Random Post

Friday, December 13, 2013
no image

4:23 PM

In this week’s episode of Ask A VC, DFJ Managing Director Josh Stein joined us in the studio to talk about his investing strategy, and much...

Read more »
no image
hc9ScYRZsACMcYC2lYOup0gA09-wrzqVEBA3CWu7YQk

You’re in luck today, true believers! We have four exciting robots that will eventually enslave and/or eat us. Each one is more beautiful than the last, thereby allowing us to be lulled into a false sense of calm while these robots slowly dismantle our society, or morals, and eventually our organic matter.


First up is the Stingray 500 drone, a quad-rotor air machine with some surprising features. The Stingray has corrective pitch programming that keeps it from flipping all over the place while you fly it. A central motor controls all four rotors and it uses a unique flight controller that keeps it upright and can even help it land without power. While the standard quadcopter design is just fine, I think this coupled with a flame thrower will really heat things up when the robots force us into relocation camps in the American hinterland.


How about this exciting video of things to come? Created by Alex Cornell, this dystopian video shows us what will happen when the robots get too smart for their own good and start to interact with angry humans. The robots will surely die the first few times… and then they’ll stop dying.


Next we have the Valkyrie “superhero” robot. This robot will help NASA conquer space and may even become the robot that conquers us. NASA scientist Nicolaus Radford offers a tour of the new robot and I certainly hope he has endeared himself to the the robots enough to, perhaps, in the end become their human collaborator.


Finally we present a video from Double Robotics that shows us the future of meetings, art appreciation, and dating. Why is it special? Our own Samantha O’Keefe is working with the robots to reduce the amount of time we have to spend in art galleries! It’s OK, Sam, we understand: it only makes sense to work with our future masters because maybe you’ll get an extra protein ration when they finally take down all world religions and governments! Until next time, humans, keep your powder dry.







3:08 PM

You’re in luck today, true believers! We have four exciting robots that will eventually enslave and/or eat us. Each one is more beautiful th...

Read more »
no image
NASA on Wednesday shut off one of the two external cooling loops on the International Space Station and has been struggling to fix it since. The problem appears to be in the flow valve within a pump module. There has been speculation that the situation could be more serious than NASA has acknowledged. Some noncritical systems in various nodes and laboratories have been powered down, and mission managers have put off a decision on whether to proceed with the Dec. 18 launch of the Orbital Sciences' Cygnus commercial cargo craft.


2:54 PM

NASA on Wednesday shut off one of the two external cooling loops on the International Space Station and has been struggling to fix it sinc...

Read more »
no image
China has "substantial evidence" on Qualcomm in an antitrust probe, according to a report in the state-run China Daily that quotes Xu Kunlin, the head of the National Development and Reform Commission's anti-price-fixing bureau. The Daily didn't divulge any specific details -- just Xu's confident assertion that Qualcomm is squarely in the crosshairs. Qualcomm released a statement saying it believes its business practices are lawful. China launched an antitrust probe into Qualcomm, the world's top maker of cellphone chips, in late November.


2:27 PM

China has "substantial evidence" on Qualcomm in an antitrust probe, according to a report in the state-run China Daily that quot...

Read more »
no image
apps1

Apple has again tweaked its iOS App Store algorithms, and the changes have brought about widespread search ranking changes across both iPhone and iPad devices. That’s search rankings, to be clear – meaning where an app is returned when a user searches for a particular keyword, like “music” or “banking,” for example, in the App Store. In other words, it’s not “ranking,” as in where an app lies on the App Store’s top charts.


The change was first spotted by app marketing tools provider MobileDevHQ, which keeps a close eye on factors that would affect App Store Optimization, or ASO as it’s often called. (Basically, that’s SEO for mobile app store search).


The company says the change occurred between 12/11 and 12/12, and is affecting both iPhone and iPad applications. The average ranking change they saw was 41.5 positions, which is 8 times the normal ranking change seen on an average day for iPhone results. Typically, the usual daily change is around 5 positions, for comparison’s sake.


The search ranking changes on the iPhone seem to be larger than those seen during the iOS 7 release (see bar chart below), which was also significant. And it’s affecting mainly App Store search rankings, as noted above, not the top charts, though this is now under investigation.


sonar iphone changes


Some examples (see charts below) show the impact this has had on various popular apps for search terms including “banking,” “home,” “music,” and “travel.” Here you’ll see that some apps have moved only a little, while others quite a bit. For example, Pandora went from 8 to 5, following the adjustment, while Rdio moved up from 96 to 53. Meanwhile, under travel, Hipmunk jumped up from 58 to 34, and Hotwire went from 116 to 66.


The charts have further examples, and these charts themselves are just a small sampling of MobileDevHQ’s tests, which involved 30,000 keyword searches.


banking


home


music


travel


As the company further dug into the data related the keyword rankings, they also found that:



  • Per keyword, 62.8% of apps saw a ranking change of at least 5 positions. (Normally about 17% of apps for a given keyword see a ranking change of at least 5 positions per day.)

  • Per keyword, 40% of apps saw a ranking change of at least 20 positions. (Normally about 3% see a ranking change of that magnitude per day.)


And :



  • Looking at the top 5 apps for any keyword, 31% of them changed. (Normally only about 8% change day-to-day.)


Of course, Apple continually makes adjustments to its App Store algorithms, but it’s not as common for it to make a large-scale change that move apps around this much in terms of App Store search results.


However, we’ve seen Apple focus on making its App Store search better in recent weeks – for example, in November we confirmed that the App Store’s search engine had begun correcting for misspellings and other “fat finger” typos and mistakes. And in the past, we’ve also seen Apple adjust for ratings, in addition to just download volumes and velocity, for instance.


What we don’t know right now is why Apple is doing this – is it part of a larger test on its part to shift how a weighting factor works in its search rankings? Is it in response to a particular problem that Apple is now trying to correct for, as has been common in the past? (Apple’s algorithms often change when publishers learn how to game its results.)


By spot checking the results over time, it appears that the changes have so far been sustained, MobileDevHQ reports, which would point to a more permanent algorithm change, and not a test.


As more data rolls in, we’ll add it here.







1:39 PM

Apple has again tweaked its iOS App Store algorithms, and the changes have brought about widespread search ranking changes across both iPhon...

Read more »
no image
maxcolbertmatthewdillabough



This is a very special edition of “
Founder Stories.”

First, this installment features the youngest entrepreneurs to be on our show, Max Colbert & Matthew Dillabough, who founded The Menlo App Academy back in 2011 when they were only 12 years old. The Academy focuses on teaching students between grades 6-9 how to develop applications for Apple’s iOS. In about two years, the Academy has completed roughly 15 classes and taught close to 150 students.


Wow.


Second, in this discussion, Colbert and Dillabough share more of the backstory of how they started The Academy, beginning with noticing their friends also wanted to learn how to code. With a busy schedule of school, sports, and other activities, the founders somehow find the time to grow enrollment, market both online and offline, and did their part to fulfill their mission of helping kids have the option to be exposed to computer literacy. Additionally, the duo talk about the subtle dynamics created when kids teach other kids (as opposed to adults teaching kids), and the importance of communicating with all of their team members as the number of teachers grows.


Most striking, to me, is the calm maturity both Colbert and Dillabough hold. Their intentions are pure, at a time in our country where our school children should (I believe) be exposed to literacy with machines and computer science to be better prepared for tomorrow’s world.


Editor’s Note: Michael Abbott is a general partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, previously Twitter’s VP of Engineering, and a founder himself. Mike also writes a blog called uncapitalized. You can follow him on Twitter @mabb0tt.







12:55 PM

This is a very special edition of “ Founder Stories .” First, this installment features the youngest entrepreneurs to be on our show, Max C...

Read more »
 
Google Analytics Alternative