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  • Flurry raises $7M for mobile analytics services expansion

    flurryMobile analytics firm Flurry said today it has raised $7 million in a second round of funding to fuel its services expansion.

    The deal comes off last month’s announcement that the San Francisco-based company would merge with Pinch Media, a New York media analytics firm. InterWest Partners led the round and was joined by existing investors Draper Fisher Jurvetson, Union Square Ventures, First Round Capital and Draper Richards.

    InterWest general partner, Doug Pepper, also joins the Flurry board of directors. Flurry launched its analytics service for mobile platforms such as the iPhone in January, 2009. The company now tracks over a billion end user app sessions per month on the iPhone, iPod Touch and Android cell phones. It has more than 15,000 developers.

    The company is monetizing its analytics information through AppCircle, a platform that analyzes the tastes of an app user and recommends other relevant apps. If the user purchases a recommended app, Flurry gets a share of the revenue. This platform is important because its easy for developers to go unnoticed on the iPhone, where there are more than 100,000 apps available. The company says 130 developers are using AppCircle.

    Simon Khalaf, chief executive, said in an interview that the company will use the money to build new services that increase its revenues. It will hire new employees and expand its infrastructure. Khalaf said the company started raising money in August, 2009. But it put that on hold as it merged with Pinch Media.

    Previously, Flurry had raised $1.5 million and Pinch Media had raised $1.8 million. The company has 18 employees and it plans to add eight to 10 people in two months. Rivals include Medialets and Mobclix.


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  • PBworks launches template store to help companies collaborate

    pbworks-logoWith today’s launch of its Template Store, PBworks wants to make it easier for businesses to use its wikis and other collaboration tools.

    The San Mateo, Calif, company describes its new feature as an “app store for collaboration templates.” Specifically, these are templates for PBworks workspaces — pages where you coordinate a project or team using PBworks’ different tools. The word “template” might make suggest that we’re talking about superficial customization, but the company is aiming for something richer here, because the design and structure of a workspace can shape how your company works together.

    For example, the template for a management team workspace includes meeting agendas, monthly objectives and tracking, weekly department status reports, and more. By using the template, the customer doesn’t have to build the wiki themselves, and in fact can even spend less time thinking about how to structure all that communications. This  should be particularly useful for companies that are new to PBworks and to online collaboration in general. Instead of wondering, “Gee, what can I do with a wiki?” PBworks gives you a basic template to start with.

    The templates can include wikis (where you can embed multimedia content), files and documents, folders, and project milestones and tasks. The Template Store is starting out 25 templates built by PBWorks, its customers, and consultants. They include a deal room, an intranet for a legal firm, and a handbook/FAQ workspace.

    For now, templates are free to business and legal edition customers, but PBWorks says it wants to work with template creators to turn this service into a real store, where they can charge for templates.

    management team template


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  • High Fasting Blood Glucose with Gliclazide

    I am a type 2 who was being treated with metformin and glyburide. The glyburide was working well… too well at times as I was experiencing frequent lows. But all in all I was pleased with my results and I had even got my fasting numbers down to reasonable levels (below 126). My diabetic nurse decided she didn’t like my frequent lows and decided I needed to change to gliclazide in the form of diamicron MR — 30 mg first thing in the morning.
    Now I find my fasting numbers very high ( between 126 and 180), every day, even if I don’t have anything to eat past supper time the night before.
    And also if I eat anything which I consider bad such as a higher carb food or meal my numbers go way high and can take a long time to come back down. With the glyburide I didn’t have this problem… if my numbers were high they quickly came down.
    My diabetic nurse is from the school of anything up to 180 is good so I can’t turn to her for advice because she would consider my numbers reasonable.

    My question is does it take awhile to adjust to this drug and will I likely find my numbers come back down again to better levels in time? Is there something I can do now in regards to improving my morning numbers? I have tried eating different kinds of snacks before bed, not eating any snack and the results don’t seem to vary at all. What could explain these higher numbers in the morning. I don’t think I am having lows in the night causing glucose dumps.

    Thanks for any and all advice!!

  • Engadget’s gear of CES 2010

    CES is Engadget’s biggest event of the year, but for the most part we don’t have any requirements on what editors should bring other than “a laptop” and “a camera.” That means there’s usually quite an array of devices and tools on hand — and every year we try some new things that make an immediate impression. We threw out some basic gear statistics in our annual CES wrap-up post, but we also wanted to highlight some super-useful new tools we brought to Vegas with us this year. Some of it is state-of-the-art expensive, some of it is brain-dead simple, but all of it helped us rock out our biggest CES ever. Read on!

    Continue reading Engadget’s gear of CES 2010

    Engadget’s gear of CES 2010 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Jan 2010 11:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Casio EX-10HG ‘hybrid GPS’ prototype taps into accelerometers for pinpoint accuracy

    It’s not a completely new idea, accelerometers have been enhancing GPS devices for a while now with additional velocity and directional information when the GPS signal is weak, but now Casio is giving it a shot in its new Exilim EX-H10 prototype camera. The “hybrid GPS” shooter does the regular geotagging thing with its onboard GPS, but when signal is weak (like when indoors, for instance), the camera augments the location data with guesstimates gleaned from its onboard accelerometers. The camera also has pretty detailed maps, so you could almost use the device for navigation, though the “pushpin” view is a good start. Hit up the source link for some more shots.

    Casio EX-10HG ‘hybrid GPS’ prototype taps into accelerometers for pinpoint accuracy originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Jan 2010 10:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • What The Financial Crisis Commission Should Really Ask

    Today in the New York Times, Andrew Ross Sorkin has a fun column consisting of a list of questions that he would like to hear the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission ask when it convenes tomorrow. He believes the questions would “help start some lively discussions.” He’s right, because the questions he lists are virtually all accusatory in nature towards the Wall Street bank CEOs who will be testifying. So while amusing, I think the commission would be prudent to consider more questions that are actually productive to its mission of better understanding “the causes and current state of the crisis.” As a result, I thought I’d offer a few suggestions of my own, just in case anyone on the committee happens to be reading.

    Before getting into my own, let me give an example of the kind of questions Sorkin poses:

    A question for all the executives about bonuses: We keep hearing that you plan to pay out billions in bonuses this year. Given that they come out of profits that, to a large degree, seem to be the result of government programs to prop up and stimulate the banking sector, do you think they are deserved, even if they are in stock? And, while we’re on the topic, given the market crisis of 2008, were you all overpaid in 2007?

    For starters, bonuses had very little to do with what actually caused the crisis. Even if they were substantially lower in 2007, the bankers would not have behaved differently. They would have still sought the highest profit possible, because that’s what bankers do. The CEOs would likely respond that there were some divisions that did not perform well (MBS traders, for example), and their bonuses (and layoffs) will reflect that, but the majority of their employees performed at or better than expectations (M&A, corporate debt underwriters, etc.). Unfortunately, in this case, a few bad apples spoiled the bunch.

    So rather than ask questions to purposely put these CEOs on the defensive, and produce no significant answers to actually help the reform effort, I’d suggest the following instead:

    Imagine it’s 2005. You can change three decisions you made and alter the future. What are those three things that you would have done differently?

    What do you believe the Federal Reserve could have done differently to prevent or lessen the severity of the crisis? Did it have the tools necessary at the time to do so, or was it incapable due to a lack of authority?

    A popular regulatory goal of Washington is bank regulator consolidation. Would it make your job easier or more difficult to have to answer to one bank regulator, instead of several? Do you think this would harm or benefit the market?

    Many have argued that capital and leverage levels weren’t prudent enough, which is part of what forced the government to recapitalize your banks with a bailout. How high would your capital levels have needed to be to avoid the crisis? What maximum leverage limit would have accomplished the same result?

    One of the most significant regulatory proposals would be the creation of a non-bank resolution authority. The idea would be that, if something like the crisis happened again, a firm like AIG could be more neatly wound down. Do you believe it’s actually possible to resolve large, interconnected firms like AIG and your banks without causing economic crises in the process?

    It’s been suggested that one way of accomplishing neat resolution of complex entities would be to require those firms to submit failure plans to be followed in a default event. If you had to draw up such a plan currently, could you do so with the confidence that the plan could be executed without causing a major economic disturbance?

    What are your views on Fannie and Freddie? Is it a good idea from an economic perspective to have an entity with an implicit government guarantee to insure and purchase mortgages? What should the government’s role be going forward when it comes to mortgages?

    Some believe that option adjustable-rate mortgages are financial instruments of destruction for consumers. Can you explain why dangerous, misleading consumer financial products should remain legal?

    If independent financial research firms were to take on the responsibility of evaluating bonds, instead of the rating agencies, how would that change the market? Would investors be able to function without rating agencies? Do you believe during the crisis they were too reliant on the rating agencies without doing enough of their own due diligence?

    All of Washington’s financial regulation proposals would force securitizers to keep some skin in the game, requiring them to retain a portion of the risk in the pools they create asset-backed bonds out of to sell to investors. How would that change the securitization market as we know it? How would that, in turn, affect consumer lending?

    Explain the role that derivatives played in the crisis. What might have helped prevent the problems they created?





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  • Liquavista’s monochrome and color e-paper displays get demonstrated (video)

    Liquavista's monochrome and color e-paper displays get demonstrated

    Philips’ 2006 spin-off Liquavista hasn’t exactly had a lot to show for itself since it earned its independence, but things seem to finally be coming together for the company, which had a suite of e-paper displays to demonstrate at CES last week, a show that was absolutely chock-full of e-readers. Our very own spin-off, Engadget Spanish, got a chance to peruse the company’s suite of offerings, including a prototype device called Pebble. It’s a lovely, thin reader that’s unfortunately not intended for production — at least not yet. The video after the break shows displays that not only redraw far more quickly than existing production screens, but also mix in RGP effects and even multi-color backlighting. It’s good stuff; you’ll want to check it out.

    Continue reading Liquavista’s monochrome and color e-paper displays get demonstrated (video)

    Liquavista’s monochrome and color e-paper displays get demonstrated (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Jan 2010 10:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Robert Sapolsky

    Why humans are not as “uniquinest” as we think. (Hint: similar equipment, different uses)

  • Choosing Motorcycle Tires

    Bikers often encounter problems when it comes to choosing the right tires to suit their motorcycle and the road conditions they expect to face. Aside from creating the physical and visual connection to the road, tires are just as important as any other critical component of the bike. You cannot expect for your tires to go on forever, as they are a subject to depreciation. This is when various elements need to be taken into consideration, such as the category of the motorcycle you own and the rid… (read more)

  • UCSD Business School Launches Student-Assisted Venture Fund

    RadyUCSD School of Management logo
    Bruce V. Bigelow wrote:

    Entrepreneurs scratching to find sources of startup capital in San Diego will soon be getting help from an unexpected source. The Rady School of Management at UC San Diego says it is launching its own venture fund that will use donor funds to make investments of $75,000 to $100,000 in startups commercializing new technologies.

    The Rady Venture Fund, which the business school describes as the first of its kind in San Diego, is modeled after the Wolverine Venture Fund, founded in 1997 by the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business. The Michigan venture fund typically invests from $50,000 to $200,000 in seed and early-stage funding rounds in syndication with other VC firms and angel investors.

    “Our objective is to provide hands-on educational experience to UCSD MBA students—not on making returns on our investment,” says Lada Rasochova, a Rady School alumna who put the fund together as director of entrepreneurship at the UCSD business school. Yet Rasochova noted the Wolverine Venture Fund has made some successful investments, notably in Irvine, CA-based IntraLase Corp., and Ann Arbor, MI-based HandyLab, which was acquired less than four months ago by Becton-Dickinson for a reported $300 million. The Wolverine Venture Fund is estimated to have made $2 million on a $300,000 investment in the medical technology startup.

    An external advisory board made up of venture investors, entrepreneurs, and community leaders will help provide guidance on the fund and associated coursework. Rasochova says there also are two “safety checks” on venture investments made by the fund. She says a committee that includes venture industry veterans will make investment decisions, and investments only will be made jointly with another VC firm. Rasochova says Rady students will participate in the entire investment process, “so we would prefer to make investments in the San Diego region so our students can help them succeed.”

    The program, which is open to both full-time and flex-time MBA students, includes a more academic course in venture finance and investment analysis and what Rasochova calls two “hands-on” classes that enable students to vet business plans, support entrepreneurs, and help manage the fund and its venture investments.

    The Rady Venture Fund is expected to make only one or two investments per year in startups focused on high technology or the life sciences, although Rasochova says the fund has ruled out drug development companies because of the extraordinary time and costs involved.

    Because the Rady Venture Fund is funded by donations to the business school through the UC San Diego Foundation, Rasochova says any investment returns will revert to the venture fund and the Rady School of Management. If there was a really huge return, she says, Rady School Dean Robert S. Sullivan would decide how any spillover funds would be used.







  • Server Makers Rejoice! The Downturn Is (Supposedly) Over

    Forrester issued an optimistic report today claiming that the economic downturn of the last year and half is over, and forecasting that tech spending in the U.S. will grow by 6.6 percent in 2010 (though not as fast as the firm originally forecast back in September.) Now that growth rates have stopped falling, the beneficiaries of the hoped-for rise in fortunes will first be the server makers, followed by communications vendors and software providers.

    The recovery will be a function of spending on the part of companies that need to upgrade their equipment for the first time in some 18 months, a lessening of the overall economic gloom, easier credit thanks to a more stable financial market and a new wave of technology arising out of the addition of connectivity to everything. From the report:

    With these four factors looking positive, we expect that the 2010 tech recovery will be much stronger than the economic recovery. Measuring nominal GDP and tech investment on a year-over-year basis (as vendors measure their revenue growth), we forecast that in 2010 US business investment in technology goods will grow by 6.6% in Q1, 6.3% in Q2, 9.6% in Q3, and 8.6% in Q4 — more than twice as large as the nominal GDP growth rates of 2.6%, 3.4%, 3.4%, and 3% for the same quarters (see Figure 8). That will be a recurrence of the pattern of growth from Q4 2007 to Q2 2008, when tech investment also grew at almost twice the rate of growth in nominal GDP. The tech boom that started in late 2007 and early 2008 will be back on track.

    Let’s hope we’re not entering another bubble, perhaps one tied to adding connectivity to everything. Already we have more e-readers than the market can handle. Add to this an influx of iPhone clones,  3-D television (GigaOM Pro, subscription required), smart grid funding, tablet frenzy and the potential for huge increases in connectivity costs that might derail such innovations before most people ever get to try them, and I’m sure that amid the good news there will still be some bad.

    Thumbnail image courtesy of Flickr user Lepiaf.geo

  • Dunham knew he’d won when he heard pop, pop, pop

    The show featured "The next Anderson Silva" and a Mexican fighter with lots of potential but it’s starting to look like the best young prospect who should’ve emerged from Season 8 of "The Ultimate Fighter" was Evan Dunham. One problem, he wasn’t on the show. The native Oregonian said he would’ve loved to have been on the show but always seemed to find about tryouts too late. He got his revenge last night by taking out the TUF 8 champ Efrain Escudero and did it in scary fashion by nearly dislocating him arm. Escudero went to to the hospital where he was told there was tendon damage and he was fitted with a sling. 

  • Gartman: Here’s How The Chinese Tightening Could Prick The Real Estate Bubble, But Help Inflate Stocks

    dennisgartmancnbc.png

    A big topic in this morning’s Gartman Letter is China and its well-known real-estate boom.

    The Gartman Letter: Moving on, the news of the People’s Bank of China’s move to again tighten monetary policy had the effect one might have expected upon Chinese equities: they fell and they fell rather sharply… initially. Interestingly, by the day’s end, after having sold off sharply, share prices in China rallied and rallied quite materially, finishing up nearly 2%! It was really most impressive action.

    As noted above on p.1, the People’s Bank moved to allow its “auction” rate on year bills to rise 8 bps, after having allowed the auction rate on shorter term bills last week to do the same. The Bank is concerned about a “Bubble” in real estate prices all across the country, but most notably along the eastern seacoast in Shanghai, Tientsin, Guangzhou, et al…and it wishes to stop that Bubble from becoming worse.

    The one certain way to do so is to raise interest rates and to make bank lending more difficult and more expensive. The Bank is doing precisely that, but in the process it is having an interestingly supportive effect upon stock prices. Perhaps the market believes that money will move quietly away from land and move toward equities, or perhaps the market is simply coming to understand that the global economy is strong and getting stronger and that profits shall soon be higher and rising.

    Interesting, no?

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Apple, It’s Time to Delete Safari From the iPhone [Rant]

    It took only a few hours: Apple has banned ForChan from iTunes, a perfectly innocent, web-based, dedicated image browser for the iPhone. Its only sin: It could display porn. Well done, Apple. Let’s delete Safari now.

    ForChan could connect to any image board web page and show pictures. Photos of dogs, cats, birds, food, cars, planes, flowers, scenes of summer, winter, and fall, or anything in between. Anything including boobs and buttocks:

    It didn’t promote porn in any way. It didn’t have any ads for porn. Its icon was plain. Its explanatory text was perfectly innocent. And yes, while the developer mentions that it could be used to browse pictures of fully naked girls—and has some boards with that kind of pictures—the app itself is not a “porn app.” Actually, you had to click a few times in the web before getting to the smut. There was no magic “Show me the tits” button.

    In fact, ForChan only has two options: Browse page after page of images, or enter a new URL to access a new web server containing different images.

    Sounds familiar?

    Yes, exactly the same as Safari. Enter any porn web site address in your Safari URL field, and you will instantly get connected to porn. Hardcore picture after hardcore picture, wet video after wet video, all the perversions imaginable, no niche left untouched.

    So why is Safari in the iPhone? Is it because web-browser porn browsing is socially accepted, leaving the ultimate responsibility in the individual using the web browser—often with a convenient privacy mode?

    If that’s the case, why delete ForChan from the iTunes Store? It’s a web browser too, no matter how image oriented it is. Apple is not selling porn in the Store when somebody purchases ForChan. They are selling a generic browser, just like the built-in Safari is. One that can only display images, any kind of images, just like the built-in Safari does.

    Apple includes Safari with no restrictions because, at the end of the day, it is your responsibility to use your web browser according to your own set of moral and social rules. You can write a new web address and access Fleshbot instead of Gawker. Your action, your choice. Nobody is going to go to Apple and accuse them of selling a porn app because I can access porn online. And nobody can accuse Apple of selling porn by making ForChan available in their app store.

    So why retire it? Just because we highlighted that it can be used to browse porn. So here’s a hint, Apple:

    Time to delete Safari.







  • Crazy Picketers Protest Everything Outside Detroit Auto Show

    Detroit Protester

    Protesters on Monday saw the North American International Auto Show in Detroit as an opportunity to complain about pretty much anything, Jalopnik reports.

    Picketers brought signs protesting everything from Michigan’s high unemployment, to government bailouts of Citibank and AIG, to even green cars. (Apparently, they’re for fascists.)

    One man held a sign criticizing single payer health care, while another’s read, “There are no teabaggers in soup lines.”

    Then they started singing.

    All in all, it was one of the strangest displays of Americans excercizing their first amendment right since, well, the Birthers.

    Check it out:

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  • Welcome to Vegas

    Las Vegas strip as it appears from Planet Hollywood main entrance-exit

  • Editorial: Health care bill offers direct benefits to Stanford

    After nearly a year of debate within the House and Senate, the Affordable Health Care for America Act was passed and will soon become law. This bill’s primary aim is to extend coverage to the more than 30 million Americans without coverage today.

    This bill has received stiff opposition from the Republican Party. It is quite an accomplishment to finally achieve some legislation to address an issue that has been pressing America for several decades. In close examination of both versions of this bill, there will certainly be some things that students on campus will find positive and certainly some that will be much less pleasing. The Editorial Board believes that there are some aspects of this bill, in particular, that will benefit the Stanford community greatly, and the bill’s shortcomings can be mended in the long run if we as citizens continue to follow the progress of health care in America.

    A major complaint about this bill is that it presents immediate costs with delayed benefits. The bill mandates individuals to attain health insurance and requires that most employers provide insurance to their employees as well, a system not altogether different from the current system here at Stanford. College-age individuals, for example, receive a very immediate and significant benefit: extended coverage for young adults, which would allow college-age Americans to stay on their parents’ insurance plan until the age of 26, rather than the usual 19 or 21. This measure saves money for families across America and will prove useful to many members of the Stanford community, particularly in a time of economic recovery.

    But the extension of health coverage in this country must come at a cost to everyone involved in the system. Estimates place the cost of this act at nearly a trillion dollars, to be added to the already ballooning national budget and deficit. The most efficient path to minimizing these costs is not to continue to ignore those Americans without coverage, but to place increasing pressure on the health care industry to make its costs more reasonable. The U.S. spends more than two times that of other developed nations, per capita, on health expenditures, despite the fact that our overall health as a nation suffers in comparison to Europe and other industrialized areas.

    Now that this debate has taken place on a national level, we hopefully have entered an era where the issues of heath coverage and insurance costs is something very deliberately and openly discussed among the American public, and not decided by an oligarchy of politicians and health care institutions. When the Senate and House versions of this act are reconciled and finally adapted to law, Democrats and Republicans alike should not view this as an end to the health care debate in this country, but merely the beginning of an enduring challenge to make health coverage affordable and fair.

  • Small Space Solution: Narrow Rolling Pantry Shelves

    2010_01_11-PantryCarts.jpgWe always have a tiny flush of jealousy when we see those beautiful custom kitchens with perfectly fitted cupboards, and lots of pull-out cabinets that make great use of every narrow space. Well, you too can squeeze in a narrow pantry pull-out, with these rolling pantry shelves.

    Pantry space for things like baking supplies, canned goods, and other staples has always been at a premium in our kitchens. Rental kitchens like ours also are not as thoughtfully planned out in terms of storage and functionality.

    Slim carts like these are designed to help you get the most out of odd or narrow spaces, like the space between the fridge and the wall, or between a bank of cabinets and the door. Some are as narrow as 9 inches, so they can be slipped in many places.They pull out on wheels, and there’s no installation necessary at all, which makes them perfect for a rental kitchen!

    Here are three slim rolling pantry shelves we found in our browsing:

    Six-Shelf Pantry Rack, $99 at Improvements. 10 inches wide and 56 inches high. We like the handsome chrome!
    Slim Cart, $24.99 at The Container Store. 9 inches wide and 30 inches tall. Skinny!
    Slim Household Cart with Wheels, $19.99 at Space Savers. 10 inches and 32 inches tall. Small and accessible.

    Do you use any rolling shelves like these? How have they worked out for you? I would love to squeeze one of these in between the fridge and countertop, but it would be a tight fit!

  • Inside a Prison Riot

    It has been five months since violence erupted at California’s overcrowded men’s prison in Chino, but stories of abuses suffered by prisoners in the riot’s aftermath are now coming to light.

    After the long night of violence on August 8 when two housing blocks at the facility were burned and destroyed, some prisoners say they spent as long as four days straight in outdoor cages with no protection from the sun. Others say they are still waiting for health care services to treat injuries suffered during the riot.

    A woman whose relative was locked up at the time of the riot has launched a website called “In The Riot” to share the first-hand stories of prisoners who suffered mistreatment in the days and months following the riot.

    One prisoner writes: “It was hot in California in August and I received a severe sun burn because I lived in a dog kennel cage under the heat of the sun. The nights were freezing cold and I literally begged them to give me a blanket or some clothes, but they REFUSED. They also did not give me any medical attention for my stab wounds.”

    Another: “I was another one who was zip-tied for hours, placed in cages for 3 days with no clothes and no blankets, not given food for hours.”

    (more…)