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Thursday, December 12, 2013
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get feedback screenshots

Back in 2006, two enterpreneurs called Kraig Swensrud and Sean Whiteley started a business based around the idea that Salesforce could be used for more than just helping salespeople organise their accounts and targets. Kieden, as the startup was called, created an add-on for Salesforce that let users create and manage Google AdWords advertising campaigns, and in that same year, it was acquired by Salesforce itself, where the two held various roles and Swensrud eventually became the CMO. Now the pair have left the mothership to forge out into the startup world again. Today they are launching GetFeedback to fill what they see as yet another hole in the market: mobile-first customer surveys.


Swensrud says that GetFeedback is launching with an unspecified amount of seed funding from Salesforce itself, along with some unnamed investors.


Today is GetFeedback’s official launch, but in beta, GetFeedback had already picked up some 1,000 customers. They include Appirio, Amazon.com Student, Dropbox, Heroku, LinkedIn, Salesforce.com — and a few out of the blue sporting outfits, the Association of Surfing Professionals and the North Face.


For those who follow the world of online marketing, you will know that the survey market is big — worth some $2 billion, according to one estimate — but also very crowded. SurveyMonkey and Google are among some of the larger companies, and lots of startups like Loop, Zoho, Polar and others are also vying for business in the same space.


Swensrud says that what’s still lacking, though, are great experiences that are mobile-first. “It’s a mobile revolution,” he told me. While online surveys have largely replaced more analog paper and in-person feedback gathering (although some of the wave-makers, like Panorama Education, have adhered to them anyway), today the game is changing again.


“There are a host of companies in the $2B market for online survey and research software,” he says. “But many of them have been exclusively focused on delivering browser-based surveys, which translate horribly onto smartphones and cause response rates to plummet, while some of them focus on specific niches in the enterprise such as market research.


“Audiences now expect every experience they have with every company to be engaging on the devices they carry with them 24/7: the smartphone and the tablet,” he says. “Furthermore, the adoption of modern mobile apps such as Youtube, Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook have retrained audiences to expect engaging, fun, simple, visually-rich experiences on these devices.”


Indeed, GetFeedback includes a lot of bells and whistles that are already commonplace in mobile media experiences elsewhere: the ability for those conducting their surveys to customize the look and branding as well as add images and video to complement text. The surveys as well are responsive, automatically resizing to whatever screen and platform where they are used.


But the promise of mobile will also make it a contested space: indeed SurveyMonkey, one of the bigger players in online, browser-based surveys, hasn’t yet make a real splash in mobile. But now that it is taking its own growth efforts up a notch (with a new enteprise service and more concerted international expansion), it may well choose to focus more on mobile either through inorganic acquisition or through an in-house developed offering.


Some of the premise of GetFeedback is about getting in on the game early — this year there will be 1 billion smartphones shipped and that number will go up to 1.7 billion by 2017, says IDC. And some of the premise is addressing what is already a need today. “Already, around 50% of all surveys are opened on a smartphone or tablet,” he says. “How will businesses evolve in this rapidly changing world, and how will businesses continue to make great decisions?”


For now, the service GetFeedback.com is pitching itself as a freemium product, with a basic offering at no charge, and a monthly pay-as-you-go subscription, based partly on a maximum number of responses generated and partly the level of technical support desired, ranging from $20/month (for up to 100 responses) to $125/month (for up to 10,000 responses). This includes also includes a self-service plan.


A video of how the service looks is below.


GetFeedback – Product Overview from GetFeedback on Vimeo.







6:40 AM

Back in 2006, two enterpreneurs called Kraig Swensrud and Sean Whiteley started a business based around the idea that Salesforce could be us...

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Fleksy-beauty

San Francisco-based Fleksy has launched its in-app SDK integration for iOS via four new partners who implement the software in their own apps today. These include Launch Center Pro, Wordbox, GV Connect and BlindSquare, and were chosen from a number of potential partners to help Fleksy demonstrate the power and range of its virtual keyboard.


Operating on iOS as a replacement for a default system component like the keyboard is not an easy task; Apple will not allow third-party devs to replace some system features like the keyboard, browser, messaging or calling app in the same way that users can do so on Android. Fleksy is attempting to get around this limitation by providing an SDK that third-party devs can use to build Fleksy into their own apps one at a time, in much the same way that Google makes it possible for devs to build in an option to have their software open links in Chrome on iOS.


These four launch partner apps are all available right now in the App Store, and take advantage of Fleksy’s unique ability to interpret a user’s intended input regardless of where they strike on the screen to different ends. Fleksy co-founder and COO Ioannis Verdelis explained to me the selection process for this first batch of apps in an interview.


“We’ve had a lot of interest [from third-party devs] really since our first release of the app on iOS,” he said. “We’ve picked four partners who worked with us through the beta process of the SDK, and we’ve tried to have one app that addresses the accessibility market, BlindSquare, and then we picked other popular apps that we think have meaningful use of text input in their design.”


Click to view slideshow.

GV Connect is a Google voice client where you can use Fleksy to send SMS messages; Wordbox is a text editor; and Launch Center Pro is “a bit of everything,” says Verdelis, with shortcuts that help people navigate iOS and get things done quicker. For these first four partners, he notes that it was important not just to get partners who would use the keyboard in interesting ways, to help showcase the possibilities for others, but to use people who helped define the product, too.


From here, Fleksy intends to continue to be selective about SDK partners and work with third-party devs to launch their integrations for a little while, but eventually the plan is to open it up for anyone to use independent of Fleksy’s involvement. Revenue for Fleksy differs depending on how each dev makes their revenue, Verdelis says, with some like Launch Center Pro trying things like offering it up as an in-app purchase and then sharing revenue from those sales, and others going for a more straightforward licensing fee.


Fleksy launched as a standalone third-party keyboard on Android out of beta last week, and Verdelis says they’ve racked up over 100,000 downloads since then. On iOS, they’ve had over 500,000 since launching their standalone app, but the SDK is the focus here in terms of business targets, so watching to see how the stable of Fleksy-using apps grows from here will be key.







6:40 AM

San Francisco-based Fleksy has launched its in-app SDK integration for iOS via four new partners who implement the software in their own ap...

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If you want a Linux distro that is different and almost always up to date, look no further than Manjaro. If you can get it to load on your computer, Manjaro has a few features that could interest a Linux user who likes tinkering with the OS. The latest release -- version 0.8.8, or "Ascello," which came out last month -- failed to impress me with its cantankerous loading, but once I got it running -- which did not happen on all of my gear -- I was pleased with its performance and ample desktop options.


6:40 AM

If you want a Linux distro that is different and almost always up to date, look no further than Manjaro. If you can get it to load on your...

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2013-12-11_23h23_51

Convo, an enterprise social network that competes with the now Microsoft-owned Yammer, today announced that it has added at-rest encryption (ARE) to its servers in order to better protect its client information.


Recent revelations relating to the National Security Administration (NSA) have taught the technology community and world at large that data isn’t safe from surveillance, and other forms of snooping. One NSA program, MUSCULAR, became infamous for tapping communication links between American companies’ data centers abroad.


The Washington Post reported that the NSA has “secretly broken into the main communications links that connect Yahoo and Google data centers” abroad, and that by “tapping those links, the agency has positioned itself to collect at will from hundreds of millions of user accounts, many of them belonging to Americans.”


In response, Google and others are working to encrypt the data that flows between their vast server installations. Microsoft, for example, went as far as calling the NSA and others of its ilk “advanced persistent threat[s].”


Convo’s move today echoes those efforts, by expanding the amount of its data that is encrypted. At-rest encryption is just that: encrypting the data sitting on servers. This information is distinct from data that is in transit, which could be comprised in other ways. It’s important to encrypt information on the go, as MUSCULAR taught us, but also encrypting data that is just sitting about internally could become the next frontier in protecting customer and user information.


This hits home, as a number of publications that I have worked at use Convo. I would frankly not like the NSA to learn the things that I’ve said about it. I only publish the polite versions, such as they are.


According to Convo, it is the first product of its kind to add ARE to its technology stack. I spoke to the company today and it indicated to TechCrunch that it expects this form of protection to become as common as SSL in the coming years, though it could take longer for larger firms to follow in its footsteps. The more data that you have, the larger the challenge.


Though there are extant reports that the NSA is working to end encryption as we know it, it remains clear that we need more, and not less data protection. At-rest encryption is another brick in the wall separating our right to privacy from government intrusion. As an industry, we need to get to work on building that wall as high as we can.


Top Image Credit: Flickr







5:24 AM

Convo , an enterprise social network that competes with the now Microsoft-owned Yammer , today announced that it has added at-rest encryptio...

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datasift

DataSift has built a reputation as a provider of Twitter, Facebook and Tumblr firehoses — streams of unstructured data that can then be used in applications to track larger user sentiment and other trends. Today, DataSift is ramping up its presence in the big data game with the launch of Vedo, a processing engine that automates some of those functions usually performed by data scientists to make sense of that firehose data. Co-founder/CTO Nick Halstead tells me that “Vedo” comes from the Italian “I see,” suggested by DataSift’s chief technical architect Lorenzo Alberton, who helped devise the service, it’s first major product offering on top of its data services.


With DataSift announcing a $42 million round of funding just earlier this month, Vedo underscores the company’s intention to use some of that financing to expand its products and specifically sharpen its target on the enterprise market. Vedo has been a year in the making, he says.


Halstead tells me that the idea behind Vedo is to offer data processing companies (Simply Measured being one example), enterprises, brands, app developers and other customers an easy way of “reading” the data that comes out of DataSift. “We’ve been very good at curating and identifying rules to get to the right data,” Halstead says, “but a lot of that has been really simplistic.”


Now, DataSift will effectively offer customers three ways of tapping into Vedo. Social tech app developers, Halstead says, are likely to have in-house data scientists who will be able to use the extensions from Vedo to add machine learning to their existing applications, resulting in faster development. “Similar to how our single API have lowered their costs, this will help them enhance machine learning but with much lower cost,” he says.


Enterprise customers, he continues, are likely to want a bit more structure in how they interact with DataSift data. For them, the company has created pre-made classifications and taxonomies, which will be available in a library and will continue to be enhanced and improved. Among the examples Halstead showed me here were feeds that, for example, identified what devices and applications people are using to post to Twitter — there are 80,000 sources in all in this one (!) — and a feed that aggregated all airline-related tweets. Yes, all those United and Easyjet complaints, all in one place.


The third area is in the area of professional services, where DataSift will effectively let you outsource your data manipulation to its own in-house team of data scientists and consultants. “If there is some kind of machine learning you want to do and you don’t have your own data scientists, we will go off and build that for you,” he says.


All in all, Halstead says that DataSift did all of this to some extent in the past — indeed, it has already been providing dozens of different kinds of metatags on data “to help customers understand social,” in Halstead’s words. “But this takes it into a different league.”


The move to offer Vedo points to another big trend we’ve been seeing in enterprise: the larger push to harness and shape the nebulous “big data” promise. DataSift notes a forecast from IDC that predicts that by 2020, one-third of the “data in the digital universe”, which amounts to over 13,000 exabytes, will have big data value. But it will remain meaningless without some sort of conduits to channel it in a particular direction.







5:09 AM

DataSift has built a reputation as a provider of Twitter, Facebook and Tumblr firehoses — streams of unstructured data that can then be used...

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Peek

Since launching a little more than a year ago, Peek is trying to find new ways to help travelers book interesting experiences when visiting new and interesting places. To that end, the company has launched a new iPhone app that will allow users to find interesting this to do even when they’re not in front of a computer.


The new Peek iOS app, released today, will give users the ability to search, discover, and book all the same activities that they might get on the company’s website. But it will also provide more personalized options based on their locations and interests.


When users first open the Peek app, it runs them through a personality quiz to help determine which activities are best suited to their tastes. Once done, it’ll suggest activities to them from a variety of categories, including family friendly, arts & culture, food & wine, sights, walking tours and staying active, among others. They can also filter activities based on price and points of interest.


The app uses geo-location to know where users are and to serve up activities based on what’s nearby. For many activities, it even offers same-day booking. And on the mobile app, it integrates with Apple’s Passbook to enable users to redeem vouchers from their mobile phones. Confirmation can also be received by email, and users can get directions and maps so they know where they’re going.


According to Peek CEO Ruzwana Bashir, most service providers today don’t offer online booking, and even fewer enable real-time booking based on calendar availability. Enabling the ability to book from mobile, and have the confidence that appointments will be registered, is even rarer. To deal with that, it’s done a lot of work to provide better calendaring features for service providers.


Peek now has activities available in 17 different U.S. locations, including Boston, Chicago, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Miami, Napa Valley, New York, Orlando, Philadelphia, San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle, Washington, D.C., and the various islands of Hawaii. It’s also available to book experiences in London and Paris.


The company, which is headquartered in San Francisco, now has 20 employees. It’s raised $1.4 million in seed funding from an impressive group of investors, including Jack Dorsey, Eric Schmidt’s Innovation Endeavors, SV Angel, and Khosla Ventures.







5:09 AM

Since launching a little more than a year ago , Peek is trying to find new ways to help travelers book interesting experiences when visitin...

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Local government emergency managers have been trying for years to figure out ways to alert members of the public about crises and incidents, like natural disasters, that could affect them. Limited success has been achieved with auto-dialer implementation, which is dependent on phone lines' capacity. Twitter thinks it may have the best answer, though, and has recently made live a system whereby Twitter users can sign up for Twitter-published government warnings that will be sent directly to individuals' Twitter accounts.


5:09 AM

Local government emergency managers have been trying for years to figure out ways to alert members of the public about crises and incident...

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