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Tuesday, January 7, 2014
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Scott Burke, Yahoo’s senior vice president of data and advertising platforms, took the stage during the company’s keynote at the Consumer Electronics Show to talk about what he said is “a new unified advertising solution.”


Burke ran through the news fairly quickly, but the thrust of it seems to be that consolidating existing ad products while also introducing some new tools. The company’s ad units now fall into four general categories — native, audience, premium, and search.


The names mostly speak for themselves, I think, except perhaps for the new “audience” ads, which the company describes as “a better way to buy ads targeted to specific audiences.” On the native front, Burke noted that Yahoo is also making an addition of sorts by powering Tumblr’s Sponsored Posts.


Earlier in the presentation, Tumblr founder David Karp had talked about those posts, which is its early stages — he noted that even though the actual ads, or the creative tools used to build them, won’t change with the new integration, the underlying infrastructure will, giving Tumblr advertisers access to “a bevy of new technologies.” Karp also claimed that those posts are being reblogged an impressive 10,000 times on average.


Outside of the ad units, Burke said Yahoo is introducing a new Ad Manager, which is supposed to give advertisers direct access to the company’s ad products, regardless of the company’s size. And there’s a new Yahoo Ad Exchange, a marketplace for programmatic ad-buying.


Overall, Burke said the changes represent “the next generation of tools” that will “simplify a highly complex and fragmented market.”


I’m heading off to interview Burke now, so I will update this post with additional comments. In the meantime, you can read more details in the company blog post.







2:40 PM

Scott Burke, Yahoo’s senior vice president of data and advertising platforms, took the stage during the company’s keynote at the Consumer El...

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It’s CES 2014, and once again, SmartThings has taken over an entire house in Las Vegas to showcase all the cool things you can do with its home automation platform. Last year, when we visited the SmartThings house, the company didn’t have any actual products on the market.


Well, a lot has happened since then — it’s shipped the first generation of SmartThings products to its Kickstarter backers, it’s launched a whole new app to make it easier to get your house up and running, and it’s signed up more than 5,000 developers making hardware and apps that work on its platform.


This year, when we stopped by the new SmartThings house, we got to see exactly how far it’s come. That starts with the app that powers it all. SmartThings CEO Alex Hawkinson gave us a demo of how users can quickly get up and running on the platform.


We also got a demo of some of the automation features that have been added to SmartThings. Thanks to its new SmartThings Labs initiative, it’s got apps to support apps and products from companies like Sonos and Philips Hue bulbs. With that integration, you can do things like let your house know that you’re awake, and have it turn on the lights, start up your coffeemaker and turn on your music player.


SmartThings recently raised $12.5 million from Greylock Partners and Highland Capital Partners. Other investors include First Round Capital, SV Angel, Lerer Ventures, CrunchFund*, Max Levchin, Yuri Milner’s Start Fund, David Tisch, A-Grade Investments, Chris Dixon, Vivi Nevo, Alexis Ohanian, Loic Le Meur, Martin Varsavsky, Kal Vepuri, Ryan Sarver, Jared Hecht, Steve Martocci, Emil Michael, Aaron Levie, Zorik Gordon, and Nathan Hanks.



*CrunchFund was started by TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington







2:09 PM

It’s CES 2014, and once again, SmartThings has taken over an entire house in Las Vegas to showcase all the cool things you can do with its...

Read more »
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1:40 PM

Today at its CES keynote, Yahoo announced a new product, News Digest to help people stay “quickly informed” on the day’s big topics by sendi...

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Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer just made her first announcement on-stage at her Consumer Electronics Show keynote — that the company has acquired Aviate, a startup that automatically organizes the apps on your homescreen.


Mayer suggested that Yahoo could use Aviate’s technology to deliver its content in smarter ways. For example, she said that your homescreen could automatically show you stock quotes at the beginning of the day, “instead of having to search or scroll for apps.”


The company offered more details in a blog post:



We envision homescreens becoming smarter, more personalized, aware of your context. Aviate helps us bring this vision to life. Aviate auto-categorizes apps on your Android phone and intelligently gathers them into “spaces.” By using signals to understand your context – WIFI, GPS, Accelerometer, Time, etc – Aviate automatically surfaces information at the moment it’s useful. So whether you’re just waking up, driving, at work, or maybe out for the night, Aviate learns your habits and helps anticipate the information and apps you need – making your phone smarter.



Note that Aviate is an Android product, and the blog post says Yahoo plans to make it “a central part of our Android-based experiences in 2014 (and beyond)” — not, in other words, on iOS. It’s hard to imagine something like this working on iOS, but it’s also interesting to see Yahoo making an Android-focused acquisition, especially since we’ve written about Yahoo’s challenges in launching a big, sustainable hit on Apple’s platform.


The Yahoo post doesn’t offer any details about the financials of the deal, but it does suggest that the Aviate team is joining the company. The startup raised a $1.8 million round of funding last year from Highland Capital, Andreessen Horowitz, and others.


Updating







1:40 PM

Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer just made her first announcement on-stage at her Consumer Electronics Show keynote — that the company has acquired A...

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Today, Twitter announced that it will report its fourth quarter fiscal year 2013 results on February 5th, 2014. This is the first report to be issued since the company went public last year.


In an interesting move, questions will be able to be submitted via Twitter directly.


“Questions submitted via Twitter, directed to @TwitterIR, using the hashtag #TWTRearnings will be considered during the Q&A portion of the conference call in addition to questions submitted by conference call participants,” said Twitter in a release today.


There will be a live webcast of the conference call, as roughly per usual with internet companies today. Twitter also notes that its investor website, as well as accounts including @twitter, @twitterIR and CEO Dick Costolo’s account to distribute investor news.


Points that we’ll be watching for in the report include any user growth metrics that might flesh out how Twitter is doing with its onboarding efforts. Its acquisition of MoPub and recent addition of native advertising and outside-network contextual products will also be evaluated based on the numbers it reports.


Twitter recently appointed Marjorie Scardino, the ex-CEO of Pearson, as its first female board member. This ended a period of intense attention as to why Twitter’s board had no female presence whatsoever. Twitter offered its IPO late last year at a price of $26 and it quickly ballooned to $44 at open. The stock took a hit at the end of December but has since recovered, currently hovering around $63 — though it did trend downwards slightly in trading today.


Image Credit: Steve Snodgrass







1:40 PM

Today, Twitter announced that it will report its fourth quarter fiscal year 2013 results on February 5th, 2014. This is the first report to ...

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CEO Brian Krzanich laid out the road map for Intel's future in his first Consumer Electronics Show keynote as CEO. Krzanich, who took over the top job last May, focused on wearable technology -- including some products designed internally -- as well as dual operating system tech and Intel's McAfee security software. Among the products Krzanich displayed was a Bluetooth headset, codenamed "Jarvis," that can integrate with a smartphone personal assistant function, such as Apple's Siri, without requiring the user to touch anything.


12:40 PM

CEO Brian Krzanich laid out the road map for Intel's future in his first Consumer Electronics Show keynote as CEO. Krzanich, who took ...

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If you're inclined to make resolutions this time of year and you're concerned about your online and offline security, here are some suggestions that can keep you safer in the days ahead. At the top of the list: You should vow to change the passwords to your important accounts on a frequent basis. "To ensure your personal information online is secure, it's a good practice to regularly change your password," said JD Sherry, vice president of technology and solutions at Trend Micro.


11:54 AM

If you're inclined to make resolutions this time of year and you're concerned about your online and offline security, here are som...

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