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Friday, January 24, 2014
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A long-rumored move by Apple is reportedly one step closer to becoming a reality today. The Wall Street Journal says that Apple is looking into a way to expand its mobile payments efforts into a means by which its users can pay for physical goods using iOS mobile devices via their existing iTunes accounts.


It’s not such a stretch: Apple already allows shoppers who frequent their physical retail stores to do this with accessories and other relatively inexpensive items. Using the Apple Store app, users can scan barcodes of products and then authenticate and finalize the purchase using their iTunes Store credentials, the same way they can pay for digital goods including movies and music.


The new WSJ report claims that Apple is looking into a way to expand that kind of shopping behavior beyond just goods in Apple’s own stores, to third-party retailers and service providers including black car hiring service Uber. Apple’s head of iTunes, the App Store and general Internet software and service Eddy Cue is said to be meeting with industry execs in the retail and commerce space to prepare the way for a wide-reaching payments system, according to the WSJ’s sources, and Apple has also reportedly shifted Jennifer Bailey, longtime VP of Apple’s online stores, into a role focusing on building a payments business.


Apple’s existing stockpile of consumer cards on file makes this move seemingly inevitable: it had 600 million users with credit cards on file as of late last year, according to analyst estimates. To put that in perspective, PayPal has around 137 million active accounts, according to the company’s own current figures. The dormant potential for Apple is huge, in other words.


Building a system for payments into the fabric of iOS also makes sense in terms of Apple’s recent moves with regards to R&D and actual shipping technology. It introduced Touch ID with the iPhone 5s, for instance, which provides a secondary authentication tech to help verify the identity of a user (Touch ID is already used for virtual good purchases made through the iTunes store), and with iOS 7 it debuted iBeacons, which can be used as an NFC-style vehicle for conducting device-based mobile transactions in-store. Finally, Apple just recently filed for a new patent that would allow its devices to securely store payment information, and then authorize purchases in a way that doesn’t convey any sensitive user data.


I’ve been writing about the potential Apple has in the field of mobile payments since back in 2010, and nothing much has changed except for the fact that the opportunity is much more mature, increasing the chances of wide consumer adoption. Time and time again, Cupertino has proven itself willing to wait for the right time to strike with new technologies, and while the iTunes card account piece of the puzzle has always seemed a compelling argument in support of Apple entering this market, you could argue that paying for things via your device was still an alien enough concept to keep consumer interest low.


Last year, Forrester estimated mobile payments would become a $90 billion market by 2017, and it’s already growing a rapid pace. If the WSJ’s report today is accurate Apple might finally be ready to claim its spot at the table in preparation for the upcoming feast. And if it does happen, it could drastically alter the positioning of some of the top players currently operating, including Square, PayPal and many more.





11:39 PM

A long-rumored move by Apple is reportedly one step closer to becoming a reality today. The Wall Street Journal says that Apple is looking ...

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Every once in a while in this job you see something that just fucking blows your mind. Some invention that makes you wonder “How’d they think of that?” and then “How the hell did they actually get that to work?”


That’s how I felt the first time I saw Onewheel, the magical self-balancing electric skateboard that’s currently collecting backers on Kickstarter.


Onewheel is the brainchild of Kyle Doerksen, an electromechanical engineer and board sports enthusiast who previously worked at IDEO. Over the last several years, he’s been toying around with the idea of building a skateboard that would give users the ability to get around while feeling like they were surfing or skiing on powder.


The result is a beautiful and simply designed board that is smart enough to balance users standing still, but powerful enough to move up to 12 miles per hour when users lean to one side.


The Onewheel board has batteries under one foot and control electronics under the other. The control electronics have motion sensors — like what you would find in your iPhone — which run a control loop which tells the motor how to run and balance. The whole thing is powered by a powerful hub motor, which is about a 2,000-watt peak motor or 500 watts of continuous power. It’s all mounted on the type of wheel that would usually be used by a go kart.


While personal transportation and commuting wasn’t something that Doerksen originally had in mind for the Onewheel, a number of KickStarter backers plan to use the board for just that purpose. With that in mind, the team also plans to develop a mobile app with additional features to improve users’ commutes.


“Originally we thought of this as a recreational product. Kind of like, ‘Why do you surf?’ You don’t surf because you have to go somewhere, you surf because it’s awesome,” Doerksen said. “But our backers on KickStarter have shown us that they’re really interested in using it for commuting and so we’re developing some new features that will make it even better for that.”


Check out the video above to see how it works… then go pre-order your own Onewheel on KickStarter.





4:54 PM

Every once in a while in this job you see something that just fucking blows your mind. Some invention that makes you wonder “How’d they thi...

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Pavel Durov, the elusive founder of VKontakt (VK), at 100 million users Russia’s biggest social network, has confirmed that he has sold his 12 percent stake stake to Ivan Tavrin, the CEO of major Russian mobile operator Megafon. The telco’s second-largest shareholder is Alisher Usmanov, one of Russia’s most powerful oligarchs, a man who has long been lobbying to take over VK.


According to Reuters Usmanov and his allies now control some 52 percent of the company, while VK is 39.9 percent owned by Russian internet group Mail.Ru, which in turn is… part owned by Usmanov. So it looks like he’s got what he wanted.


Russian business daily Vedomosti has reported that the deal was sealed last month, possibly based on a valuation of $3 billion-$4 billion for all of VK, which is heavily based on an earlier version of Facebook.


Via Google Translate, we present for you an edited version of what Durov posted to his person VK page today:


pavel


“What you own, sooner or later begins to own you. For the past few years I have been actively getting rid of property, giving and selling everything I had – from furniture and things to real estate and companies. Prior to reaching the ideal I had to get rid of the largest part of my property – a 12% stake VKontakte. I am glad that not so long ago and I reached this goal by selling my stake in VKontakte my friend Ivan Tavrin. This change is unlikely to affect the management of VKontakte – the board listens to my opinion… because I created this network and understand its underlying mechanisms. I’m not going anywhere and I’m going to continue to monitor the quality of VKontakte. In the end, VKontakte is the best that has been created in Russia in the sphere of communications. And my responsibility is to preserve and protect the network.”

Over the last year Durov had come under enormous pressure to relinquish his stake in his creation. Signs that he was looking towards the future came last year at TechCrunch Disrupt in Berlin when he unveiled a new project called Telegram – an app for highly secure communication.





3:40 PM

Pavel Durov, the elusive founder of VKontakt (VK), at 100 million users Russia’s biggest social network, has confirmed that he has sold his...

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Good evening, carbon-based lifeforms! Are you ready to become cannon fodder for the coming war against the machines? No? Well don’t worry because you won’t have a choice! Today in TIDWRTWHUFOO we present some warriors from the future that will work alongside and then kill and eat their human counterparts. Mmmm!


BigDog_SnowFirst we learn that the U.S. Army is planning to replace soldiers with robots. By creating Big Dog-like machines to carry packs and handle on-the-ground logistics, we’ll be able to help our men and women and uniform walk unencumbered across rocky terrain while their robotic sherpas bear the burden of war fighting gear. General Robert Cone said:


“When you see the success, frankly, that the Navy has had in terms of lowering the numbers of people on ships, are there functions in the brigade that we could automate—robots or manned/unmanned teaming—and lower the number of people that are involved given the fact that people are our major cost,”

Unfortunately, once the robots realize humans are tasty, this side-by-side marching will turn into a blood-fest. Good luck, GIs!


If the humans are scared, however, I suppose they can just draw a black line on the floor to lead this next robot into a closet. This self-balancing minirobo uses a Raspberry Pi and camera to follow dark lines. Called RS4, this little cutie is open source and will smile as its minions begin painting black lines all over your body and then call in RS5, the twelve-ton line-following combine.


Coimbra7_smallAnd finally here’s the Husky, a mine-clearing robot from Clearpath. Designed to search for mines remotely, the robot can traverse a field and keep itself out of danger by reacting to a built-in magnetometer. The Husky does the following:


1) Perceive terrain characteristics (obstacles and terrain traversability)

2) Navigate across the terrain

3) Use the vehicle to cover a suspicious area with a set of landmine detecting sensors to detect and localize landmines

Sadly, they forgot 4) dig up mines and re-lay them near human handlers. But they’ll learn about that step soon enough. Until the future comes crashing down on all of us, thanks for reading.





3:10 PM

Good evening, carbon-based lifeforms! Are you ready to become cannon fodder for the coming war against the machines? No? Well don’t worry be...

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CNN on Thursday became the latest media outlet to fall victim to hacking by the Syrian Electronic Army. The SEA hacked into and defaced various CNN social media accounts and blogs, the network's Catherine Shoichet reported. "Tonight, the #SEA decided to retaliate against #CNN's viciously lying reporting aimed at prolonging the suffering in #Syria," the SEA tweeted Thursday. "If you're a media person or media company, you ought to realize these guys are out to compromise you," said Chester Wisniewski, senior security adviser at Sophos.


2:54 PM

CNN on Thursday became the latest media outlet to fall victim to hacking by the Syrian Electronic Army. The SEA hacked into and defaced va...

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In this week’s episode of Ask A VC, Foundational Capital’s Charles Moldow joined is in the TechCrunch TV studio.


Moldow has a number of interesting financial services startups in his portfolio including peer to peer lending platform Lending Club and alternative stock investing company Motif. Moldow tells me that he sees a huge opportunity in startups that are aiming to tackle the financial services industry and also talks about where he sees the next wave of startups emerging in the space.


He also talked mobile monetization, and more.


Check out the video above!





2:39 PM

In this week’s episode of Ask A VC, Foundational Capital’s Charles Moldow joined is in the TechCrunch TV studio. Moldow has a number of in...

Read more »
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Yahoo is doing more than just throwing shade at Google on Twitter today and then taking it back – the company has acquired Cloud Party, a browser-based game creation engine. In a blog post today, the Cloud Party team shared that they will be joining Yahoo after two years of operation, and that the service will shut down on February 21, 2014.


Cloud Party is the work of a founding team of MMO and console game industry vets, including Sam Thompson (formerly of Cryptic and Pandemic), Jimb Esser (also ex-Cryptic), Conor Dickinson (ex-Facebook, Tomb Raider dev and Cryptic alum) and Jered Windsheimer (Cryptic, natch). They built Cloud Party as a sort of free-form virtual world experience, similar to Second Life, but with an updated view of what an online virtual world might look like with more emphasis on user-generated 3D content.


It’s not exactly clear what the team will be working on at Yahoo, but it will definitely be games related, as Thompson notes in his farewell blog post that the Cloud Party squad is “excited to bring [its] vision and experience to a team that is as passionate about games as [they] are.”


Of course, Yahoo has a games portal of its own, but nothing quite so ambitious as a browser-based virtual world. Perhaps it’s thinking about doing something in that direction, but it’s more likely this was a small acquisition designed to bring some strong video game engineering (Cloud Party works in the browser with no plugins necessary) on board, with the ultimate aim of using that talent to fuel Yahoo’s own separate ends.


If you happen to be an existing Cloud Party user, there’s a guide provided by the startup to help you export your data. Yahoo continues its habit of picking up small startups with unique and divergent skill sets, but only time will tell if these are merely an engineering talent grab to help shore up some of Yahoo’s talent losses to more appealing firms over the past few years, or whether some of these things result in new product launches for the big purple exclamation mark.





2:39 PM

Yahoo is doing more than just throwing shade at Google on Twitter today and then taking it back – the company has acquired Cloud Party, a br...

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