Archive for August 9th, 2008

DeWolfe (in the gray jacket) and Hilton (in the pink dress) leaving a club in L.A. together.

(Credit: X17.com/TechCrunch)

It’s not the sort of TechCrunch post you see every day: the Valley blog reported on Friday night that Chris DeWolfe, president of News Corp.’s MySpace, …


Source [The social]

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Video phone calls just haven’t caught on like all those cinematic depictions of the future stated they would–kind of like flying vehicles. But a bunch of investors led by Bain Capital Ventures still believe. They’ve pumped a $10 million Series B round into TokBox, a video chat and calling site

Source [The social]

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melted chocolate

Coffee, cheese, and chocolate have gotten increasingly fancy and esoteric over the past 20 years. It’s not just about Hershey bars anymore.

Artisanal chocolate is everywhere, and now some of it comes with a sustainable spin as well. Plenty magazine discovered an interesting Boston-area chocolatier called Taza Chocolate, which prides itself on using gentle roasting techniques and stone mills to process its Mexican cacao beans. The end product is intense dark chocolate suitable for eating alone or melting into recipes.

Taza sources organically grown beans directly from small farmer cooperatives and makes sure they receive more than fair trade prices. The company claims to be “uniquely positioned as one of the only independently owned, socially and environmentally responsible chocolate makers in the country.”

By that the company means it has set up streamlined supply chains, makes local deliveries by bicycle, packages everything in recycled paper, and even donates its organic waste to a local community garden organization.

And just to top it off: “It only takes one glimpse of our pile of bikes at the factory to discover that all of our employees either ride or walk to work.”

How sweet!

Don Willmott’s blog posts are provided by LifeWire, a part of The New York Times Company.

For more visit Source:[green.yahoo]

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Each year at the Office 2.0 conference about Web-based business apps and processes, paid attendees get some cool gadget pre-loaded with information relevant to the conference. In 2006–the first year of the show–the gadget was an iPod Nano with the conference schedule built in. In 2007, attendees got an iPhone with links to the conference information and the show’s social-networking apps pre-loaded. This year, the giveaway is an HP 2133 Mini-Note PC (the Linux version, not Windows). Given that the cost of attending the conference ($1,495–but read to the end for a discount code) is half that of two other conferences popular with the Web 2.0 crowd, Demo and TechCrunch50, one has to wonder how the organizer of the Office 2.0 is making any money. Especially since the Office 2.0 venue is leagues fancier than those other shows’ locales.

Here’s the secret: he isn’t.

Ismael Ghalimi is doing this conference for the love of it. “I love the workmanship of work, the business of these tools,” he told me. “I like interacting with the people who are passionate about this stuff. Somehow it all fits together. We don’t have very sophisticated motives. It’s just plain fun.”

Now, to be clear, both his business and his wife benefit from the conference. Ghalimi’s day job is is running Intalio, which provides open-source business process management software, both free versions as well as paid subscriptions for large companies; Intalio has about 400 customers, the newest of which is the Bank of Venezuela. Ismael’s wife, Might Chang Ghalimi, is CEO of the Monolab Workspace, an office suite rental business designed to be compatible with the needs of Web 2.0 start-ups. Subscriptions even come with their own carbon offsets. Exposure to the Web 2.0 productivity wonks who come to the Office 2.0 conference no doubt help the Ghalimis sell their services.

But I believe Ismael when he says the Office 2.0 conference is, “our collective experiment.” If he wanted to turn a profit he could start by not giving away $500+ notebooks (or he could get the giveaway sponsored, which it is not–the conference has to purchase them). “We’re not in the conference business,” he states.

The Office 2.0 experiment is about moving a business–the conference itself–and a community wholly into the Web 2.0 world, and it’s about studying which devices can help the most. The Apple devices in previous years were successes, he states. This year’s Linux subnotebook giveaway will likely be less used at the conference than the pocketable devices of previous years, but Ghalimi believes that giving people devices that are essentially just Web browsing machines will reinforce that you can in fact get real work done without having much, if any, local software on your laptop. For Ghalimi, that’s apparently worth the expense.

Ghalimi tries to run the conference without paper and without traditional software apps. This year he’s having superior luck than last. There’s finally a good Web-delivered record-keeping system, he says (Intacct), solving one of the last issues he had in going fully 2.0. And like last year, the only paper he has to deal with is the sponsor fees. Many are still submitted by check.

Office 2.0 also experiments with “back channel” concepts: community and social services that reinforce what’s happening at the show. A group Twitter feed will be projected on the side walls of the conference during sessions, oriented so both audience and people on stage can see it. Ghalimi is using Jive’s Clearspace enterprise collaboration service as the foundation for a communication during and after the show. But, he says, he still needs better tools to help attendees “get better value out of their time.”

Most current conference networks, he says, “create a lot of cognitive friction.” There are always people he use them, but they’re usually the same people: “those social media freaks.” Ghalimi believes that, “we need to wait a couple of years until the huge players take over the market…until everyone decides that our social graph is going to be on LinkedIn or Facebook,” or a similar service that is already working as a de facto business social network.

Recently I’ve been writing a greater proportion of curmudgeonly posts than I normally do. That’s because I’ve been talking to entrepreneurs about their one-trick and derivative products. Ghalimi is helping to restore my faith in Web 2.0 by illustrating how complex and interesting inter-related Web-based businesses can be. He is involved in three fundamentally different enterprises that nonetheless reinforce each other. It makes his businesses both more interesting and more robust than they would be on their own.

The Office 2.0 conference opens September 3 in San Francisco. You can get a small ($100) registration discount by going through this link.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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Video phone calls just haven’t caught on like all those cinematic depictions of the future said they would–kind of like flying vehicles. But a bunch of investors led by Bain Capital Ventures still believe. They’ve pumped a $10 million Series B round into TokBox, a video chat and calling site

Source [The social]

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The International Herald Tribune reported on Thursday that Facebook attempted to acquire a look-alike German social network before finally suing it in a federal court last month.

StudiVZ, a German site geared toward college students, is 10 times the size of Facebook’s user base in Germany. It also looks just like Facebook, with a different color scheme, which is what ticked off the site’s legal team. The court complaint, which called StudiVZ “a knockoff,” says “a year and a half after the debut of Facebook’s Web site, (it) was built by duplicating the look, feel, and features of Facebook.com.”

The complaint continued: “Facebook is concerned that, because StudiVZ looks like Facebook, and incorporates similar features and functionality to Facebook, users will incorrectly believe that StudiVZ is associated with Facebook.”

But according to sources who spoke to the IHT, Facebook first tried to acquire StudiVZ, which would haven’t only quelled the problem but also bought Facebook some major inroads in the German market. Parent company Georg von Holtzbrinck, however, wasn’t satisfied with what Facebook was willing to pay. The German publishing company had acquired StudiVZ for the equivalent of $134 million early in 2007 and reportedly wanted significantly more than that in a hypothetical sale to Facebook.

Intellectual-property lawsuits are nothing unfamiliar at Facebook, which was sued years ago by the creators of onetime rival ConnectU, when they alleged that Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg had swiped their code and business plan. Facebook settled the lawsuit by effectively acquiring ConnectU for a combination of cash and stock.

But in this case, Facebook is the one crying foul. The IHT noted that because of international borders, it’s unclear where this case will be tried. But it’s more clear that this case has some foundation: StudiVZ’s similarities to Facebook go right on down to the “poke.” On the German site, that’s called “gruscheln.”

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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(Credit: Dipity)

Timeline creator Dipity has finally been put to a totally awesome use: a user called “tatercakes” has created a timeline of fads and memes that have surfaced on the Internet since its earliest days. And, as far as I have the ability to see, almost nothing has been left out–if you’…


Source [The social]

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By JAD MOUAWAD Published: August 5, 2008 In a season of roller-coaster energy costs, the drop in oil and natural gas prices in current days was greeted as good news. But they remain so high that experts are predicting that heating bills this winter will far exceed those of last year. Even after a precipitous decline from its […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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