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Friday 31 January 2014

Deadspin What Time Is The Super Bowl?

Could this licensing deal help keep BlackBerry afloat?



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Apple's iWatch and iOS 8 are reportedly fitness-focused



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Underground: 40 años fotografiando el metro de Londres

Foto por Bob Mazzer

Foto por Bob Mazzer


En los años 70 Bob Mazzer trabajaba como proyeccionista en un cine por lo que se encontraba personajes la mar de curiosos cuando volvía a casa en el metro de Londres tarde después de terminar el trabajo.


A lo tonto, a lo tonto, siguió tomando fotos en el metro durante más de cuarenta años, del estilo de las que se pueden ver en Life in the Tube: 40 Years of London Underground Photography.


Bob acaba además de publicar una selección de ellas en el libro Underground .


(Vía @ElGris).


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Engadget Podcast 382 - 1.31.14



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It's Not Just You: Gmail Is Slow



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From Friend to Convert: The New Role of Facebook in Mormon Missions



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The Astrodome Is Now In The Historic Register, Still Might Be Doomed

Huawei's new high-resolution tablet may give the Nexus 7 a run for its money



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BrightFunnel Raises Funding To Build Smarter Marketing Predictions

brightfunnel infographic

Marketing startup BrightFunnel is announcing that it has raised a small “advisory round” of slightly less than $1 million from some big-name investors.


Co-founder and CEO Nadim Hossain served most recently as the vice president of marketing at PowerReviews (which was acquired by Bazaarvoice). In that role, and in other jobs as a marketing executive, Hossain said that with his background in economics and econometrics he expected to be “swimming in CMO insights,” but that turned out not to be the case.


Instead, Hossain said he found “production tools” with limited analytics, at least on the level of what a CMO would want to know.


“I remember being at a board meeting in May of 2011, and they asked me questions where I didn’t know the answers,” he said. ” My self identity is as someone who can get at the numbers and get at the truth, and I had to make guesses. It just made me feel not authentic and wonder, why don’t I have the answers? These are knowable questions.”


So at BrightFunnel, he’s trying to build tools that will given him the answers that he was looking for. The eventual goal, Hossain said, is to create “the Google self-driving car for marketers.” In other words, customers should be able to identify how much money they want to spend on a campaign and what their revenue targets are, and with BrightFunnel’s recommendations, the marketing plan should basically run itself.


The company isn’t quite there yet. Instead, Hossain said, it’s more like navigation app Waze. Its current features include identifying the marketing “levers” that can lead to increased revenue, as well as analyzing performance trends by campaign and channel. BrightFunnel also integrates with marketing automation systems including Marketo, Eloqua, Pardot, Act-On, and Hubspot.


And yes, it offers predictions about the revenue impact of marketing campaigns. Hossain estimated that those projections are within 10 to 20 percent accuracy — not just on the conversion rate but also how long it will take to close the sale, which is particularly important for the business-to-business marketers that BrightFunnel is targeting.


One of Hossain goals is to improve that accuracy, which he said is “blows [marketers] away” but is not quite up to snuff for statisticians.


Anyway, here are the investors:


Paul Albright, former CRO, Marketo

David Gutelius, former Chief Social Scientist, Jive Software

Ryan Holmes, founder and CEO, HootSuite

Steve King, former CEO, DocuSign

Scott Kleper, founder and CTO, Context Optional (Adobe Marketing Cloud)

Tim Kopp, former CMO, ExactTarget (Salesforce.com Marketing Cloud)

Chris Maeda, former CTO, KANA Software

Mark Organ, CEO, Influitive and co-founder, Eloqua (Oracle Marketing Cloud)

Venkat Rangan, CTO, Clari and founder, Clearwell Systems (Symantec)

Russell Siegelman, former VP, Microsoft, and Partner, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers






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Richard Sherman Gives the Best Twitter Advice You'll Ever Get

Aereo stops taking new customers in New York



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Tablet deals of the week: 01.31.14



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This Week On The TC Gadgets Podcast: Facebook Paper, Lenovo-Moto, Carbon 3D Printing, And Coffee!

gadgets140131

Looking for a way to get through Friday? Here you go.


Facebook launched a news reader app called Paper. (Teens will love it.) And Google sold Motorola to Lenovo for $3 billion, which made earnings week interesting. And, in the land of startups, we explore a new Carbon 3D Printer and a Keurig Coffee machine. So you can print yourself a cup-holder, which will store your fresh cup of coffee, as you drive to work on this blessed Friday.


We discuss all this and more on this week’s episode of the TC Gadgets Podcast, featuring John Biggs, Matt Burns, Jordan Crook, Darrell Etherington, and Romain Dillet.


The Superbowl is in two days, and the work week is almost over. We’re almost there.



We invite you to enjoy our weekly podcasts every Friday at 3 p.m. Eastern and noon Pacific. And feel free to check out the TechCrunch Gadgets Flipboard magazine right here.


Click here to download an MP3 of this show.

You can subscribe to the show via RSS.

Subscribe in iTunes


Intro Music by Rick Barr.






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This kit lets you build a musical instrument from just about anything



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US Cellular offers $50 unlimited plan with throttled data as a catch



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Roku 3 for $70, Surface Pro, iMacs and MacBooks Galore [Deals]

Aereo Sells Out Of Capacity In NYC

soldoutsign

Aereo, a TV streaming service looking to change the way we consume media, has just sold out of capacity in New York City.


Founder and CEO Chet Kanojia confirmed the news via Twitter.


The company launched in 2011 with NYC as a pilot market, and has since expanded to 11 markets total. The service, much to the chagrin of major network broadcasters, acts as a remote, mini antenna, letting subscribers pull OTA TV signals out of the air and stream them live across any internet-connected device.


And if that weren’t enough, users have the option to use Aereo as a remote DVR service for as low as $8 month.


That said, Aereo has worked tirelessly to ensure that this type of business is actually legal. In much the same way that it’s legal for an individual to use rabbit ears to access broadcast television, it’s legal for an Aereo user to rent out an individual Aereo antenna and access, or record, TV content.


However, a single antenna that sends a signal to multiple, separate users is illegal. In other words, Aereo needs one antenna available for every active user of the service, and at this point, there’s simply not any room left for new users in NYC.


Some have misreported that this is a product of power issues, though recent conversations I’ve had with founder Chet Kanojia suggest that Aereo has been trying to build out more capacity to keep up with subscriber growth.


For a startup, it’s not a bad problem to have. Though, if the company wants to foster growth in its first, and likely strongest, market, it will need to offer extended capacity as quickly as possible.


Broadcasters must be equally displeased by this news, considering that they’ve been bullying Aereo in the courtroom since the service launched. It started with a lawsuit in NY, which migrated to Boston, and again to Utah, until most recently the Supreme Court decided to hear the case and make a final, federal ruling.


Based on the track record, I predict Aereo will win in court and will lead the revolution as a stepping stone from bundled TV packages and middle men to an on-demand, TV consumption structure.


Here’s Aereo’s official statement on the matter:



We’re fortunate that Aereo continues to experience strong growth across all our markets. Our team has been working overtime to add more capacity in our existing markets. As soon as additional capacity is added, new consumers will be notified that they can sign up and create an Aereo account.







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The State of Android in 2014



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OUYA's new matte black console offers twice the storage for $130



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Dispositivos electrónicos en el avión en España: tres semanas sin noticias

iPhone con la aplicación KindleLa Agencia Estatal de Seguridad Aérea sigue fiel a su fama de tratar las cosas a velocidades glaciales, pues tres semanas después de la entrada en vigor de la nueva normativa que permite a las aerolíneas que lo deseen solicitar el uso de dispositivos electrónicos personales en modo avión durante todas las fases del vuelo aún no ha autorizado a ninguna aerolínea a hacerlo.


Por lo que sabemos tanto Air Europa como Iberia e Iberia Express han entregado la documentación pertinente; Air Nostrum está realizando las pruebas pertinentes en los aviones de su flota, y en cuanto las terminen solicitarán también aplicar la nueva normativa.


Vueling, por su parte, parece que también ha presentado la documentación pertinente, pero no nos lo han confirmado.


En Estados Unidos no habían pasado ni 24 horas de la aprobación de la nueva normativa cuando Jet Blue y Delta ya estaban aplicándola; en el Reino Unido fue British Airways la primera en hacerlo apenas cinco días después de que entrara en vigor la normativa aplicable.


Pero en España toca seguir esperando.


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Ouya Updates Hardware With $129 16GB Console, 8GB Edition Remains At $99

16GB Pic

Ouya’s original hardware featured just 8GB of storage onboard, but a temporary Limited Edition all-white version launched during the holidays that doubled that to 16GB. Now, the game console startup is making that a permanent feature of its newest hardware, an Ouya console with a solid matte black finish that also offers better Wi-Fi connectivity and a “refined” controller design.


The new 16GB version adds $30 to the MSRP of the original, coming in at a total of $129 for the console and one controller. It goes on sale at Ouya.tv, as well as Amazon and Amazon.ca starting immediately, and the original 8GB model will continue to be sold as well at its original $99 price point (which is discounted to $69.99 currently on Amazon.ca)


As for what’s been improved about the controller, Ouya says that the joysticks and buttons are “better” and that the controller has less lag time overall. We’ve asked for more specifics around the improved Wi-Fi, but have yet to hear back with any details. The new console also ships with the latest Ouya firmware, which is said to improve all-around performance for the Android-powered hardware.


Ouya has faced some challenges lately, including the departure of one of its key founding team members, VP of Product Muffi Ghadiali. The company has not released any sales data recently, so there’s no telling how it’s performing, but the introduction of a new SKU seems a little unusual given the relatively modest nature of the tweaks.


Developers on the platform recently shared some numbers regarding their software sales on the console with Gamespot, which could be an indicator of hardware sales strength. Feedback was mixed, but overall the impression given was that sales are by no means represent runaway success. Ouya has raised $23.6 million in funding to date, including its initial crowdfunding campaign and a Series A round led by Kleiner Perkins.






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The Most Popular Tech Words in Porn Titles

US phone companies to explore replacing all phone numbers with IP addresses



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The FCC Is Beta Testing the Future US Phone Network

PlayStation 4 companion app update highlights live game broadcasts



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Canadian spy agency used airport WiFi to track travelers



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Inq Mobile, One Of The First Facebook Phone Makers, Shuts Down

Inq Mobile

Inq Mobile, one of the first companies to build a Facebook phone, announced that it has shut down with a message on its site (h/t Android Police). The U.K.-based, Hutchison Whampoa-backed company didn’t say why it decided to close. We’ve emailed them for more information.


Inq, which was founded in 2008 and pivoted a year ago to focus on mobile software, said it will no longer update Material and SO.HO, its apps. Material, a news reader, released its final editions on Jan. 28, while social media aggregator SO.HO will not be updated after today, though it will continue to function. Support pages for the Cloud Touch smartphone and Inq’s featurephones remain on its site.


The timing of Inq’s closure and Material’s shutdown is interesting because several of tech’s largest companies have recently started to offer their own news apps and tools. These include Yahoo’s News Digest; Twitter and CNN’s Dataminr; and Paper by Facebook, which will launch next month.


Inq Mobile began as a maker of low-priced Android smartphones. It was one of the first companies that collaborated with Facebook to create a social smartphone in 2011, around the same time HTC and the social network struck the partnership that yielded the Salsa and ChaCha.


Inq’s Cloud Touch, which was released exclusively in the UK three years ago, had a custom Facebook wrapper built on top of Android, and an early version of SwiftKey. Though cheaply priced (starting at $50 with a subsidized contract), the Cloud Touch couldn’t compete with Samsung’s rapid takeover of the Android market. The company pivoted and started developing mobile apps one year ago.


Material, which TechCrunch covered when it launched its iOS version in August, was a social magazine app that used Inq’s “interest extraction engine” to look at the Facebook and Twitter accounts of users and figure out what kind of articles they wanted to see. Content was delivered in two daily editions.


At its launch, Material already had strong competition from popular social news readers like Flipboard, Zite, and Pulse.


Inq CEO and co-founder Ken Johnstone told TechCrunch at the time that Material differentiated from other news readers by offering an easier set-up than its rivals because all users needed to do to power Material’s algorithms was connect their Facebook or Twitter accounts.


“For somebody who has invested a lot of time in Twitter and Facebook anyway, this is about getting a return on that investment,” Johnstone told TechCrunch’s Natasha Lomas.


Yahoo, Twitter, and Facebook’s news aggregation products all feature some human curation, but, like Material, they also rely heavily on algorithms to customize content for each user. Inq had planned to monetize Material by harvesting enough data to build an advertising business, but its failure to do may be a cautionary tale for other developers of news readers.


Though algorithms are necessary if a news aggregator wants to scale up (and collect enough data to be profitable), they still can’t replace human curation. Like Feedly, Pulse, and Zite, Material’s customized content stream suffered from problems like miscategorized stories, irrelevant content, and “the overall feeling you get from flicking through an edition is not a cohesive, editorially unified whole, but an algorithmically generated bunch of mostly random stories with (at best) a few loose, overlapping themes,” as Natasha put it.






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Archos' Neon tablets are even more budget-friendly than usual



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Daily Roundup: Xperia Z1 Compact review, Facebook Paper and more!



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The next Windows 8.1 update might skip the Start screen by default



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Samsung Shape: the Right Way to Do Wi-Fi Speakers



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Have a favorite music streaming service? Sound off, people of Engadget



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Intel's AppUp is shutting down



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Samsung Galaxy Note 3 Neo aims to offer S-Pen experience without flagship specs



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Chromecast, Google Play, Nexus 5 and Google Wallet had a very good 2013



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IBM's speedy graphene chip could lead to super-efficient mobile devices



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