional“facial coding” of the candidates and their expressions may determine who gains traction and who gets the nomination.

Campaigns and the public will soon be inundated with information on how candidates are tracking and their odds for success ("the horse race"). Politicians and the populace will turn to social media to influence and gauge our opinions and moods. But few candidates and voters are likely aware of“facial media” (you heard it here first) and the science of “facial coding.”

After the 2010 the midterm elections, more campaigns than ever began usingneuromarketing techniques, that is, studying the brains of voters in order to craft messages that would appeal to them and win votes at the polls. Turning the tables in 2011, neuromarketing researchers can now measurecandidates’ own brain-driven facial movements and emotions, in order to assess their performance, fine-tune campaign marketing, or even predict election outcomes.

Dan Hill, president ofSensory Logicand author ofEmotionomicsandAbout Face, is a facial coding expert who works with leading Fortune 150 companies, professional sports teams, and government agencies (e.g. TSA). Sensory Logic helps clients who market to consumers by measuring their emotional facial responses to various stimuli in an effort maximize appeal. Companies also hire Hill to assist in employee recruitment and talent management.

Hill has been diagnosing candidates and predicting elections since 2004. In October 2007, he had Obama 2-1 emerging as the Democratic presidential nominee when a famous former White House advisor and current GOP pundit had him at 20-1. He was ahead of the pack in predicting the demises of Rudy Giuliani and Fred Thompson. Historically, Hill says, the happier candidate triumphs (think frowny Dole, Kerry, McCain, etc.). Sensory Logic uses proprietary Cartesian Graphs to measure and score the impact, appeal, and engagement, emoted and emitted, by the candidate’s face. A person can show four types of smiles but a “’true smile’ which is a strong natural smile seen around the eyes and mouth” is more rare, distinctive, and powerful. Hill’s analysis suggests when a politician should drop out or not even enter the race (when his heart, or face, isnot in it).

Fast Company, exclusively, met with Hill to understand his methodology and get an initial read and deconstruction of the Republican faces of 2012. This first-ever facial coding of the full presidential field is based on Hill’s methodology, which correlates 23 Facial Action Units to 7 Core Emotionsplusthe widely accepted Big 5 Personality Traits model producing Sensory Logic’s EmoTraits®. {Themethodologybuilds off of a 19th century foundation laid by biologist Charles Darwin and refined more recently by Paul Ekman.}

Several of Hill’s conclusions drawn from the candidate analysis:

•"Chris Christie (who says he won't run for president) is the most negative, making him a logical VP choice to tap into the Tea Party's anti-establishment anger."

•"Mitch Daniels and John Huntsman are the antithesis of Trump: Trump is most intense, while they are the least intense and the most understated."

•"If Romney wins the nomination, Buddy Roemer could be a natural VP choice--fellow businessman and the same emotional profile while adding regional diversity.”

For our own visualization of Hill's full analysis of the current crop of prospective candidates--and what their faces are saying about their mood and their odds, click here.

But how reliable and useful are the analyses and findings? Hill tells Fast Company he has not been hired by political campaigns; but his client list is growing, diversifying, and becoming more global, he says. Recently Sensory Logic clients asked that their names be removed from the firm’s Web site due to project confidentiality and competitive reasons. With the assistance of Ekman, theCIAuses their own facial coding and“microexpressions” analysis in recruiting and conducting espionage. What did they recently glean from Bin Laden’s facial gestures? Hill also revealed he was asked though the BBC by an unknown sponsor to interview and code people in Karachi, Pakistan (he declined).

Fred Davis, a seasoned political consultant who has advised George W. Bush and John McCain on their presidential campaigns (he will soon work for former US Ambassador to China,Jon Huntsman, Jr., whose entry into the presidential race is all but assured), extols the tactics of neuromarketing and has confirmed their use in his past campaign work. He thinks Hill’s facial coding approach and findings are interesting but says perhaps just a"clearly written analysis of what people feel in their gut when they see a candidate… I'd put this technology in the category of extensive focus groups on demeanor and personality. Nice to have, but quite a luxury. {It} probably never would be given significance."

Hill concedes some challenges and limitations of political facial coding. The data is based on his own observation and coding and using other (not as proficient or expert) coders might mean less reliability and consistency. Also, the analysis and findings derive from a limited sample of candidate speeches. What if the sample pool happens to be based on a candidate’s few bad hair days? And while politicians cannot fake their facial muscle movements and those corresponding “core emotions,” they could fudge to a degree and manipulate the"personality traits"they want to project.

Darryl Howard,who has applied the neuromarketing methods of"muscle, pupil, and skin response"on a number of successful GOP campaigns, finds Hill’s facial coding approach useful and the data valuable."Hill’s understanding of how the human body gives information both voluntarily and involuntary is brilliant. And this {facial coding} information can be very helpful to the voter in making their choice in an election."

Hill thinks the data can also help a candidate understand how he or she can differentiate from the field--as a brand, (e.g. if the pack shows anger, then stand out as bright), or to assess the competition, strengths, and weaknesses. The coding may point to the need for a candidate to be truer to his or her authentic emotions versus being staged (think Gore), or to be more singular and polar emotionally and personality-wise, instead of all over the map and bland.

The 1960 Nixon-Kennedy debates famously underscored the power of mass media and ascendant television to shape elections and shined a harsh light on candidate facial expressions. In 2008, no one exploited the power of emerging social media channels more effectively thanBarack Obama. In 2012, who can turn facial media and smiles into victory?


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пятница, 6 мая 2011 г.

iFive: Sony Facing New Hack, Apple Now Second In Smartphones, WSJ's WikiLeaks Clone Leaks, LG Delayed iPad 2, Kindle At Walmart

1. Just as Sony confirms it'sabout toput parts of the PSN back online finally, a hacker group has said it's poised to launch athird waveof digital assault on Sony's online presence as punishment for its weak security. Sony's making moves toofferfree ID and hack protection to U.S. users affected by the previous breaches, but a third wave of attacks would be very bad news for Sony--which has already spent plenty of money fixing the earlier ones.

2.Appleis apparently poised to break a notional milestone that confirms how much the phone industry has changed: According to IDC it's justtaken second placebehind Nokia in global smartphone shipments (edging RIM to third place) and as its sales are accelerating well beyond the industry growth rate it could soon eclipse Nokia--particularly as the Finish company transitions to Windows Phone 7.&

3. TheWall Street Journalsurprised many by recently launching its own-brand competitor to scandal-embroiled WikiLeaks...but security researchers have now pored over the code for"SafeHouse"and say they'vediscovered huge security holesthat would make the leak site itself very leaky--potentially compromising any data submitted, and possibly even exposing the would-be anonymous sources.

4. The iPad 2's global launch, while far speedier and more numerous than the iPad 1's, suffered due to supply chain issues. The finger has now pointedfirmly at LG Displayas being to blame, thanks to quality control issues that meant the LCD units suffered light leakage and the firm could only meet about 50% of its orders. Chimei Innolux has now been brought on-stream to make up the production shortfall, and this will help Apple cement its already 82%strangleof the U.S. tablet game.

5.Amazon's Kindle is getting a new outlet, and it's a biggie: Over 3,000Walmart storesacross the U.S. The Kindle will be shelved alongside the Nook and iPad--two big threats to its e-reader crown, which may affect sales a little. But the bigger question this poses is does this represent a"rush to the bottom"to try to shift as many units as possible before the market becomes too commoditized and Amazon has to try a new paradigm?

Chat about this news withKit Eaton on TwitterandFast Companytoo.


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среда, 4 мая 2011 г.

Laughs 3.0: Comedy Comes Of Age Online

Did you hear the one about the Internet?

Comedy is dominating Net buzz in big ways this week, with several announcements that will make denizens of the web smile--and laugh.

Pandora announced that it would beadding comedy channelsto its popular personalized web-radio service. As it announced on its blog:

Adding comedians to the mix has been one of the top requests from our listeners, so we've taken the same approach to comedy as we have to music: carefully and deliberately analyzing comedic"bits"across a very large number of attributes to capture the style, delivery and content of each performance. It's been a very fun experience, taking what we've learned in music and applying it to a whole new category. Now, instead of talking about"minor keys,""falsetto,"and"extensive vamping,"our comedy-analysts capture"odd juxtaposition"(A horse walks into a bar...),"misdirection"and"spoonerisms"(a well-boiled icicle, instead of a well-oiled bicycle)...We've had a great team of working comedians furiously analyzing what is now a collection of more than 10,000 sketches from more than 700 different comics and counting.

Taking a page from its own"Music Genome Project,"it's calling the initiative the"Comedy Genome Project."

The stubbornly analog Jerry Seinfeld also is jumping into the Internet mix this week, launching his own website,JerrySeinfeld.com. It's really just an archive, though one that will no doubt fill a huge demand; Seinfeld himself will be choosing just three dailiy clips to share, to keep the content digestible and visitors coming back. SeinfeldtoldtheTimesthat he has no interest in sharing his comedic aperçus via a blog or Twitter, which strikes him as"comedy with a net."

Web humor: it's all the rage right now.Funnyordie.comjust wona Webby, and AlexaindicatestheSplitsider, the comedy sitespun offofThe Awl, is doing well, with a healthy growth trend over the last three months.

A word to the would-be wise guy, then: you might want to get in on this Internet thing.

FollowFast Companyon Twitter.EmailDavid Zax, the author of this post, orfollow himon Twitter.

{Image: Flickr useralan-light}


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вторник, 3 мая 2011 г.

Crowdstory's Audio Easter Egg Hunt

Crowdstory

"Oral history everywhere,"might be the tagline of a new student startup coming from the heartland.Crowdstorylets users record 30-second audio snippets and tie them to a location on a map. Subsequent visitors to that location, or friends and followers of the person who left the snippet, can check out the story later, and leave their own. The iPhone app (Android version forthcoming) just released an update recently, and was incubated by a unit within the University of Oklahoma's refreshinlgly non-euphemisticCenter for the Creation of Economic Wealth.

A team of some 10 students created the app, says Bryce Stubblefield, one of the creators, and a senior himself at OU."Imagine something really cool happend at the Space Needle--you saw some cool street performer outside,"he says, offering one potential use case."Or it might be something like a restaurant review you could leave anonymously: you go to a hole-in-the-wall cafe, and you don't think it's really worth the hype."Uses abound, from the frivolous to the serious: the team has been talking to Native American tribes around Oklahoma, discussing the possibility of recording miniature oral histories with them.

You might record fond moments in your current apartment and leave them for the next tenant, as echoes from the past. Or you might create a series of little stories and string them together--an audio tour, or a pub crawl series, for instance.

Those last two ideas are ones Stubblefield mentions when he talks about possible ways to monetize the app, which is currently free."We're looking to monetize in a few different ways, all down the line,"he says. They might charge for premium features--like a voice-changer, or the ability to leave slightly longer stories. They're also looking into partnering with large businesses for alternative marketing strategies. You might have deals attached to certain promoted stories:"listen to this story and get 50% off,"says Stubblefield by way of example. They'd rather not do straight ads, just yet--"right now that's a question mark, whether we'll integrate ads."The team sure wouldn't mind having Crowdstory being licensed by a giant like Yelp, FourSquare, or Gowalla, says Stubblefield.

If the app ever does make money, who benefits? As a product of OU's software business accelerator, Crowdstory has several different entities with stake in the company. The university owns the intellectual properties that come out of the accelerator, explains Stubblefield, but the students who create the product sill have a"reasonable stake in the company so far as personal equity goes."He calls this set-up"really unique, especailly for the state of Oklahoma."Crowdstory's team is the first one to come through the accelerator program. If it works, the hope is to make the state a low-cost-of-living alternative for startups: an unexpected little tech hum in the heartland.

Crowdstory is a cool idea, and the kind that only gets cooler as more people use it. It's coming out of stealth more or less with this post (it just has about 270 users for now), sodownload a copyand try out leaving behind a touch of oral history with your next check-in.

{Image: Flickr userkk+}

FollowFast Companyon Twitter.EmailDavid Zax, the author of this post, orfollow himon Twitter.

Read More:Apple Going After Color, Instagram With iPhone's Social"Photo Stream"


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воскресенье, 1 мая 2011 г.

Osama Bin Laden Dead, The Story Twitter Broke

"The United States has conducted an operation that killed Osama bin Laden,"President Barack Obama has just announced. 

Word that Obama would be making an announcement started spreading around 10:30 p.m. EST. (News coverage would eventually cut into the last bit of Donald Trump'sCelebrity Apprentice, adding a final, albeit likely unplanned, coda to Obama's skewering of Trump at Saturday night'sWhite House Correspondent's Association dinner.) But Keith Urbahn, chief of staff for the office of the former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld,appearsto be the first to have broken the news that Osama bin Laden, 54, the man responsible for the attacks of September 11, 2001, is dead--via his @keithurbahn Twitter feed.

As CNN bounced between various reporters guessing at details and theNew York Timeswebsite crumbled under a massive flood of clicks (at the time of our first post, it was nearly impossible to get on the site, impossible to access the initial story--aseven-page bin Laden obituarywas published shortly thereafter), Urbahn was tweeting what he's found out from his sources.

For example, he believes it's unlikely, if the U.S. had an inside intelligence source that bin Laden would have been killed via drone attack.

... And indeed, Obama confirmed that after years ago authorizing Leon Panetta, who, it was reported last week, is about to become Obama's Secretary of Defense, to make the kiling of bin Laden"top priority"in the war against al Qaeda. 

"Last August, I was briefed about a possible lead,"Obama said in a speech Sunday evening at about 11:30 p.m. EST."It took many months to run this thead to ground."Obama said the U.S. military had found that bin Laden had been"hiding within a compound"--a mansion eight times the size of others nearby--in Abbottabad, Pakistan, an affluent area where many retired military officials lived. 

He was killed after a firefight between bin Laden's forces and"a small team of Americans,"Obama said. Later it was reported that the 40-minute operation was conducted by Navy Seals in helicopters and on the ground. No Americans were harmed, and the U.S. forces killed bin Laden and took possession of his body. 

Obama reportedly gave the order to attack the compound in a National Security meeting as the world media watched the Royal wedding. 

 


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