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Wednesday, January 15, 2014
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Ask anyone under the age of 30 if they love Facebook. Chances are, the answer will be no.


The once dominant social network has most certainly fallen from its hyper-exclusive, hyper-popular beginnings to become the place where moms and uncles post their political opinions and baby pictures. (At least, I think. I haven’t been on Facebook in forever.)


In fact, Facebook has lost so much of its cool factor that even President Obama knows it.


As it turns out, the Atlantic’s associate editor covering tech Robinson Meyer happened to be sitting near Obama at a coffee shop, of all places, during a meeting the President was having to learn more about 18-34 year olds. The goal was to get more people in this demographic to sign up for coverage under the Affordable Care Act. For Meyer, the goal was to overhear the president say something relevant to his beat and — as it so happens — President Obama gave him a gem.


“It seems like they don’t use Facebook anymore,” said President Obama.


Meyer tries to get to the bottom of the President’s use of “they.” Perhaps it was the age group he was researching, between 18 and 34, or maybe it was the all-encompassing, third-person singular, gender-neutral pronoun, muses Meyer.


But we know who “they” is. It’s the cool crowd of teenagers and twenty-somethings that make social services popular to begin with.


Meyer’s eavesdropped interview also revealed that the president knows what Snapchat and Instagram are, though his interest and/or enthusiasm toward the up-and-coming social powerhouses is unclear.


What is clear is that Facebook has lost its swagger.


Since Facebook bought Onavo, which was one of very few services that could provide empirical data into this downward spiral, there is only one other service that can offer insight into the competitive landscape of Facebook and other social players.


According to App Annie, Facebook was ranked in the 50′s in downloads on the U.S. iTunes store. Meanwhile, Snapchat was ranked in the teens and even single digits. In August, some sort of algorithm change suddenly bumped Facebook into the teens as well. (App Annie told TechCrunch that it had “observed changes in the iOS App Store rankings around August” but refused to clarify whether Apple was the sole source of this shift for Facebook.)


Even at the current rank of 14th overall and 3rd in social, Facebook is still ranked lower than Snapchat (6th) and Instagram (11th). Instagram (arguably the coolest part of Facebook) is still ranked lower than Snapchat in Photo and Video categories.


Of course, this doesn’t necessarily paint a picture of a Facebook in trouble. The company is home to over 1 billion users, with the third most popular website on the internet behind Google and YouTube. Plus, this data actually proves that Facebook and Facebook Messenger are often downloaded by people when they buy new phones, showing the apps are still necessities.


But the cool kids are gone.


Facebook is no longer where we flirt with college classmates and spend hours posting photos. That use-case became nearly impossible when Facebook stopped being exclusively for college students and opened up to everyone. Inevitably, younger cousins and aunts and uncles and parents got on the platform. It started feeling more like a family reunion photo site than a hot social network.


And then, the generation that was champing at the bit to get on Facebook realized that their parents were champing at the bit, too. Instead of being a network full of 14- to 22-year olds, it became a network of 12- to 50-year olds.


Nowadays to the cool young kids, it’s an address book, with an email function, and perhaps the option to stalk if the person of interest doesn’t have Instagram. It’s a skeleton for all the other social apps we use, so signing up is easier and finding friends isn’t a repetitive process each time you download a new app.


Will Oremus hits the nail on the head. You can either have “everyone” or the cool kids, but you can’t have both.


Facebook has chosen everyone, and it makes sense — their business model depends on ubiquity. If you have everyone’s social data, you can sell ads about anything and convert. And up until recently, Facebook’s been wildly successful with this.


When Instagram posed a threat with 30 million super engaged and young users, Facebook instantly neutralized that threat with a cool $1 billion. After a shaky IPO, Facebook’s ad business is killing it.


But now up-and-comer Snapchat is posing a threat. Facebook first tried to fight it with a clone called Poke, which flopped, and then offered $3 billion to buy the app.


Snapchat, unlike other social competitors, is not reliant on Facebook at all, instead opting to use the Address Book for friend finding. Meanwhile, we’re seeing Instagram users rain down hellfire on Instagram ads as the once hip and cool photo-sharing app gets swallowed up, now a cog in the Facebook corporate machine.


With every day that passes, Facebook starts to look less and less like an Apple and more and more like a Dell. Luckily, there’s still no Apple on the horizon. While younger, hotter social networks spring up and solve problems, no one but Google has tried to make an all-encompassing social network to compete with Facebook. And we all know how that worked out.


Zuck is aware of all this. He admitted on an earnings call that Facebook is losing steam with teens, but that he’s more concerned with Facebook being useful than cool. And it still is useful.


The company will continue to see downloads, as it’s now necessary to have Facebook if you want to use other social apps. Facebook will continue to make money on ads (now that it knows everything about us) and Messenger will remain a truly popular tool among text-obsessed teens.


But things have changed. Obama even said so.


The cool kids are officially on the hunt for something else, and it’s only a matter of time before another Evan Spiegel pops up, too stubborn to take cash from Zuck, but this time with an all-purpose social network. And being young and VC-funded, this social network won’t show ads for years.


And, being different from the incumbent, it will become wildly attractive to teenagers and twenty-somethings.


But that’s way in the future. Right?







1:39 PM

Ask anyone under the age of 30 if they love Facebook. Chances are, the answer will be no. The once dominant social network has most certain...

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The United States National Security Agency's surveillance efforts reportedly include radio transmissions from circuit boards and USB cards inserted surreptitiously into computers. This apparently has been going on since 2008. "This is pretty cool," said Jim McGregor, principal analyst at Tirias Research. "You could embed a transmitter in a USB dongle or memory card or mouse plugin or USB plugin ... . There are lots of places you could hide it." The device used for remote spying over radio is the Nightstand.


1:09 PM

The United States National Security Agency's surveillance efforts reportedly include radio transmissions from circuit boards and USB c...

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Facebook will start peddling user data to Yandex, Russia's top search engine, as part of a deal between the two tech giants. Yandex will get full access to public data from users in Russia, Turkey, Ukraine, Belarus and Kazakhstan. Yandex will use the data in question -- which includes posts and comments that have not been classified as "private" -- to enhance its search results. For its part, Facebook figures to get a bump in traffic in Russia, where is competes with homegrown social network VK.


11:39 AM

Facebook will start peddling user data to Yandex, Russia's top search engine, as part of a deal between the two tech giants. Yandex wi...

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vita

And Unity’s develop-once, build-for-anything arsenal continues to grow.


This morning, the guys over at Unity made good on a promise they first made in March of last year: support for Sony’s latest handheld, the Playstation Vita.


For those who might not know, Unity is a game engine built from the ground up to fulfill a dream that game developers have had for ages: the ability to build a game once, and have that game playable on many different platforms with minimal effort. You’ve still got to tweak each game for optimizations and platform-specific things like touch controls or motion sensors, sure — but that’s a drop in the bucket compared to rewriting the bulk of your code base for each and every platform.


(Want to know more? Slashdot has a great — if now slightly dated — look at Unity’s tale so far)


With this addition, Unity is sort of running out of platforms to expand to. It now supports, amongst others: PC, Mac, and Linux, iOS, Android, BlackBerry, Windows Phone, PS3 and PS4, Xbox 360 and Xbox One, and the Wii U (though working with the game consoles is much more complicated than working with computers or smartphones — for the most part, you need a thumbs up from the console maker before you get started). Oh, and some games can be played on the web through Unity’s browser plug-in.


Rather than just offering up game porting support, Unity has gone ahead and integrated Vita-specific features into the mix. With that, developers are able to tap things like the Vita’s motion sensors, its cameras, and the Vita’s crazy rear touch pad.


Alas, even if you’re already set up with Unity and have a Vita nearby, you might not be able to start crackin’ away at building games for the Vita just yet. Like pretty much every other console on the market, Sony has things locked down pretty tight — if you want to build on the platform, you’ll have to convince Sony to make you a licensed developer. For those of us just dabbling, that… might be a bit of a challenge.







11:24 AM

And Unity’s develop-once, build-for-anything arsenal continues to grow. This morning, the guys over at Unity made good on a promise they fir...

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11:24 AM

Our favorite hacker in the world, Ladyada AKA Limor Fried, spent a good few minutes talking to President Obama in one of his famous Fireside...

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Image (1) ebook_image.jpg for post 120640

How much should you pay for an ebook? $9.99? $0.99? $0? And how much should you price your ebooks? I’m going to tell you what people have actually paid for their ebooks, based on some hard data from Luzme. You can set the price of your book to be anything you want; what really matters is what someone will pay for it!


Last year, Luzme captured a large amount of ebook price data and reader pricing preferences. I am analysing this data and will share any interesting results.


I do not claim that this is representative of the whole ebook industry, but I hope that some real data might contribute something useful to the debate.


So here is my analysis of the actual prices that people have paid at Amazon in 2013, when they bought via Luzme.


USA


For the US data, I have normalised it against the “standard price” of $10.


Here is the way the various prices worked in terms of units sold.


luzme-2013-comparative-units-us

The most popular price points are at the low-end, with a local peak around the $10 mark, and then tailing off as the price increases.


This does not surprise me. But what I did not expect, is how much people will actually pay for an ebook (well over the $10 price! How much do you think the most expensive one went for? I will tell you later…)


Now look at the revenue over the same price points.


luzme-2013-comparative-revenue-us


See how the $9-10 range shows a spike of revenue? I suggest this validates the industry viewpoint that there is a good market for books priced around $10.


UK


The UK market is a completely different story. Here, I have normalised the data around the £6-7 range, which is roughly $10.


luzme-2013-comparative-units-gb


By far, the largest number of units sold is £1 or less (mostly 99p). And then it tails off as the price rises. There are hardly any sales over £5 (approx $7.50)


luzme-2013-comparative-revenue-gb

And the revenue tells the same story; £5 or less is where the sales are.


So why the great difference?


I can understand why there are markets for both low-price ebooks and $10 ones.


From talking to my users, they fall broadly into two categories. First there is the avid readers who buy many books each week; their watchlist is so long that they are happy to buy whichever is cheap today. Then there is the reader who has a particular book in mind; they do not buy very often but when they do, they are not price-sensitive, they just want the book straightaway.


But why the difference between the US and the UK?


In the UK, there is usually a fierce price war going on between Amazon and some new entrant; currently it is Sainsburys, previously it was Sony and Nook. But there is usually someone trying to buy market share by discounting the price. Previously we had the 20p offer from Sony, now 99p seems more common.


In the USA, the current tussle appears to be between the existing ebook stores and the new startups wanting to sell you a subscription model (aka “Netflix/Spotify for ebooks”)


In Summary


10 facts you may not know about 2013 ebook sale prices, as seen at Luzme:


In the USA:



  1. In the USA, ebooks sell at all prices from $1 up to $10.

  2. The most popular price range was $1-2.

  3. The most revenue was earned between in the $9-10 price range.

  4. Specialised ebooks sell at high prices, over $100.


In the UK:



  1. It’s completely different!

  2. Ebooks don’t sell well above £5.

  3. The most popular price range was <= £1.

  4. The most revenue was earned in the <= £1 price range.

  5. There is less evidence of specialised ebooks selling at high prices.


And..



  1. Someone thought an ebook was worth $134.84! “Digital Signal Processing in Power System Protection and Control”, to be precise…


Rachel Willmer is the founder of Luzme, a book comparison site. This is part of a series on crowdfunding and publishing, The Mytro Project . For future posts I’m looking for more input from online analysts and other crowdfunding platforms so please email me at john@techcrunch.com.







10:54 AM

How much should you pay for an ebook? $9.99? $0.99? $0? And how much should you price your ebooks? I’m going to tell you what people have ac...

Read more »
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pingboard_squares

Office management isn’t exactly an area most startups tackle, but Pingboard, which is launching in beta today, aims to become “an office manager’s best friend.” The company argues that it’s the first really modern service that was built for office managers. Pingboard also announced today that it has raised a $1.25 million funding round.


While enterprises have often developed their own solutions, Pingboard says, it wants to become the go-to office management solution for small and medium businesses and startups. The company says these still tend to rely on seldom-updated spreadsheets (we’ve got a few of those at TechCrunch as well) and manual processes. Pingboard, on the other hand, stores all employee information in a single place.


The service also offers an API, so companies that need to connect their directory to more complex applications and have the resources to do so can expand the service to meet their own needs.


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Indeed, while the company is starting out with this directory service, it does see itself as a platform. It’s starting out small because it believes that having the core directory data allows it to then power more interesting use cases. The team says this could be anything from powering company lunch orders to getting into human capital management. Over the long run, that’s where the Pingboard team believes the real value of its service will be.


“We are launching focused on the employee directory first because virtually everything that needs to be automated in an office centers around employee information,” the company told me.


As part of the core service, Pingboard includes some basic messaging functionality (using email or text messages) so employees can easily notify each other or receive notifications from their office manager when they have a visitor or a package has arrived for them, for example. All of the data in the system can be imported from spreadsheets and auto-synced with Google Apps, social profiles and HR systems. The service also allows users to sign in with the Google Apps accounts.


The service was founded by Bill Boebel (CEO) and Rob Eanes (CTO). Boebel is an Austin-based angel investor and part of Capital Factory, together with OtherInbox founder Joshua Baer and WP Engine founder Jason Cohen. He previously built Webmail.us, which was acquired by Rackspace in 2007. He stayed with Rackspace until 2011. The project was incubated at Capital Thought, an incubator founded by Boebel, Baer and Cohen.


The lead investor in Pingboard’s funding round is Silverton Partners. Baer and Cohen also invested in this round, as did Webmail.us founder Pat Matthews, Rackspace funder Pat Condon, Indeed.com founder Rony Kahan and RightScale founder Jonathan Siegel.







10:54 AM

Office management isn’t exactly an area most startups tackle, but Pingboard , which is launching in beta today, aims to become “an office ma...

Read more »
 
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