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Posts Tagged ‘at-techcrunch50’

New Seesmic Desktop supports Facebook fan pages

Friday, September 18th, 2009

The new Seesmic Desktop app lets Facebook fan page managers update them in sync with Twitter.

(Credit: Loic Le Meur / Seesmic)

There are a handful of Twitter apps out there that can also update Facebook statuses, and no clear market leader, but the new build (version 0.6) of Seesmic Desktop may soon be the app of choice for marketers who use Twitter and Facebook for brand promotion. That’s because it can now manage activity on Facebook’s “fan pages” as well as personal profiles, meaning that the operators of these pages can update them in sync with Twitter accounts.

“With the Facebook Page feature, you have greater control on how you market your business, oversee your brand, listen to your fans and build your community,” a release from Seesmic explained. Facebook, it should be noted, has launched its own feature to push fan page updates directly to Twitter.

If you’re an ordinary Facebook user who doesn’t manage any fan pages, Seesmic Desktop can also track status posts from those that you subscribe to.

Seesmic Desktop was built after parent company Seesmic, which had previously built a video-commenting company, acquired Twitter desktop app Twhirl.

Founder Loic Le Meur also announced that 2.5 million people have now downloaded Seesmic Desktop, and that Seesmic has partnered with Twitter image-sharing app Yfrog to be its default image provider. It’s the second partnership deal for Yfrog in a month, having inked a deal with URL shortener Bitly a few weeks ago. That’s probably disconcerting news for Yfrog rival Twitpic, once the unequivocal big player in Twitter image uploads.

Originally posted at The Social

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New Seesmic Desktop supports Facebook fan pages

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Twitter to raise funding at $1 billion valuation?

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

Twitter is attempting to raise funding at a $1 billion valuation, according to a TechCrunch post Wednesday.

The blog cited unnamed sources claiming that Twitter CEO Evan Williams announced the valuation in a recent meeting. According to TechCrunch’s sources, Twitter plans to raise about $50 million during the financing round. The company has already raised about $55 million in funding.

Twitter hasn’t immediately responded to requests for comment.

In February, Twitter co-founder Biz Stone announced in a blog post that his company raised approximately $35 million in a Series C round of funding led by Benchmark and Institutional Venture Partners. At the time, it was reported that Twitter’s valuation for the round was about $250 million. Assuming that both reports are true, Twitter is contending that it’s now worth four times as much as it was just seven months ago.

Of course, determining the real value of a company is a subjective practice. And most times, those figures change rapidly as economic factors impact the company’s operation.

Twitter, which has yet to turn a profit, still hasn’t implemented a profit-making business model. That could have a major impact on its valuation, regardless of the figure.

That said, Twitter co-founder Biz Stone said in an interview with VentureBeat last month that his company will implement a revenue model by the end of the year. He wouldn’t dig too deep into details, but he did say it would incorporate paid accounts for businesses that want to use the platform for marketing and customer relations.

But just how those paid accounts will impact Twitter’s growing user base is up for debate. Will companies go elsewhere to promote their brands? Will they pay Twitter’s fees? All that can impact the company’s real value.

So as Twitter possibly heads into another round of funding, it’s important to remember that valuations are fluid numbers that are easily changed. It’s also important to note that so far, Twitter hasn’t confirmed that $1 billion valuation. So maintain some skepticism, as we do, until we hear from Twitter.

Twitter to raise funding at $1 billion valuation?

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At TechCrunch50, sexy yields to sensible

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

Outside the TechCrunch 50 conference in San Francisco earlier this week.

(Credit: Josh Lowensohn / CNET)

SAN FRANCISCO–At some point during the TechCrunch50 conference it became evident that the Web 2.0 floodgates are no longer open.

Maybe it was when conference co-organizer Jason Calacanis asked one of the panels of judges what they’d thought of a round of pitches from just-launched social-networking start-ups like inbox aggregator Threadsy and photo-sharing iPhone app Clixtr. Sean Parker, the Napster co-founder and former Facebook exec who will be portrayed as a “Silicon Valley bad boy” in the film adaptation of Ben Mezrich’s dot-com scandal tome “The Accidental Billionaires,” leaned his elbows on the onstage table, slouched, and declared, “I’m a little bit bored with social media.”

Maybe it was when the TechCrunch50 conference winners were finally announced and the grand prize went not to a slick and shiny app filled with Ajax interfaces and social-media mashups, but to RedBeacon, a mundane-looking local services start-up that aims to offer an alternative to Craigslist and the Yellow Pages if you’re looking for somebody to paint your house or cater a party.

Or maybe it was when several Facebook execs took the stage to announce, among other things, that the social network–the subject of perpetual hand-wringing over how it would possibly make money–achieved a cash-flow positive status for the first time in the second quarter of this year, earlier than its 2010 goal.

Web 2.0 has grown up, after three years of investment, start-ups, and media hype, and it couldn’t have been more evident at TechCrunch50, a two-day parade of start-up launches that sometimes feels less like a conference and more like a fraternity reunion. By this point just about everybody knows just about everybody else; the launch demos were just as likely to come from established industry players as from hopeful young newcomers.

Not so long ago, the Web start-up landscape was dotted with dozens of small companies with a legitimate shot at getting huge. As recently as last year, it wouldn’t have been entirely ludicrous for an ambitious entrepreneur to take the stage at TechCrunch50 and announce that he or she was hoping to build a new start-up into the next Facebook. But the big guys have gotten bigger, and everything in comparison appears to be niche, peripheral tools.

Innovation on the Web these days comes in the form of fine-tuned features and tweaks, not big and lofty new schemes. TechCrunch50’s lineup showed that while there are very promising ideas out there, the new stuff is about improving existing concepts, not creating something off-the-wall new. ToyBots, a new Web-connected toy company, takes the kiddie Webkinz craze from a few years ago and infuses it with the thinking behind “hackable” household gadget Chumby. Winner RedBeacon, as well as used-car marketplace Mota and job-hunt site LocalBacon, all pitched themselves as better options than traversing the Craigslist jungle. iMo and Spawn Player are both add-ons for gamers, the former an iPhone controller app and the latter a Slingbox-like place-shifter.

And when something popped up at TechCrunch50 that was pretty darn original, it was met with some restraint. There was plenty of excitement over AnyClip, a new database site that indexes and deep-tags short clips from movies, but the judges rightfully expressed concerns over the difficulty of wrangling with copyrights and content owners.

It’s a far cry from the days when, even in the post-Napster era, millions of dollars were pumped into music- and video-sharing start-ups that weren’t prepared to deal with the intricacies of big media. And likewise, VC dollars were once flooding into start-ups that hoped to be the biggest social network in the world. The economy put a damper on this, for sure, but so did the increasing dominance of the likes of Google, Facebook, and to a lesser extent Twitter and Digg. The big news in venture capital on the Web these days is Twitter’s alleged billion-dollar valuation and Facebook’s employee stock trading, not in a huge rush of investors heading for the next big thing on the Web–which is exciting nonetheless, because it wasn’t all that long ago that these companies were just as small as those presenting onstage at TechCrunch50.

For now, if we want genuine, holy-crap excitement in the tech industry, perhaps we should be looking at hardware, green tech, edgy mobile innovations like augmented reality, or perhaps even enterprise technology. TechCrunch50 seemed to have the right idea by devoting a category of pitches to new hardware companies–but the judges, whose backgrounds were in Web and software investments, admitted that this wasn’t their area of expertise.

There were blunt words for some of the companies at TechCrunch50, especially community-based sites that require a critical mass of users to stay afloat; judges seemed skeptical that the social-media fever of the past few years can still pack enough of a punch. “Why would I leave Twitter for this?” asked Robert Scoble of one start-up–the same Robert Scoble who, in fact, did more or less leave Twitter for FriendFeed, which had impressive technology but little mainstream appeal when Facebook purchased it this summer.

The next big game-changer in social media might be out there already, and we haven’t even seen it coming yet. But watching more than four dozen start-up pitches in a row made it pretty clear that most of the biggest splashes of Web 2.0 have come and gone: we simply don’t need another news aggregator, another discovery engine, another question-and-answer service, another blogging platform, or heaven forbid, another social network. This is good. It’s a sign of industry maturation.

And it’s certainly not a bad thing that Silicon Valley’s elite finally seem to be catching on to that.

Originally posted at The Social

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At TechCrunch50, sexy yields to sensible

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