Friday, April 27, 2007
Thursday, April 26, 2007
Stewart and Caterina
Flickr co-founders Stewart Butterfield and wife Catarina Fake.
"He says many casual Flickr users want to sell their pictures but aren't sure how to proceed with copyright or payment. On the flipside, media companies would love to tap into the wealth of material but can't always find it or the photographer."
source: http://www.cbsnews.com/stories
Posted by
Augustine
at
5:24 PM
Verizon/Vonage Lawsuit As A Proxy For What's Wrong With The Patent System
Group Of Banks Sues TJX Over Data Breach
Posted by
Augustine
at
4:42 PM
Got A Good Credit Score? Rent It To Someone In Need
Posted by
Augustine
at
4:41 PM
Zipcar + ParkatmyHouse
London is host to one of the coolest and most functional partnerships we've seen recently. A collaboration that lets people share cars and parking places! It's hard to believe it's taken so long for something like this to come around...
ParkAtMyHouse is a new service that provides affordable and penalty-free parking around public venues by enabling property-owners to rent out their empty driveways, garages, car parks and other spare pieces of land to drivers needing somewhere to park. Anyone can register to rent out their parking space to consumers and/or businesses.
The new service has just partnered with ZipCars - another progressive company that allows users to rent cars by the hour or day. Users can book a Zipcar online or over the phone at any time, any day of the week. Then all you have to do is walk to the nearby car, unlock it by swiping your unique Zipcard across the windscreen and drive away with the minimum of fuss.
Posted by
Augustine
at
4:02 PM
BACKUP: Create easy online backups with Jungle Disk and Amazon S3
Tech columnist Mike Elgan has found what he considers the ultimate backup solution: Jungle Disk, a front end for Amazon's S3 storage service.
Jungle Disk puts a virtual drive on your computer that looks like any another hard drive. Unlike "regular" backups systems, you can browse, open, check and confirm the validity of every file in your backup by simply opening the folder, and using the files as if they were on your local hard drive. They're not locked away in a cryptic, proprietary system.The Jungle Disk application lets you set up automated backups, which looks for any file changes in the files or folders you specify, then backs up any modified files at the frequency you set. You set it and forget it.
Jungle Disk is free while in beta; down the road it'll cost you $20 or $1 per month. As for S3, it's a pay-as-you-go service that costs 15 cents per gigabyte of storage and 20 cents per gigabyte of data transferred.
Those are pretty affordable rates, but you can accomplish almost exactly the same thing with MediaMax and Mozy, both of which are free. What do you think? Put your online-backup thoughts where they belong: the comments! —Rick Broida
Posted by
Augustine
at
3:15 AM
Wednesday, April 25, 2007
Create Animated GIFs Online - Photo Slideshows without Flash
Posted by
Augustine
at
10:44 PM
Getty Images vs. Flickr
excerpted from
Thomas Hawk's Digital Connection
Thursday, March 01, 2007
Getty Images vs. Flickr
Let's take this a step further though and look at Creative. This is the side of stock photography where marketers go to get images to sell things.
Below are three searches that I selected at random. Las Vegas, candle and clouds. Now click through to the search pages for these terms at Flickr and at Getty Images. Which one is better? Is it clearly better? If you were a marketer would it make a difference to you which one you pulled your images from?
Las Vegas Getty
Las Vegas Flickr
Candle Getty
Candle Flickr
Clouds Getty
Clouds Flickr
Now let's take this a step further and enter into the long tail of stock photography let's do a search for Tujunga (a small town in the San Fernando Valley where I grew up) and Mount Tam (a local mountain in Marin here in the Bay Area).
Tujunga Getty
Tujunga Flickr
Mount Tam Getty
Mount Tam Flickr
Interesting what you get here isn't it? You see with 400 million images in their library Flickr is the better stock agency for long tail stuff for sure. The problem just is that Flickr hasn't figured out how to turn this on yet.
Posted by
Augustine
at
10:22 PM
Business 2.0 - Can Amazon.com Play Nice with Others?
source: http://blogs.business2.com/beta/2007/04/can_amazoncom_p.html by Owen Thomas excerpt "FlickrCash, a service which searches Flickr, likewise neglects to mention Yahoo's interest in the name."
Posted by
Augustine
at
2:42 PM
Founders, Founders and More Founders
by Darren Herman (4/4/2007)
Paul Graham of Y Combinator success has released an insightful essay about traits he’s studied with the early stage entrepreneurs he deals with each day that are part of his program up in Boston.
The essay didn’t just strike me about founders, but it struck me about Y Combinators success rate as well:
We’ve now been doing Y Combinator long enough to have some data about success rates. Our first batch, in the summer of 2005, had eight startups in it. Of those eight, it now looks as if at least four succeeded. Three have been acquired: Reddit was a merger of two, Reddit and Infogami, and a third was acquired that we can’t talk about yet. Another from that batch was Loopt, which is doing so well they could probably be acquired in about ten minutes if they wanted to.
That’s pretty darn solid if you ask me. I do not know anyone personally who has been through the Y Combinator, but based on the essay that Paul has written and the statistics, the numbers certainly look positive.
In the essay that Paul has written, he talks about many reasons why people do not become entrepreneurial and talks about why those reasons should be ignored. The topics covered are:
- Too young
- Too inexperienced
- Not determined enough
- Not smart enough
- Know nothing about business
- No Cofounder
- No idea
- No room for more startups
- Family to support
- Independently wealthy
- Not ready for committment
- Need for structure
- Fear of uncertainty
- Don’t realize what you’re avoiding
- Parents want you to become a doctor
- A job is the default
Posted by
Augustine
at
2:09 PM
Labels: investment, VC, YCombinator
Download of the Day: HandBrake (All platforms)
Windows/Mac/Linux: Rip DVDs to your iPod with HandBrake, the latest version of the program previously known as MediaFork.
HandBrake can turn DVDs into iPod-friendly MPEG-4 or H.264 video files. It includes iPod, Apple TV and even Sony PS3 presets, but you can also customize various audio and video settings to your liking. (Needless to say, the ripped files will also play on Zunes and other devices.)
Windows users can choose between GUI and CLI versions; both require DVD43 to be installed if you want to rip copy-protected DVDs (the ones you own, of course). Also, be sure to choose the VIDEO_TS folder when you browse the DVD, and then select the "title" that contains the actual movie (it's usually the longest one). For Windows users in particular, HandBrake definitely makes easier work of copying DVDs to your iPod, though the overall process still takes a few hours.
Still in beta, HandBrake is free; it's available for Windows, Mac and Linux operating systems. —Rick Broida
Posted by
Augustine
at
1:34 PM
Samsung builds a better, smaller 4GB DIMM
Posted Apr 23rd 2007 7:35PM by Donald Melanson Filed under: Desktops, Laptops