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Tuesday, February 11, 2014
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Good things come in Threes, and it’s both maddening and enthralling. I’m talking about the new iOS mobile game from developer Sirvo, which combines Sudoku-like puzzle mechanics with Candy Crush-style matching for an experience that’s all too addictive.


How addictive? I opened it up to start my airplane ride to San Francisco from Toronto this week, fully intending to put it down after a few minutes and put on a movie. But I didn’t put it back down again until we had to turn off our devices to prepare for landing.


That’s a solid six hours of matching up multiples of threes to rack up higher-number tiles and higher scores. It’s not an experience I’ve had with many mobile-first games, which tend to be fine distractions, but lack the power to draw me in for extended gaming sessions in the way something like a Skyrim or a Final Fantasy can.


The mechanics alone aren’t enough to explain the draw of Threes; the mathematical matching is compelling, addictive and so simple as to be understood by all, yet also just sophisticated enough that it stands out from the typical matching games that depend solely on pairing up tokens. But the careful attention to design, animations, character creation, and sound all combines to make sure that each interaction is so satisfying you never want to leave the app.


THREES_trailer


If, like me, you have a tendency to fall into deep dark gaming keyholes when you find something you like, then you are probably familiar with the concept of a video game hangover: So-called because the physical effects resemble those that come after a night of heavy drinking, the video game hangover takes effect after an extended session without breaks, food or water. As I’ve aged, I’ve developed a lower tolerance for both kinds of hangovers, but with Threes I find myself happy to suffer through.


This isn’t the first time the developers behind Threes have captured my heart and mind – creators Greg Wohlwend and Asher Vollmer previously created Ridiculous Fishing, a longtime addiction with a unique art style and absurdly engaging premise, as well as Puzzlejuice and Hundreds. You don’t get much closer to finding a hit factory on mobile like this from an indie dev team. Threes is a hit among hits, however, because it has the potential to become the next Sudoku or crosswords, but with digital-first roots, which means it doesn’t have to sacrifice anything to adapt itself to our pocketable devices.


The game sits in the shadow of the late, dearly beloved Flappy Bird, with its infuriating difficulty level and derivative graphics and gameplay, but it’s the slow burn to the Bird’s short, bright flare and fizzle.





12:16 PM

Good things come in Threes , and it’s both maddening and enthralling. I’m talking about the new iOS mobile game from developer Sirvo, which ...

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Sigma is known mostly as a maker of lenses for other companies' cameras, but a few years ago it latched on to a new kind of sensor technology and produced an innovative byte snapper that caused a stir in photography circles. Now it's introducing a new generation of its Foveon cameras with a redesigned sensor and a speedier image processor. "Foveon sensors are different in that they are more like film than traditional digital sensors," said Shawn Barnett, features editor for DPReview.com. "They capture light in layers, much like film did."


11:23 AM

Sigma is known mostly as a maker of lenses for other companies' cameras, but a few years ago it latched on to a new kind of sensor tec...

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Lithium Technologies, which helps companies engage with their customers online, has “signed but not closed” a deal to acquire Klout, according to a report in Recode. The deal is supposedly a mix of cash and stock “in the low nine figures” (namely, a little more than $100 million).


Neither Lithium nor Klout responded immediately to requests for comment — I’ll update this post if they do.


Klout has raised more than $40 million in funding from investors including Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, Mayfield Fund, ff Venture Capital, Microsoft, and CrunchFund (which, like TechCrunch, was founded by Michael Arrington). The site, which claims to measure social influence, was relaunched last week with new content sharing recommendations, and the company said it saw more than $10 million in revenue in 2013.


Lithium, meanwhile, raised a $50 million round last fall in what it said was preparation for an IPO.





10:54 AM

Lithium Technologies, which helps companies engage with their customers online, has “signed but not closed” a deal to acquire Klout, accordi...

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Intel Capital, the chipmaker’s venture arm, has made two investments in 3D marketplaces, one in Austin and one in Lithuania. The companies, makexyz and CGTrader, allow users to upload 3D objects and sell services and downloads.


Makexyz is a 3D printing marketplace where modelers can upload their prints and then request they be printed locally on consumer-grade 3D printers. CGTrader is an digital model marketplace where you can buy 3D models for computer animation and the like. The are also slowly moving into the 3D printing space.


The terms of the investment are undisclosed.


“Our goal is to help people make stuff,” said makexyz founder Nathan Tone. “And intel’s investment strengthens our opportunity to help people make stuff at a significant scale. With a quickly growing, global network of 3D printers, a lot becomes possible.”


Image via Airwolf3D





10:26 AM

Intel Capital , the chipmaker’s venture arm, has made two investments in 3D marketplaces, one in Austin and one in Lithuania. The companies,...

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The investment pool in Toronto just got bigger thanks to a new $100 million fund closed by Canadian VC Georgian Partners, which is its second growth equity fund. The first one, closed back in 2010, was half the size at $50 million, and this new one includes investment from the recently announced fund of funds initiative from the Canadian and provincial government as well as private investors, the Northleaf Venture Catalyst Fund.


Other investors include BMO, Kensington Capital Partners, Fondaction and more, and the fund, like its predecessor, will be aimed at helping enterprise-focused startups looking to accelerate their growth take wing. Previous Georgian Partners portfolio companies include live event dynamic coverage platform ScribbleLive and Ottawa-based e-commerce giant Shopify.


Georgian’s investment strategy is built around something it calls “Applied Analytics,” which is the overlap point of ‘business processes, big data and information rights’. That’s quite the string of buzzwords, but it essentially amounts to companies that are focused on a particular tool needed by businesses, who use data analysis and above-board and transparent gathering of said data to solve enterprise problems.


Their portfolio includes a couple of companies focused on helping media companies embrace the web and mobile, as well as drive digital ad revenue, online shopping, digital rewards and loyalty, and fraud and privacy protection. The new fund will likely be used to support companies in the same general areas.


This is also a sign of what the Northleaf Venture Catalyst Fund will be used for in terms of helping to inject some life in the Canadian startup ecosystem. Georgian’s specific focus on growth doesn’t necessarily do much for early stage or consumer-focused startups, but B2B players with moderate success looking to kickstart their progress will definitely have a lot to gain from this fresh injection of capital.





10:26 AM

The investment pool in Toronto just got bigger thanks to a new $100 million fund closed by Canadian VC Georgian Partners , which is its seco...

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Yahoo has acquired New York-based startup Wander.


The terms of the deal were not disclosed, but based on rumors I heard last night at the Crunchies, it appears that the price was north of $10 million. Led by founder Jeremy Fisher, Wander has raised a total of $1.2 million in funding.


Wander, which has been around since graduating TechStars in 2012, is aimed around changing our content creation habits. Originally, Wander was focused on sharing travel experiences in a diary, but soon pivoted focus onto an app called Days.


The app lets users create a series of photographs and gifs in a package called a “Day,” which can be shared the next day. The idea is this: rather than sharing bite-sized moments in real time, Days is about sharing an entire story of how your day went.


By tying everyday experiences together, Days lets you share mundane things like your morning coffee or your cat and, thanks to the context created within the story, those mundane things become more “share-worthy.”


According to the blog post, Days will continue on as a standalone app, supported by all members of the Wander team. Plus, the five-person team will start working on “some exciting new projects” as a part of Yahoo’s Mobile and Emerging Products team, based in NYC.


Here’s the blog post in full:



We’ve spent the past few years figuring out how to make content creation as habitual as content consumption. That’s the idea behind Days, the daily visual diary we launched in May 2013. Nine months later, we’re excited to announce that we’ve accepted an offer to bring our work on daily habits to Yahoo. We started our company with the vision of transforming daily habits, and we’re proud to be joining a new one that shares that mission.

Our entire team will be joining Yahoo’s NYC-based Mobile and Emerging Products group, where we’ll continue on as a startup team within a larger organization. The Days app will live on as a standalone entity, and we’ll also be working on some exciting new projects that we can’t talk about just yet.

Sincerest appreciation to our investors, our advisors, our friends and families, the good folks at Apple, and, most importantly, our users! Your days have inspired us and it’s been beyond rewarding watching the product and community we’ve built together evolve and grow. We are so grateful, thank you!

If you have any questions, please tweet @wander or email us via founders@onwander.com.

Happy Days,

-Jeremy, Keenan, Lara, Sean, and Whitney



Obviously, this isn’t the first acquisition for Yahoo under Marissa Mayer‘s leadership. The fashion-forward CEO has acquired more than 15 companies in the past 18 months, during which time she’s totally turned around the perception of stagnancy in the internet juggernaut.





10:26 AM

Yahoo has acquired New York-based startup Wander . The terms of the deal were not disclosed, but based on rumors I heard last night at the ...

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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...

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