Startups

In short... Choreographed Hope! We are what happens when GENEROUS STRANGERS unite! HopeMob is exactly what it sounds like - a mob of people bringing hope. Just as Flash Mobs dance and bring spontaneous joy and laughter, HopeMob will b...
In short... Choreographed Hope! We are what happens when GENEROUS STRANGERS unite! HopeMob is exactly what it sounds like - a mob of people bringing hope. Just as Flash Mobs dance and bring spontaneous joy and laughter, HopeMob will bring caring strangers together to create sudden, yet organized relief and hope all over the world! We see a need and swarm it!
about 2 hours ago
Mosey. Adventures in the making. Mosey is your destination for custom-curated experiences. Think of it as a playlist of your favorite places and activities perfectly packaged into step-by-step guides. Whether it be the perfect Sunday aft...
Mosey. Adventures in the making. Mosey is your destination for custom-curated experiences. Think of it as a playlist of your favorite places and activities perfectly packaged into step-by-step guides. Whether it be the perfect Sunday afternoon, a weekend out-of-town, or the ultimate date night, use Mosey to embark on your next adventure.
about 2 hours ago
Listen millions of tracks online.Search in real time youtube videos, youtube playlists, spotify tracks, and our database of 540 000 albums reference.Keep your favorites tracks in playlists. Sync them to your youtube account, use the embe...
Listen millions of tracks online.Search in real time youtube videos, youtube playlists, spotify tracks, and our database of 540 000 albums reference.Keep your favorites tracks in playlists. Sync them to your youtube account, use the embedded spotify widget and so on....
about 2 hours ago
Accept bitcoin payments and receive the balance in your bitcoin wallet. No merchant account required. Bitcoin is a digital currency, a protocol, and a software that enables instant peer to peer transactions, worldwide payments, and low f...
Accept bitcoin payments and receive the balance in your bitcoin wallet. No merchant account required. Bitcoin is a digital currency, a protocol, and a software that enables instant peer to peer transactions, worldwide payments, and low fees. Bitcoin was design for easy transactions including mobile phones.
about 2 hours ago
Keep all in One place! Collect and organize photos, music, films, articles and more from around the web.
Keep all in One place! Collect and organize photos, music, films, articles and more from around the web.
about 2 hours ago
It's easy to start offering benefits and rewards to your employees. Customize what to offer from ten categories, including: Music, Books, Cleaning Service, Coffee & Tea, Experiences, Fitness, Food, Movie Tickets, Transportation, and Vide...
It's easy to start offering benefits and rewards to your employees. Customize what to offer from ten categories, including: Music, Books, Cleaning Service, Coffee & Tea, Experiences, Fitness, Food, Movie Tickets, Transportation, and Video. Employees choose which service they want from each benefit you've added. For example: By offering the Music benefit, your employees each get to choose between Spotify, Rdio or iTunes. Reward employees for a job well done
about 2 hours ago
Bring back the art of making mixtapes with MiTapes, a music player app for iPhone. Remember the days when compiling a mixtape was a labour of love? Now you can turn the songs in your iPhone music library into a collection of mixtapes. ...
Bring back the art of making mixtapes with MiTapes, a music player app for iPhone. Remember the days when compiling a mixtape was a labour of love? Now you can turn the songs in your iPhone music library into a collection of mixtapes. MiTapes allows you to create mixtapes just as you did on cassette tapes back in the day, picking that perfect mix of songs to suit a particular mood, occasion or person!
about 2 hours ago
Editor’s note: Tadhg Kelly is a veteran game designer, creator of leading game design blog What Games Are and creative director of Jawfish Games. You can follow him on Twitter here. During the 1940s Howard Hughes spent millions developin...
Editor’s note: Tadhg Kelly is a veteran game designer, creator of leading game design blog What Games Are and creative director of Jawfish Games. You can follow him on Twitter here. During the 1940s Howard Hughes spent millions developing and building a plane with the largest wingspan in history and a huge carrying capacity. The Spruce Goose was meant to solve a problem of moving troops and material for the second world war effort, but by the time it was tested, the war was already over and the plane’s engine technology was being superseded by jets. Even with more money at his disposal than Solomon, Hughes could not convince the world that his propellered giant had a place. I think it might be a similar story for the Microsoft Xbox One. What’s Xbox One Good For? Even at a physical level the Xbox One idea just doesn’t work for me. For one thing, it looks huge and ugly, like an old Toshiba VCR. Its next-generation Kinect is farcically large for what amounts to a fancy webcam, and the console also needs to be connected to your cable box in order to serve up all of its television features. That’s a lot of technology to find room for under your TV set at a time when everything else seems to be getting smaller. Unlike the miniature Apple TV or OUYA, Xbox One demands pride-of-place and lots of room, and when I put those two ideas together it just doesn’t work. It fails my wife’s test of asking that our living room not be overrun with technology. It fails the small-apartment test, the small bedroom test and the crowded family home test. The fact that the Kinect needs to be attached before it can even be switched on merely reinforces that fact. And even after all that, what is Xbox One’s core function?  TV TV TV. TV you can control with gestures. TV you can command with your voice. TV that can be sidebarred. TV that can trend, find, recommend and socialize. Transmedia TV. Gamelike additions to TV. Halo the TV show. It’s a fancy remote controller, an adjunct to your existing services whose job is to make it slightly easier to search for Game of Thrones. It’s also a way to have Skype chats with friends while watching Star Trek, listening to both friend and film speak over each other in real time. What else? A music player perhaps, but doubtful one that will work with your iTunes library. A social networking device if you can get voice recognition to actually work. A Netflix box perhaps, but what isn’t these days? A games machine, but not for all of the varied types of innovative games that now populate your smartphone. Only the big and the bold will do for Xbox One. When you say it like that this new console does seem rather odd, doesn’t it? The Short Head What started when the Xbox 360 went from a much-beloved home of indie games in 2008 to a monotone Metro-powered top-10s machine in 2011, Xbox One continues. It’s what Chris Anderson might call aiming for the short head. Microsoft only wants to talk big, top 10, top 25. It seems to believe that that’s the only conversation that anyone cares about. As part of the event, Microsoft had Electronic Arts showing us a demonstration of a new game engine delivering water dripping off NFL players’ helmets and UA fighters getting slow-mo kicked in the face. It had Activision showing Call of Duty clips and dog animations that gave the Internet plenty of GIF ammunition. It had next generation Forza. These are all big-game plays, and between showing them off and talking about key partnerships, the implication is that Xbox One intends to use a strategy similar to the old Nintendo Entertainment System. That is to say: tentpole releases only, nothing but strikes. No great depth of diversity, but instead a system targeted solely at mass audiences. Madden-as-a-service, hooked up to your real NFL tv shows and fantasy games. A way for big connected plays to capture all of their value and place Microsoft at the heart of gamin
about 2 hours ago
The Gillmor Gang — Robert Scoble, Kevin Marks, Keith Teare, John Taschek, and Steve Gillmor — neatly sidestepped the Yahoo Tumblr acquisition and segued into the wonderful world of messaging. As Facebook Home settles into a cot at the ho...
The Gillmor Gang — Robert Scoble, Kevin Marks, Keith Teare, John Taschek, and Steve Gillmor — neatly sidestepped the Yahoo Tumblr acquisition and segued into the wonderful world of messaging. As Facebook Home settles into a cot at the homeless shelter, Google is revving up for an all-out assault on the service suite. Google Glass is just the tip of the iceberg; below the waterline, the search giant is sucking image, location, traffic, and advertising data in realtime. It may seem like the Gang is tilting over into Google love, but scratch the surface (no pun intended) and you’ll find just as much Apple love lurking beneath. The consensus is not so much a two-horse race as a widening duopoly that makes it very hard for Yahoo or Microsoft or Amazon or any new player to break the hold these two giants maintain. Of course, that’s what they said about Microsoft, which in reality was the duopoly of Windows and Office. @stevegillmor, @scobleizer, @kteare, @jtaschek, @kevinmarks Produced and directed by Tina Chase Gillmor @tinagillmor Live chat stream
about 4 hours ago
Google Buzz, the social service that Google launched way back in 2010 and then killed in 2011, reminded former users that their data still lives in and will be moved over to your Google Drive accounts in July. That’s lovely. The em...
Google Buzz, the social service that Google launched way back in 2010 and then killed in 2011, reminded former users that their data still lives in and will be moved over to your Google Drive accounts in July. That’s lovely. The email describes exactly what will happen with your data, which won’t count against your Drive storage limits, thankfully. If you don’t delete the data and let Google move your stuff to Drive, it says that the public Buzz posts you shared in the past “may appear in search results and on your Google Profile.” OK, then. Here’s the entire email in case you’ve filtered out Buzz communication to go directly to Spam or Trash: In October 2011 we announced Google Buzz was shutting down. On or after July 17th, 2013, Google will take the last step in the shutdown and will save a copy of your Buzz posts to your Google Drive, a service for storing files online. Google will store two (2) types of files to your Google Drive, and the newly-created files will not count against your storage limits. If you’d like to wipe Buzz from your online world completelly, go here and delete the data now: https://profiles.google.com/me/deletebuzz 1. The first type of file will be private, only accessible to you, containing a snapshot of the Google Buzz public and private posts you authored. 2. The second type of file will contain a copy of only your Google Buzz public posts. By default it will be viewable by anyone with the link, and may appear in search results and on your Google Profile (if you’ve linked to your Buzz posts). Note, any existing links to your Google Buzz content will redirect users to this file. 3. Any comments you made on other users’ posts will only be saved to those users’ files and not to yours. Once the change described in this email is final, only that user will be able to change the sharing settings of those files. This means that if you have commented on another author’s private post, that author could choose to make that post and its comments public. If you would like to avoid that possibility, delete all your Buzz content now. 4. The new Google Drive files will only contain comments from users that previously enabled Google Buzz, and the files will not contain comments that were deleted prior to moving the data to your Google Drive. Once the files are created, they will be treated the same as any other Drive file. They are yours to do with as you please. This includes downloading them, updating who can access them, or deleting them. Before these files are created, you can view the Google Buzz posts you have authored here. If you do not want any of your Buzz posts or comments saved to Google Drive files, you can immediately delete your Google Buzz account and data. Thank you for using Google Buzz. Since Google mentions that you can delete your data not once, but twice, in the email, that’s the course of action that I’ll be taking. Buzz never took off, and Google went on to focus all of its efforts on Google+. There were a slew of reasons why Buzz didn’t work, mostly centered around privacy. The close integration with Gmail made the entire experience a mess, blurring the lines between what should be personal and what should be public. This is clearly the last step for Google to completely rid itself of the product, and all of the privacy concerns and issues that cropped up around the product. Oh, and just in case you missed that delete link, here it is again. Thank you, Google.
about 4 hours ago