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Wednesday, December 4, 2013
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Like moths to a flame, kids gravitate toward iPad and iPhone games. But for parents that want their children to still be exposed to real-world toys, a new startup called ZowPow is offering a way that they can do both.


The company makes plush toys that can control gameplay.


One of their very first toys is a tiny plane that can control up-and-down movement for a paired game called “Tiny Plane,” which is published by EA's Chillingo.


The game controller they built has built-in sensors and accelerometers that can tell which direction the plane is facing, so that the plane in the game mimics its movement through Bluetooth LE (see the video below).


The two-person startup, which was just accepted for Y Combinator's upcoming batch, is launching with two partner companies. The other is Get Set Games, a fairly well-known smaller studio that's behind Mega Jump and Mega Run. The franchise's protagonist Redford is getting his very own plush toy controller that costs $29.99.


The startup is selling both of their toys through their online store. This is just an initial start. Co-founder Jennifer Lu, who came from a business development background at Andreessen Horowitz-backed game developer TinyCo, says the startup plans to sign up many more titles from third-party developers.


They don't plan to focus on building their own intellectual property in-house, and instead would rather partner with developers that already have their own unique characters and audiences. There's a revenue share with the original developer for each toy they sell.


ZowPow's platform supports iOS devices that are the iPhone 4S or later, the iPad 3 or later, then the iPad Mini and the iPod Touch 5. They can also connect to TVs if the iOS device owner has an HDMI adapter or AirPlay.







3:55 PM

Like moths to a flame, kids gravitate toward iPad and iPhone games. But for parents that want their children to still be exposed to real-wor...

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Medium-Logo

Medium, the blog publishing platform from Twitter co-founder Evan Williams, has today released new features and a few design changes.


Medium has sprouted from a seedling to a full-fledged media tool in the last year, recently opening up sign-ups to the public.


Today, however, the tool gets a bit of a revamp, with more placement and layout options for photos, giving the writer extra control over the layout of the story. Williams is calling it Medium 1.0.


Here's what he said about it in the official blog post:



We're calling this release Medium 1.0 because we feel it represents a major milestone for the product. It has all the core components to be the simple-but-powerful idea distribution system we set out to build. But, by definition, 1.0 means this is the beginning. We're just getting started.



Medium is also adding the ability to add a cover photo (including a “wash” on that cover photo) as well as the ability to place full bleed photos throughout the story. Captions can also be added to these photos.


Though the refresh brings about a few additional choices, like updated fonts, the company assures us that the process “remains incredibly streamlined and simple.”


Medium has also made some big changes to collections, including more robust stats and data around the curation feature. Williams admits in the blog post that collections were a bit confusing before, but that's about to change.


From now on, collections are closed by default, keeping the creator as the sole editor of the collection unless otherwise specified. The creator, called an Editor, can then decide what other pieces to include in their collection by searching or taking submissions. Making and accepting submissions to one another's collections is intended to create a more engaging blogging audience, with true curators floating to the top.


You can take a look at the new tools here.


Medium continues to iterate and grow at a quick pace, but is remaining tight-lipped when it comes to any real user numbers or traction figures. But then again, this is “just the beginning” for the next-gen blogging platform.







1:39 PM

Medium, the blog publishing platform from Twitter co-founder Evan Williams, has today released new features and a few design changes. Medium...

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According to leaked documents from whistleblower and Russian residency enthusiast, Edward Snowden, the National Security Agency is tracking people's whereabouts en masse. By collecting the location data from billions of cell phone records, the National Security Agency can map the relationships of suspects, reports The Washington Post.


The Post even has a delightfully artistic explainer video to ease our transition to an Orwellian state with a pleasant voice-over and soothing graphics (below)


As per usual, the NSA claims that the location-tracking program is completely legal. Even when users opt-out of location tracking apps, cell phones still need to connect to towers to transmit calls, which can be used to triangulate a location throughout the day.


“Sophisticated mathematical techniques enable NSA analysts to map cellphone owners' relationships by correlating their patterns of movement over time with thousands or millions of other phone users who cross their paths. Cellphones broadcast their locations even when they are not being used to place a call or send a text,” explains The Post.


The NSA also claims that only foreigners are targeted, but it does incidentally pick up data on potentially millions of Americans. Millions of people are connected to a target through two degrees of separation.


If you're #outraged, you may be in the minority: most Americans support the NSA's vast dragnet. Still, Congress is moving forward with several competing surveillance reform packages. Any reform will likely have to wait until the president's NSA task force group issues its recommendations.


Until then, any guesses on what else the NSA is tracking?


[Image Credit: Flickr User frozenchipmunk]







1:39 PM

According to leaked documents from whistleblower and Russian residency enthusiast, Edward Snowden, the National Security Agency is tracking ...

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Yota Devices, based in Russia, aims to shake up the smartphone market with the entry of its YotaPhone. The smartphone, which goes on sale Wednesday, first emerged in Dec. 2012. It was featured at the Consumer Electronics Show earlier this year, and its intriguing form factor earned it several Best of CES awards. Now, the YotaPhone is hitting the market. The YotaPhone utilizes dual screens: a color display on the front and an e-ink display on the back.


1:39 PM

Yota Devices, based in Russia, aims to shake up the smartphone market with the entry of its YotaPhone. The smartphone, which goes on sale ...

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1:09 PM

John Maeda is leaving his role as president of the Rhode Island School of Design to become a design partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield ...

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touchcast laptop

TouchCast, a startup with a more interactive approach to online video, is launching a beta version of its Windows PC app today.


The company was co-founded by former TechCrunch editor Erick Schonfeld and it launched its first product, an iPad app, back in June. The app combines easy-to-use video production tools with “vApps” (short for video apps), which allow users to include interactive content from sources like Google Maps, Facebook, Twitter, and pretty much any web page.


Schonfeld told me yesterday that the iPad app has been downloaded more than 160,000 times. (One of the big use cases, he said, is for sharing between teachers and students.) He and co-founder Edo Segal both see the desktop PC app as a product that can be used by more professional customers, with new features like the ability to support multiple cameras, to import videos that may have been shot and edited with other programs, and to create “hot spots” in a video that can link to any web page when clicked. Plus, someone who uses TouchCast on a PC should be able to tap into more computing power than they would on an iPad.


Many of those new features will eventually make their way to the iPad version, Schonfeld added - there isn't a hard-and-fast division between the PC and tablet, and he imagines that some users will go back and forth between the two.


Schonfeld and his co-founder Edo Segal also reiterated their broader vision, which is to foster something they call the “video web” - in other words, to make video content feel less walled off from the rest of the web. That means video producers can incorporate more web content, and it also means that someone watching a video can interact with that video in a new way. For example, with the new hot spot functionality, users can open up relevant websites and browse them while continuing to watch the video. They also suggested this means that users could end up engaging with, say, a two-minute video for 10 or 20 minutes.


For now, Schonfeld said the app is being used primarily for video production, not consumption. In addition to adding more interactivity, both he and Segal suggested that TouchCast could “democratize” the production process by allowing users to make high quality videos without spending a lot of money on equipment (you can use your built-in iPad camera or a simple webcam) or a lot of time on postproduction (you can put the video together while you're filming, with no postproduction required).


In that sense, Schonfeld compared TouchCast to a blogging platform like WordPress, because it “liberates” people to publish content on their own, rather than working with a team of developers, editors, and so on.


Segal acknowledged that TouchCast is still a long way from winning over a mass audience to its bigger vision for online video, but he said the company is still laying the foundation.


“We're very comfortable with where it is right now,” he said. “Not everybody's getting it, but all the vectors are pointing at it - that video is the canvas of the web.”


Segal noted that behind-the-scenes, TouchCast has an enterprise business where it works with large media customers, he said it's too early to announce any of them.


Like the iPad version, the TouchCast PC app is available for free. (Yes, there's supposed to be a Mac version in the works.) And here's a TouchCast demonstrating TouchCast on the PC (embedded via YouTube, so it doesn't have viewer interactivity).







11:38 AM

TouchCast , a startup with a more interactive approach to online video, is launching a beta version of its Windows PC app today. The company...

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docstoc congrats

Intuit, maker of financial products like Quickbooks and TurboTax, has a stated purpose of trying to be “the operating system for small business.” Today, it took another step to solidify that position with its planned acquisition of Docstoc, which over the years has created one of the largest directories of documents for building a small business.


Intuit has been on a bit of an acquisition spree lately, acquiring companies like FullSlate, Level Up Analytics, and GoodApril in the last six months alone. All of those acquisitions are based around providing better technology and more tools to small businesses.


This acquisition is no different, and it wraps up a neat little success story for Docstoc, which has spent the last several years helping small businesses get off the ground. The company was founded way back in 2007, and was one of the first TechCrunch 40 finalists, as a repository for user-submitted documents for small businesses. But while it still has a sizable number of documents provided by users, about 20 million by last count, over the years it's transitioned to produce its own content.


That includes not just all the documents one might need to get a small business of the ground, but also videos, tutorials, classes, and other educational information. In all, Docstoc now has more than 20,000 pieces of content that it's produced, and it's adding more than 300 new pieces each week.


In addition to its main site, which brings in some 16 million uniques and has 40 million registered users worldwide, Docstoc also has a few side businesses. A year-and-a-half ago, it launched a site called License123 to provide businesses with all the licenses they'd need to be compliant with local regulations in their home cities. And earlier this summer it made an acquisition of its own, bringing on professional services and software recommendations company BestVendor, which it combined with its own ExpertCircle business.


All of that provides Intuit with a wealth of information and resources for a customer base that's largely made up of small businesses. The company has more than 5 million Quickbooks users, many of which are contractors, freelancers, or otherwise businesses of one. According to Intuit VP and GM Alex Chriss, who led the deal, this acquisition will help both companies better serve that audience.


“There's 28 million small businesses out there and 22 million are really small businesses, businesses of one,” Chriss said. “They have to face a whole bunch of these questions immediately after starting a business, and these guys [Docstoc] have the best content in the world about how to do that.”


For Docstoc CEO Jason Nazar, the acquisition also made a whole lot of sense. The company has been running profitably for years, after raising just $4 million from investors. While it wasn't totally bootstrapped, Nazar says having the resources of Intuit behind Docstoc will help it to grow and accelerate its pace for launching new products.


“I spent seven years being scrappy,” Nazar said. “I'm looking forward to having big resources behind us, and a big brand like Intuit.” But for Docstoc employees, not much will change. According to Nazar, the entire 50-person team will continue operating in its same office in Santa Monica, Calif.


Even so, he sees a big opportunity to make things easier for other small businesses just starting out. “Both of our goals is to meaningfully change the lives of those 28 million small businesses for the better,” he said.


I wish both of them luck in that. After all, having been a fan of Docstoc and Jason personally for a while, I gotta say - it couldn't have happened to a better person or a better team.







11:09 AM

Intuit, maker of financial products like Quickbooks and TurboTax, has a stated purpose of trying to be “the operating system for small busin...

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