Random Post

Tuesday, February 11, 2014
no image
FBI "red tape" is preventing detectives from accessing the mobile phone formerly belonging to South African sprinter Oscar Pistorius, the double amputee known as "Blade Runner," who faces murder charges over the 2013 death of his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp. South African investigators reportedly have been trying to persuade the FBI to back a request for Apple to unlock Pistorius' iPhone, allowing its contents to be scrutinized ahead of the murder trial, which begins in early March.


9:45 AM

FBI "red tape" is preventing detectives from accessing the mobile phone formerly belonging to South African sprinter Oscar Pisto...

Read more »
no image

8:08 AM

The Gillmor Gang — Robert Scoble, Keith Teare, Kevin Marks, and Steve Gillmor — talk everything under the sun; Flappy Bird, Nadella and Bil...

Read more »
no image
sosh

Residents of San Francisco and New York City have been lucky enough over the last year or so to have access to Sosh, a social concierge that helps users find fun and interesting things to do based on their location and interests. Well, those who live in the Emerald City can now also use the app.


After several weeks of beta testing, Sosh has expanded into Seattle, which is its third market. There, it will provide the same sort of activity and food and venue recommendations that it gives in its first two cities.


The whole thing works like this: Sosh trawls thousands of different data sources, including event websites, blogs, and the like, and then curates some of the top things to do in each of the cities it operates in.


There’s also a personalization element that kicks in for each user as they bounce around the app. It checks your social graph for common interests between your friends, and also learns what types of things you like, based on what you check out, favorite, or save. Afterward, it will serve you up more things like that.


The social aspect also enables users to easily share with their friends, on networks like Facebook and Twitter.


Seattle is just the first in a series of cities that Sosh plans to expand into over the next year. According to founder Rishi Mandal, Chicago and DC are next, followed soon after by Los Angeles and Boston. Or something like that.


“Over the next year, there should be no reason that Sosh won’t be in every city throughout the country,” Mandal told me.


Sosh will be leaning heavily on a whole bunch of new funding that the company roped in last August. It raised $10.1 million led by Khosla Ventures, with participation from Battery Ventures. Altogether it’s raised more than $16 million.





7:39 AM

Residents of San Francisco and New York City have been lucky enough over the last year or so to have access to Sosh , a social concierge tha...

Read more »
no image
cozy

Cozy is tackling another part of the rental process today with the launch of a new feature for credit checks.


The startup, which raised a Series A led by General Catalyst last year, already allows landlords to perform tasks like screening tenants and collecting rent. Now, when a landlord finds an applicant that they’re interested in, they can actually request the credit report from the Cozy website. Then, the applicant can choose whether or not to approve the request (presumably they’ll say yes if they want the apartment.)


Co-founder and CEO Gino Zahnd said this changes the process in a few key ways. First, it means that the applicant doesn’t have to give their social security number to the landlord of every apartment that they’re applying for. Obviously, that’s a security issue for the applicant, but Zahnd argued landlords don’t necessarily enjoy being stuck with a stack of sensitive personal information to dispose of either.


“We’re completely changing who controls the information during this process,” he said.


Second, Zahnd said this eliminates the need for an application fee. In fact, he claimed that his goal is to “rid the world of application fees,” which he described as “a ridiculous idea.”


Third, after the initial report, every follow-up credit request is a “soft inquiry” that just updates your information, rather than a “hard inquiry.” The important difference? A hard inquiry affects your credit score, while a soft inquiry doesn’t.


Cozy-LandlordApp


To provide this information, Cozy uses Experian Connect API. Zahnd said the fact that credit reporting company Experian is now willing to make this data available to other companies through an API is a sign of how the industry is changing: “Consumers expect to have control of their private information. … Experian very much recognizes that.”


He added that the credit reporting launching today is “very much a first version,” with new features planned that will “give renters even more power around how this works and who initiates the process.”





7:24 AM

Cozy is tackling another part of the rental process today with the launch of a new feature for credit checks. The startup, which raised a S...

Read more »
no image
sgp103

DigitalOcean, the fast-growing SSD-based cloud hosting service, today announced the launch of its Singapore data center location. Hosted in Equinix’s Singapore 2 data center, Digital Ocean’s new location marks the company’s first expansion into Asia.


The service recently expanded to Europe with its first data center location in Amsterdam and the reason for going to Asia are the same as the ones that brought DigitalOcean to Europe. The company has seen large demand from potential users in the Asia-Pacific region, who want to use the service, but can’t stomach the increased latency that would come with hosting their services in DigitalOcean’s Europe or the U.S. data centers. At the same time, the company’s existing customers have increasingly shown interest in getting their services closer to their own customers in Asia, too.


According to DigitalOcean co-founder and CEO Ben Uretsky, the company decided to keep with its focus on simplicity, so despite the higher cost of operating in Singapore, it won’t change its pricing, which still remains at $5/month for its most basic servers. Uretsky stressed, though, that he has no doubts that the Singapore location will be profitable despite the margin loss. He also noted that he expects the new location to grow at a similar pace as its Amsterdam location.


In keeping with its focus on a lean operation, DigitalOcean won’t have its own staff on the ground in Singapore. Instead, now that its own team has set up the basic infrastructure, it will work with the data center personnel and system integrators to keep its service up and running.


Singapore, Uretsky told me, is the first location where the company is rolling out the latest version of its software. This 1.5 release will enable the company to more quickly launch new features for its users, Uretsky promised. While DigitalOcean has long talked about bringing IPv6 and more 1-click installs for popular services and frameworks, for example, those rollouts have taken longer than expected. According to Uretsky, the company had a tough decision to make: does the team want to clean up some of the technical debt it incurred when it first started the service, or chase the market? In the end, the company decided on getting its internal code right so that it now has a better foundation on which it can build new services.


One early mistake DigitalOcean made, for example, was to use two different image formats: one for its smaller servers and one for its larger ones. That meant the team had to manage two systems and the conversions between them whenever a user wanted to upgrade or downgrade to a different machine. This also created some of the security issues DigitalOcean was faced with last year. In the new system, the company now uses a single image format.


With this release, DigitalOcean is also now ready to launch IPv6 support soon. While Uretsky didn’t say when exactly we can expect this launch, the company now has the foundation for this feature in place and will like launch it very soon.





7:24 AM

DigitalOcean , the fast-growing SSD-based cloud hosting service, today announced the launch of its Singapore data center location. Hosted in...

Read more »
no image
macbook on desk, from picjumbo

Levo League, a site with career resources for young women, announced today that it has raised $7 million in angel funding from investors including Lubna Olayan, the CEO of Saudi Arabian firm Olayan Financing Co. and Véronique Morali, president of Fimalac in France, as well as CEO of Webedia/Allocine. Previous supporters have included Sheryl Sandberg, who made an angel investment in Levo in 2011 before publishing “Lean In,” and former Ning CEO Gina Bianchini.


The latest round of funding, which brings Levo League’s total raised so far to more than $8 million, will be used to create Levo 2.0, the next iteration of the startup, as well as increase its membership and launch local chapters in cities around the world. Levo already has chapters in 22 cities, including San Francisco, Dallas, Chicago, London, and Vancouver.


The company also plans to expand its existing recruitment, retention, and brand engagement services for companies such as Disney, The New York Times, AOL, Bonobos, and Southwest Airlines.


Founded by CEO Caroline Ghosn and Amanda Pouchot in 2012, Levo currently has 8 million members and its target demographic is women in the first 10 years of their career. In a statement, the company said that Levo 2.0 “will personalize the users’ experience in connecting with the opportunities, knowledge and network they need to succeed professionally.”


[[Image source]]





6:57 AM

Levo League , a site with career resources for young women, announced today that it has raised $7 million in angel funding from investors in...

Read more »
no image
Whole_Foods_Sign___Flickr_-_Photo_Sharing_-2

A year and a half after debuting a massive partnership with Starbucks, payments company Square is announcing its next big, in-store retail deal: Whole Foods. When Square debuted Stand last year, the assumption was that this high-powered hardware and software play would help attract large retailers. Clearly, this is a sign that this strategy is working.


The deal essentially places Square Stands and registers in all Whole Foods in-store venues (not checkout lines). These include sandwich counters, juice and coffee bars, pizzerias, and beer and wine bars in Whole Foods. In some of these spots (i.e. sandwich counters) shoppers had to go through the regular checkout line to purchase food. In other venues (ie wine bars), there was an existing register or even standalone ordering kiosks. These will all be replaced by Square Stands, the hardware device Square has developed for we understand.


For Whole Foods, having registers at various spots in the store where people are just buying one or two items on the go, helps reduce the wait time for customers who are just picking up dinner or lunch. And Square’s checkout process is seamless and also includes extra features like the ability to add things like tips, or send email receipts. Today, seven Whole Foods Market venues already use Square Stand, including stores in Austin, New York City, Florida and the San Francisco Bay Area, and all venues across the U.S. will eventually use Square and Square Stand.


“Together with Square, we’ll deliver options to expedite checkouts, and we look forward to developing new concepts to further simplify and improve grocery shopping,” said Walter Robb, co-CEO of Whole Foods Market in a release. “Square’s forward-thinking vision and technology makes them an ideal partner to create a convenient, responsive experience for our customers.”


For Square, this is obviously a high-profile, highly visible deal. While the company’s technology is not yet powering the grocery checkout line, placement in the grocery giant’s juice and coffee bars, and sandwich stands and more could be only the beginning. At select venues, Whole Foods Market will offer customers the option to use their mobile device to pay using Square Wallet, Square’s consumer payments application. And several Whole Foods Market locations will serve as “lab stores,” testing additional innovations around Square and payments.


“Whole Foods Market and Square share a focus on supporting local sellers and creating amazing shopping experiences,” said Jack Dorsey, co-founder and CEO of Square in a release. “With Square, Whole Foods Market will enable commerce in more parts of their stores with easy, accessible tools that showcase the best of what’s achievable in the service of retailers and customers.”


Last year alone, Whole Foods did $13 billion in revenue. Even if Square is powering payments for a a small fraction of that pie, that’s still a win for the company, which hasn’t announced a big retail partnership of this size since Starbucks. Another thing to consider about this deal is that Whole Foods could see the ease of use of Square and want to expand this to checkout registers, which would be an enormous coup for Square. If the company is eyeing an IPO, more deals like this should spark investor interest.


Photo Credit/Flickr





6:10 AM

A year and a half after debuting a massive partnership with Starbucks, payments company Square is announcing its next big, in-store retail d...

Read more »
 
Google Analytics Alternative