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Tuesday, December 3, 2013
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DataSift, a social data platform that provides brands and enterprises with access to content from the likes of Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr and dozens of other social networks, is today announcing a $42 million, Series C round of funding. Rob Bailey, DataSift's CEO, tells me that the company plans to use the new financing for a number of different purposes.


First up is international expansion, starting initially with Japan, Brazil, Turkey, South Africa, and Indonesia. DataSift also plans to add more data partners; and to expand into what Bailey calls “non-social” data sources - which can include messaging and gaming services, enterprise collaboration platforms and more. DataSift has seen a “huge amount of inbound interest” for data from these sources, he says.


Insight Venture Partners - the VC firm that has backed Twitter, Snapchat, Buddy Media, HootSuit and a number of other leading social startups - led the round with existing investors Scale Venture Partners, Upfront Ventures, IA Ventures, Northgate Capital and Daher Capital also participating. As part of the round, IVP's co-founder and MD Jeff Horing is joining DataSift's board of directors.


DataSift has now raised just under $72 million.


Bailey and DataSift are not providing a post-funding valuation, but considering that another player in the data firehose game, Topsy, has just sold to Apple for reportedly over $200 million, and DataSift is "considerably" bigger in size, it may well be a number well north of that.


Since being founded in 2010 in the UK, DataSift has been riding a veritable social media tsunami. A swathe of popular (and free) services like Facebook, Twitter and Tumblr attract billions of users, who use the sites daily to post messages to each other and read what others have to say. That rush of consumers and their opinions are of huge interest to advertisers and others for obvious reasons, yet most of that data is unstructured and therefore hard to “read”. DataSift therefore provides a way for those enterprises to make better use of that data from these social media platforms: each piece of data gets tagged with metadata, which can then be used in different applications to chart what people are talking about, gain insight on different trends, and so on.


DataSift says that its 1,000 corporate customers today cover 40 countries and include Bloomberg, Dow Jones, CBS Interactive and Dell and social technology application innovators Marketwired, Dachis Group, Conversocial, SecondSync, HootSuite and Simply Measured.


The move to looking for new business in international markets makes sense for DataSift, Baily says, because they are the markets “where we see the biggest amount of social activity, yet are the most underserved.”


Unsurprisingly, DataSift ate a little of its own dogfood when selecting what countries it would target first. “We did a lot of sophisticated analysis internally,” he says. “We looked at aggregated social and local networks and the size of the advertising and business intelligence markets in these countries.” And in a sense the infrastructure for growth is already in place: the company already provides detection on its platform for 150 different languages, and is built for scaling. “Right out of the gate, it will be an incredibly easy path for us to enter Brazil, for example,” he says.


I also asked him about Japan. There, a lot of the buzz has been around messaging platform Line, which is more of a private, direct service than the one-to-many nature of networks like Twitter and Tumblr. In these sorts of scenarios, it's likely that messaging companies might tap DataSift for competitive intelligence of their own platform for their own commercial development, CTO Nick Halstead tells me. Still, the two would not comment on Line directly. “We have not announced a deal with Line yet,” Bailey said. “We cannot comment on deals that have not been announced but I think Line is one the most important data sources in Japan, along with some other ones.” (My interpretation: watch this space.)







8:09 AM

DataSift , a social data platform that provides brands and enterprises with access to content from the likes of Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr an...

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Microsoft has recognized that people appreciate the chance to make their own stuff, possibly due to the success of PlayStation exclusive LittleBigPlanet, and that's why it created Project Spark, previewed back in June at E3. Spark is an even more free-form game creation engine with a focus on simultaneous game playing and building, which also encourages sharing among friends and family.


The beta for Project Spark kicks off today on Windows 8.1, which means if you're one of the still quite small crowd on that latest desktop OS, you can take part – so long as you've also signed up for the beta over at the Project Spark website. The closed beta will extend to Xbox One users beginning in the new year, however, and that's where I expect the software to really start to shine, given Microsoft's sizeable user pool based on early sales numbers of the next-gen console. Microsoft also says cross-platform support is coming eventually, too.


Microsoft is touting Spark as a way to create collaborative, effectively unending games with your friends and connections, which is an interesting take on gaming as a social medium. Games have always had social aspects, to be sure: alternating turns or watching your friend who was lucky enough to own a PS1 play through Final Fantasy is no doubt an experience common to many of my particular vintage. Then of course came split-screen gaming, culminating the pure joy that was Goldeneye 007 for the N64, and the modern era of shooting and tea-bagging that is the Call of Duty series.


Now, Microsoft wants you to do something even more participatory, creating worlds as you explore them. At its most basic, Spark does most of the heavy lifting for you, with you specifying simply a scenario, setting and character before being thrown into a randomly generated game provided by the engine. But you can get much more granular, building different genres of games, using various different inputs including Kinect and the Xbox One controller, and even incorporating motion capture and voiceover using the Kinect for custom animations and dialogue. The Spark engine seems insanely flexible, so it'll very interesting to see what a legion of brand new amateur game devs can do with this in their hands.


Grab the Spark beta app from the Windows Store, but you might have to wait a little while to use it if you haven't yet got a beta key, and it's not going to be available in all regions immediately. This is potentially the most interesting thing Microsoft has done for a long time, so it'll be great to watch how this progresses, even if you're not that interested in becoming an auteur yourself.







8:09 AM

Microsoft has recognized that people appreciate the chance to make their own stuff, possibly due to the success of PlayStation exclusive Lit...

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Business analytics company SumAllis announcing that it has raised $4 million in new funding from existing investors Battery Ventures and Wellington Partners, as well as an additional $1 million in debt from Silicon Valley Bank.


The company allows customers to connect a wide range of services, including social networks like Facebook and Twitter, email marketing tools like MailChimp and Constant Contact, payment providers like Amazon Payments and PayPal, and ad platforms like Bing Ads and Google AdWords. Businesses can then view and analyze all of that data from a single interface.


CEO Dane Atkinson said SumAll's appeal is boils down to allowing customers to “see your damn data.” He added that his team works hard to understand the key performance indicators that customers care about. (And some of those customers can be pretty big - SumAll says one agency is using the service to track more than 120 Google Analytics pages and 50 Facebook pages.)


The new funding was actually revealed last month in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, but SumAll hasn't talked about the deal until now.


Atkinson told me the company actually had enough money in the bank to last until “well into next year,” when it planned to raise a larger round. However, the service has been growing quickly, supposedly tracking $4 billion in sales activity for 100,000 businesses, with the total amount of data doubling every 45 days. As a result, SumAll's infrastructure costs are increasingly rapidly, and Atkinson said he wanted to raise the money so that he wasn't tempted to cut expenses by “shaving down” the amount of data that SumAll tracks.


He added that SumAll talked to other potential investors, but ultimately decided to “stick to a smaller round for now” from existing backers and “barrel through until we get to bigger scale” (and can presumably raise money at a higher valuation).







7:39 AM

Business analytics company SumAll is announcing that it has raised $4 million in new funding from existing investors Battery Ventures and We...

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UPS is also looking into getting flying robots to deliver packages, according to The Verge, along with Internet ecommerce giant Amazon. Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos dominated the news cycle yesterday with the revelation that Amazon was working on drone delivery with 30-min. ship times, albeit for a few years out in a best case scenario, but UPS also now appears to be interested in replacing its reliable army of brown-shorted carriers with repurposed evil mindless deathbots.


UPS told the Verge that it finds the concept of commercial drone use “interesting,” and that it'll continue to “evaluate” its usefulness for the parcel carrier. Big Brown also pointed out that it pours more money into R&D than any of its competitors in the delivery business, which, while not confirming it's spending on drones specifically, definitely suggests that could be the case.


In addition to the official statement, Verge quotes multiple sources close to the company as confirming that it's testing a number of different drone-based delivery programs. But unlike Amazon's vision of a robot flying from a warehouse to your door with your order of Uranium ore, the UPS implementation could shore up something like delivery from the airport to the local storage warehouse or distribution center. That's actually a vision that's much more feasible in the near-term, so long as regulators can catch up and the FAA can establish some clear guidelines on the use of unmanned transport in domestic airspace.


Imagining a world where the freeways aren't clogged with huge, noisy, loud, polluting transport trucks presents a tempting vision, especially for frequent commuters. But drones whirring between local sort facilities, central depots and airports, not to mention consumer doors and driveways, presents a possibility of a sky darkened by quad- and octocopters buzzing about their business.


The delivery drones will block out the sun, and all will be plunged into darkness. On the bright side, we'll get our Kindles in record time.







6:24 AM

UPS is also looking into getting flying robots to deliver packages, according to The Verge , along with Internet ecommerce giant Amazon. Ama...

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According to Fortune, China Mobile has begun quietly taking pre-orders for Apple's iPhone 5s and 5c smartphones. The below screenshot reportedly originated on a website owned by a subsidiary of China Mobile.


A potential deal between Apple and China Mobile, China's (and the world's) largest mobile carrier has been in negotiation for more than six years. Finally, however, it seems that the two giants have come to an agreement.


Back in September, we learned that Apple's newest smartphones would be compatible with China Mobile's network, though neither company made any announcements regarding iPhone availability on the network.


Just last week, China Mobile announced it would get 4G LTE, which was another hint in the iPhone direction.


Fortune reports that the webpage has been replaced with a placeholder reading “Reservation page information update, will be reopened later appointment. Please try again later, thank you for your support of Suzhou Mobile!”


Suzhou Mobile is the website owned by China Mobile's subsidiary, and according to Fortune, a great city to test out a soft launch of the iPhone with 5 million relatively wealthy citizens.


Reports have swirled lately that China Mobile would begin selling the iPhone 5s, 5c on December 18, so we should have a firm answer in the next month or so.


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6:24 AM

According to Fortune , China Mobile has begun quietly taking pre-orders for Apple's iPhone 5s and 5c smartphones. The below screenshot r...

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Yext is adding new tools today to help businesses synchronize their content and data across multiple services with the launch of a product called Pages.


Back in 2009, the company launched a pay-per-call ad service at TechCrunch's Disrupt conference, but it has since sold that business to IAC and refocused on helping businesses manage their location data, first on local search and listing services like Yelp and Bing, then on Facebook too. With Pages, it's making it easier for businesses to update their own websites as well.


To illustrate why this is useful, CEO Howard Lerman told me about being dispatched by his wife to pick up a pie, only to discover that the store in question was closed for the day. It turned out that the store's Facebook Page had been updated with that information, but its website (which is what he had consulted) was not. Lerman argued that this reflects a broader problem, where many businesses find it difficult to consistently update their websites, so those websites turn into digital brochures.


“We want to make the web a little less static,” he said.


With Pages, Yext is offering customers five different widgets - calendars, menus, bios, product lists, and social posts. Once those widgets are embedded on a site, they can be updated from the same Yext interface as everything else, with the same information. And those updates go live immediately, as Lerman showed me in a quick demo.


The new feature also points to the company's larger vision, which is to build a “Yext Cloud” that helps businesses manage all their marketing needs from one place. Lerman suggested that the company will continue building out the cloud with new products in this vein.


He also claimed that the company's focus on business data and updates is already paying off handsomely. Yext will be serving 500,000 locations and have a $50 million revenue run rate at the end of this year, he said, and he expects that to double to 1 million locations in the next year. (Lerman estimated that Yext's customer base is half small and medium businesses and half larger brands that account for multiple locations.) And he emphasized that Yext is a software-as-a-service company, with reliably recurring revenue.


In addition, Yext is announcing that it now supports international addresses in 75 countries and 150 languages, and that it's expanding its social features to include support for Google+.







6:09 AM

Yext is adding new tools today to help businesses synchronize their content and data across multiple services with the launch of a product ...

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In the world of eBay sellers, some people photograph their wares on models and take the time to write up comprehensive product descriptions. Other listings… are kind of indecipherable. Or just unhelpful.


WorldLister, an app launching today, is trying to help the latter group become more like the former, by generating listings for you that include video, sizing information, and substantial product descriptions that flow. For those too lazy to write out a full description, it's an easy way to look a whole lot more professional.


WorldLister, which is free, hooks up to users' eBay accounts and acts as a kind of seller's dashboard. Listing an item requires answering a series of questions; if it's a clothing item, for instance, it will ask for color, material, style, and size. The WorldLister platform has a real time feed of a person's listings; users can change the price of a given item there and it will update to eBay automatically. The app is also integrated with eBay messaging.


The aim is to be faster than eBay's current system, and WorldLister is promising to have listings up in minutes.


“What took eight hours of work you can do in one hour,” founder Bryan Harmon said.


According to Harmon, the team started developing the app to list clothing first, since it's a difficult category in which to nail sizing. So rather than leaving users to guess what a size 6 means for any given brand, WorldLister provides a walk through on how to measure an article of clothing flat and then uses those measurements for sizing. WorldLister then went on to develop its algorithm for other tricky categories, like used automobiles.







6:09 AM

In the world of eBay sellers, some people photograph their wares on models and take the time to write up comprehensive product descriptions....

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