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  • Finally! More devices using Android 4 than older versions

    It has taken since the introduction of Android 4.0 in Dec. 2011 until now, but there are finally more devices running Android 4.0 or better software than those that run older versions of Google’s platform. On its Android Developer Dashboard, Google notes that 45.1 percent of Androids hitting the Google Play store of late use Android 4.0 or better. That compares to the 44.2 percent that still use Android 2.3 Gingerbread software.

    The uptake of Android 4.0 and its sub-versions of late has been quick. In October, I saw that 1 in 4 devices visiting Google Play used Android 4.0 or better. At that time, I suggested that we’d see half of all Androids use recent versions of software within four to six months. We’re not at the halfway mark yet, but it’s only been four months. With the acceleration of phones and tablets running newer software, I won’t be surprised to see us reaching the tipping point next month.

    Android versions Feb 2013

    Clearly helping this phenomenon is Android’s changing pace. It has slowed over the past year or so, and that’s a good thing. It means that Android is more on par with iOS and other platforms than ever before. That’s part of the reason some prominent long-time iPhone users are now checking out Android — listen to our latest podcast to hear more on that topic, because there are other reasons as well.

    Hardware makers have also “caught” up to the software changes. Even after Android 4.0 arrived in late 2011, it took a good six months for phones to ship with a recent version of Android. By and large many of these now ship with Android 4.1 and not Android 4.2, but the differences between the versions aren’t that great. If the average consumer were to compare an Android 4.1 phone to one with Android 4.2, it’s safe to say they’d be hard pressed to tell the two apart.

    The feature differences brought by distributed Android software updates has been a key target for iOS users when looking to criticize Android. These points have definitely had merit; particularly early on in Android’s life-cycle. But I’d argue that Google’s issue has largely diminished and it’s really not that different on iOS; it’s just handled differently.

    Some iOS features found in software aren’t applicable to older devices and yet, these are reported as having the same version of iOS as devices that can use the new features. Every iPad Apple has produced can run iOS 6 which includes Siri, for example, but only Apple’s third- and fourth generation iPad’s can actually use Siri; different code is actually pushed by Apple to different devices, yet all have the same public version number.

    Regardless of which platform you use, this should help Android developers target more devices for mobile apps. And they shouldn’t have to worry as much about version numbers or supported API levels as more Androids run newer versions of the platform.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
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  • One year in, Google Play store has over 5M ebooks and 18M songs

    A year after its launch-slash-rebrand, Google Play contains over 5 million ebooks, 18 million songs and 700,000 apps, Google announced in a blog post Wednesday.

    Google Play is a rebrand of the Android Market, intended to remind users that Google sells content besides apps. So far, success has been mixed. When it comes to ebooks, for example, Google hasn’t been able to compete with Amazon or even Apple; its share of the ebook market is likely in the single digits, and while 5 million ebooks sounds high, a lot of those are free public domain titles. And as our Erica Ogg wrote recently, while the number of Android apps has grown quickly, developers almost never choose to develop for Android before or instead of iOS.

    Google is taking some steps to bring more users to the store. It started offering gift cards and a wishlist feature last year. Today it’s running sales on a bunch of content — $5 ebooks, some 99-cent movie rentals and other promotions.

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  • Prepare Your Pockets, Samsung’s Next Galaxy Note Phablet Could Sport A 5.9-Inch Screen

    galaxynote2-1

    Samsung’s Galaxy S IV hasn’t even been revealed yet and news of another top-tier Samsung smartphone is already threatening to steal some of its spotlight. The Korea Times reported earlier today that the Korean electronics giant is busy working on a Galaxy Note phablet followup with a 5.9-inch display behind closed doors.

    If the Korea Times’ report holds true then Samsung is taking a more measured approach to how it scales up smartphone screen sizes — as PocketNow points out this is (thankfully?) a hair smaller than what some earlier rumors suggested, since for a while there it looked like Samsung was considering pushing out a phablet with a 6.3-inch screen. The Times’ source also noted that the Note III would sport an eight-core Exynos processor, a not-so-subtle reference to Samsung’s Exynos 5 Octa chipset.

    Samsung isn’t the first to push up against that 6-inch barrier, and they’ll hardly be the last. Chinese OEM Huawei blew past it earlier this year when it unveiled the hefty Ascend Mate and its 6.1-inch screen at CES, and ZTE revealed its 5.7-inch Grand Memo during Mobile World Congress. For better or worse, the plus-sized phone trend doesn’t seem to be going anywhere.

    In the past I’ve asked how big is too big for these sorts of phablets, but looking back that’s sort of a restrictive question. The word “phablet” doesn’t have a universally accepted definition (it’s usually just used to refer to big honking phones) — perhaps the better question is at what point are devices like the Note and Grand Memo more tablet than phone?

    For what it’s worth, Samsung and rivals like Huawei and Asus seem keen on making that sort of distinction a meaningless one. The Korea Times report comes just days after Samsung pulled back the curtain on its Galaxy Note 8.0 tablet in Barcelona during Mobile World Congress — it’s the company’s smallest Note tablet to date and some versions of the device feature the ability to make voice calls. Asus (perhaps swept up in a fit of wordplay-induced whimsy) also showed off its 7-inch FonePad tablet at MWC, and touted its ability to place voice calls almost as much as its reasonable price tag.

  • Swift Slams Tina Fey For Golden Globes Joke

    The Golden Globes may be months behind us, but Taylor Swift is still sore about a jab made at her expense by comedians Tina Fey and Amy Poehler. Swift, who’s song “Safe & Sound” lost to Adele’s “Skyfall” for best original song at the awards show, was mocked by the two hosts over her many publicized relationships.

    “You know what Taylor Swift, you stay away from Michael J. Fox’s son,” said Fey, feigning drunkenness on-stage at the Globes. Sam Fox was serving as Mr. Golden Globes for the award ceremony.

    Poehler suggested that perhaps Swift should “just go for it,” but Fey countered that the pop star “needs some ‘me’ time to learn about herself.”

    Now, in a new interview with Vanity Fair, Swift reveals that she resents the picture of her that is presented in tabloid magazines. She claims the magazines will “turn you into a fictional character,” which is presumably what Fey and Poehler were basing their joke on.

    Swift told Vanity Fair that Fey’s joke reminded her of something Katie Couric had told her: “There’s a special place in hell for women who don’t help other women.”

    Both Poehler and Fey have responded to Swift’s comment. Poehler told The Hollywood Reporter that she feels bad if Swift was upset, and “That being said, I do agree I am going to hell.” Fey told Entertainment Tonight that it was a “lighthearted joke” and that other jokes she made that night had more punch.

  • FreedomPop’s home broadband service goes live. Can you survive on 1 GB a month?

    FreedomPop launched its home broadband service on Wednesday, taking the freemium model it uses for mobile data to the residential broadband market. FreedomPop is offering 1 GB free of charge to any user who signs up for service and buys its $89 home WiMAX router.

    Anyone who does more than check email on their home PC is surely going to use more than a single gigabyte in a 30-day spell, but as with its mobile service, FreedomPop is offering ways for users to earn more free data and selling premium data plans with bigger buckets of data. The bottom line though is heavy home broadband users aren’t going to sign up with FreedomPop – these plans aren’t designed for Netflix or file sharing  — but the virtual network operator is making a compelling case to casual data users, selling home connectivity for as little as $10 a month.

    FreedomPop Home routerFreedomPop is offering four tiers of service, all of which tap into Clearwire’s WiMAX network available in 70 cities (as an MVNO FreedomPop resells Clearwire’s WiMAX capacity today and will soon resell Sprint LTE connections as well). The first tier costs nothing, giving customers 1 GB of monthly data with speeds throttled to under 1.5 Mbps. Every additional megabyte beyond the one-gig cap costs a cent, so going way over that cap could be a mighty expensive proposition. For instance, Streaming a 2 GB HD movie would cost you an additional $20.

    But FreedomPop is being perfectly up front that this plan is meant for basic web surfing and email. In any case, the low-speed connection would prevent you from engaging in many bandwidth-sucking activities. As with its mobile service, FreedomPop allows free users to earn more data in 50 MB chunks by engaging the FreedomPop social network, using FreedomPop’s IP services and participating in promotions. It’s not yet clear if FreedomPop will allow customers to share their unused data with other home users like it allows mobile users to swap megabytes.

    The next tier up is a $10 monthly plan, which ups the cap to 10 GB while keeping speeds limited to 1.5 Mbps. From there, the cap stays at 10 GB, but for $5 or $8 more a month you can boost speeds to 3 Mbps and 8 Mbps respectively. In the paid tiers, FreedomPop is charging a half-cent for every megabyte overage.

    Even still, 10 GB isn’t much for a home connection. In July, my colleague Stacey Higginbotham took a detailed look at how different households consumed broadband, and found even sparse users of streaming services still consumed well over 10 GB each month, to say nothing of 1 GB. But once you turn off that multimedia spigot, usage drops considerably. Stacey interviewed one user in Atlanta who averaged 500 MB a month for three straight months when she took a hiatus from streamed video.

    You might think of these of your grandparents’ home broadband plans (though in this day and ages, grandparents are becoming increasingly sophisticated in web communications tools), but FreedomPop seems to be positioning as a means of bridging digital divide, offering cheap, and even the possibility of free, service to people who normally couldn’t afford home broadband or just want minimal connectivity. There are still millions of dial-up users left in the U.S. It would be interesting to see if FreedomPop can reach them with this service.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
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  • iPhone 5S production reportedly now underway

    iPhone 5S Production
    A pair of reports from earlier this week suggested that Apple (AAPL) plans to launch its iPhone 5S this coming August, and now a new report states that production of the next-generation Apple smartphone is currently underway. Macotakara, which has reported accurate details of unreleased Apple devices in the past, claims that Apple’s manufacturing partner Foxconn has completed test runs of the iPhone 5S and is now prepared to ramp up manufacturing. The report also notes that leading Japanese wireless carrier NTT DoCoMo may finally begin selling the iPhone this fall.

  • Heritage Group Invests in Aviacode

    Heritage Group has made a strategic investment in Aviacode. Financial terms weren’t announced. Salt Lake City-based Aviacode provides remote medical coding services and software to hospitals and physician offices.

    PRESS RELEASE

    Heritage Group, a Nashville-based healthcare investment firm, today announced a strategic investment in Aviacode, an innovative provider of technology-enabled medical coding services and software. This investment adds to the portfolio of companies for the Heritage Healthcare Innovation Fund (HHIF) and furthers Heritage Group’s mission to fund solutions that meet the needs of its strategic investors.

    Based in Salt Lake City, Aviacode provides remote medical coding services and software to hospitals and physician offices across several settings and specialties. A number of forces currently facing healthcare providers—including the looming ICD-10 transition, persistent reimbursement pressure, and a national shortage of qualified coders—have created a growing need for accurate, high-quality coding. Through its cloud-based platform, Aviacode offers access to a national network of certified coders and provides enhanced productivity, compliance and quality.

    “We are very pleased to partner with Aviacode, which has developed a differentiating technology platform and built a leading medical coding operation over the last decade,” said Rock Morphis, managing director of Heritage Group. “This funding will enable Aviacode to further accelerate its record growth trajectory and increase its capacity to deliver innovative medical coding solutions to new customers. We are proud to be part of that effort.”

    Heritage Group’s strategic investors represent the entire continuum of healthcare delivery, including health systems, payors, post-acute providers, and medical distributors. HHIF’s limited partner base is comprised of Amedisys, Inc., Cardinal Health, Inc., Community Health Systems, Health Care Service Corporation, Intermountain Healthcare, Iowa Health System, LifePoint Hospitals, Memorial Hermann Healthcare System, Trinity Health and Vanguard Health Systems.

    “The Heritage investment is significant to us as a company. It represents not only a financial opportunity to expand our cloud-based technology and coding solutions in the revenue cycle management markets, but also a strategic opportunity to collaborate with experts from within the Heritage limited partnership base. We are already seeing strategic value in those relationships,” said Dave Jensen, CEO of Aviacode.

    Brentwood Capital Advisors served as the financial advisor to Aviacode in this transaction. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

    About Heritage Group

    Heritage Group is a Nashville-based, venture capital firm with over 25 years of experience financing, operating and advising companies at all stages. Created by a diverse group of the nation’s leading healthcare services firms, the Heritage Healthcare Innovation Fund is a $167M strategic initiative focused on investments in businesses that improve the delivery of healthcare services. For more information, go to www.heritagegroupusa.com.

    About Aviacode

    Aviacode is the industry leader in technology-enabled medical coding services since 1999. Aviacode’s cloud-delivered coding applications, ProCoder™ and ProAuditor™, enable professional medical coders and coding auditors to create consistent, reliable and predictable coding results and document reviews. Aviacode’s proprietary technology and workflow improves the accuracy and efficiency of medical coding, which is the process of translating clinical documentation into diagnosis and procedure codes, which is at the heart of healthcare revenue cycle. These improvements impact hospitals and physician groups profoundly through improved efficiency, increased revenue and strengthened cash flow. For more information, visit www.aviacode.com.

    The post Heritage Group Invests in Aviacode appeared first on peHUB.

  • How General Mills Uses Food Technology to Make an Impact in Africa

    If you knew how to help feed the hungry — would you? Most of us would, but often we just don’t know how. So, it was difficult at first to see how General Mills, half a world away in North America, could play a meaningful role in addressing hunger in Africa. General Mills employees were already volunteering their time packing meals for African children and partnering with other organizations to build grain storage systems and dig community wells — but we believed that we could do more.

    We began to think, could we share what we know — our knowledge and technical expertise as a food company — with small and growing food producers in Africa? By helping local food processors produce safer and more nutritious foods, could we help create sustainable market access and better livelihoods for millions of African farmers and their families? And, could that boost farmer incomes, strengthen food security, and increase the supply of affordable, nutritious foods in local economies?

    With this in mind, we founded the nonprofit Partners in Food Solutions (PFS). The name itself describes the business model. We’ve recruited world-class companies to join our effort, including our U.S. neighbor Cargill and Dutch-based DSM. We’ve received support from bi-lateral and multi-lateral agencies, such as the World Food Program and USAID, which helps shape and guide PFS by sharing experiences, methodologies and resources through a public-private partnership formed in 2010. We’ve partnered with international NGOs, such as TechnoServe, and social investors like Root Capital. Each partner brings different expertise, but together we can accomplish far more than any of us could alone.

    As a group, we saw the need to fully embrace technology in a way that would easily allow skilled volunteers to transfer their knowledge to our partners in Africa. We adopted a cloud-based platform that serves as a knowledge repository for all our work, and is specifically designed to help our food scientists and engineers seamlessly work with our African partners from 8,000 miles away. On the ground, our African partners work directly with our partner, TechnoServe.

    Though some may see this work as philanthropy, we see it as creating shared value with local African businesses. For example, Nyirefami, in Tanzania, is a company that mills flour. General Mills knows flour. We’ve been in the milling business more than 140 years, and with Gold Medal, we’re still America’s leading flour brand. PFS volunteers were able to provide Nyirefami with the technical expertise needed to install a quality control lab, and improve washing and pre-drying operations. With that, Nyirefami increased their milling capacity five-fold, paving the way for the company to buy more grain from local farmers, while also earning the highest level of food certification available in Tanzania.

    Veronica Banda is one impressive farmer I met recently in eastern Zambia. Veronica sells her cotton to Cargill, and her corn to COMACO, a local nonprofit that markets food to consumers while also striving to save wild animals and ecosystems. Farmers work hard, and Veronica certainly does. She also cares for her family, including several children she has taken into her home who have lost parents to HIV/AIDS. Because PFS is helping COMACO grow, creating markets for her crops, Veronica’s income is rising. Today, she not only feeds her children, she can also send them to school. (Veronica is pictured below, left, with COMACO employee Whitson Daka, center, and me on the right.)

    Ken in Africa.jpg

    It’s a powerful idea — and it’s playing out with more and more small companies. PFS is working with 40 food processors on more than 140 projects in Kenya, Zambia, Tanzania, Malawi, and most recently Ethiopia — and we are looking for more. Our vision is big, and our journey is long. But I believe the role General Mills is playing is exactly the role we can play best: lending our technological expertise.

    How can you apply what you do best to reduce poverty and increase economic activity in the developing world? Here are some ideas:

    Leverage your core expertise. As one of the world’s largest food companies, we knew we could help African food processors and smallholder farmers by sharing our food processing expertise. Our teams work alongside our African partners to create viable, culturally-sensitive technology solutions in areas such as process, food formulation, equipment design, packaging, etc. What valuable expertise can your company share?

    Enlist on-the-ground support. Our in-market partner, TechnoServe, in partnership with USAID and PEPFAR, is evaluating, hiring, and managing small, in-country teams to identify promising companies. They then help develop and implement projects that PFS volunteers can address back home. Find a quality local partner who can guide you in understanding and addressing local needs.

    Embrace technology. We can do things today we couldn’t dream of five years ago. Technology is allowing us to successfully partner remotely from 8,000 miles away. We share a common technology platform with our partners, which helps us solve problems despite the challenges of varying time zones and cultural differences. Technology breaks down barriers and helps unite people with purpose. Use it.

    Seek out like-minded partners. We knew we could make a greater impact if we brought on world-class partners. Be thoughtful in selecting partners who share your vision, but offer capabilities and expertise that you couldn’t provide on your own.

    Engage and empower employees in leading the effort. Employees will be your engine to keep programs moving forward, while creating new approaches to solving problems. We have found that by pioneering a model that enables our employees to use their core skills to make a difference, they receive as many benefits as they contribute.

    Jump in with humility and get started. Much of our success stems from our willingness to “stumble forward” and learn as we go. Be willing to think big and move quickly, albeit imperfectly.

    We hope you can learn from our journey, and start a company-wide effort of your own. For us, it has proven to be some of the most gratifying work of our careers.

    Please join the conversation and check back for regular updates. Follow the Scaling Social Impact insight center on Twitter @ScalingSocial and register to stay informed and give us feedback.

  • Innovid Raises $11M From Sequoia, Genesis, T-Venture, Vintage

    Innovid said it raised $11 million in Series C funding from existing investors Sequoia Capital, Genesis Partners, and T-Venture and new investor Vintage Investment Partners. The funding will enable the company to expand to new screens, including gaming consoles, connected TVs and broadcast TVs, alon with supporting its growth in video ad delivery to PCs, mobile devices and tablets.

    PRESS RELEASE

    Innovid Secures $11M in Series C Funding from Sequoia and Vintage Venture Partners

    Latest funding positions Innovid to continue global growth and further expand its video advertising platform into new screens such as gaming consoles, connected TV, VOD and broadcast TV

    New York, NY. — March 6, 2013 — Innovid, the technology platform delivering immersive video advertising anywhere, today announced that it raised $11 million in Series C funding. Existing investors Sequoia Capital, Genesis Partners, and T-Venture (Deutsche Telecom) participated in the round, with a new investment from Vintage Investment Partners. This announcement comes on the heels of a global leadership position in the agency video ad serving market with 450 percent year over year growth for the company. The funding will be used to continue Innovid’s rapid global growth in video ad serving across PC, mobile and tablet, as well as expand into new screens including gaming consoles, connected TV, video on demand and broadcast TV.

    “Innovid’s swift worldwide growth is indicative of the advertising industry’s need for a platform that advances TV advertising to the next stage,” said Doug Leone, General Partner of Sequoia Capital, which has funded an unprecedented number of enormously successful companies including Google, Apple, LinkedIn and Cisco. “Leveraging its proven technology and experienced team, we are confident Innovid will fulfill its vision to revolutionize the world of TV advertising.”

    Innovid’s video technology platform provides brands and marketers with the tools to create, deliver, and measure video advertisements from simple pre-roll campaigns to the most complex addressable and interactive units. The company’s iRoll® formats bring alive a new dimension for digital video, adding native, interactive elements to flat pre-roll ads. Marketers can insert interactive elements in their video ads, including games, contest entries, social apps, coupons, additional video, shopping carts, store locators, and any other creative ideas to capture viewers’ curiosity and create powerful, immersive experiences for consumers.

    The company’s expertise has been widely validated in the industry. In fact, Innovid was recently selected as a winner of the IAB’s Digital Video Rising Stars and will join other winners in working groups to define the final specifications of interactive video formats for the industry. In addition, Innovid’s advanced video ad server is being used by global brands like Toyota, Nissan, Chrysler, Sony Pictures, Paramount, GSK, eBay, T-Mobile, EA, and Best Buy among others.

    “TV ad spending in the U.S. alone was estimated to reach $70 billion last year. Imagine the increased value of those dollars when brands add personalization, interactivity and advanced measurability to their ads,” said Zvika Netter, co-Founder and CEO of Innovid. “Our technology is the first to bridge TV and digital by bringing together the powerful visual experience of video and the full personalized and interactive capabilities of the Internet.”

    The latest funding brings Innovid’s venture funding total to approximately $27.6 million. The company previously received $3 million in Series A from Genesis Partners; $4.1 million in a venture round from Genesis Partners and T-Venture; and $9.5 million in Series B from Sequoia Capital, Genesis Partners and T-Venture.

    About Innovid
    Innovid delivers immersive advertising anywhere. Founded in 2007, Innovid provides visionary marketers with the tools to create, deliver and measure video campaigns, in any format, on any screen, publisher or ad network. Innovid’s Ad Server was developed to address the issues specific to video ad serving and simplify the process for agencies and marketers.  Bringing a new dimension to online video, Innovid’s iRoll reimagines the possibilities for interactive engagement across multiple screens.  For more information, visit www.Innovid.com.

    The post Innovid Raises $11M From Sequoia, Genesis, T-Venture, Vintage appeared first on peHUB.

  • Keystone XL with Allen West

    Dan Kish talks Keystone XL with Allen West

  • Sverica Buys Dexmet

    Sverica International Management said Wednesday that it has acquired Dexmet Corp. Financial terms were not announced. Sverica said its third fund acquired Dexmet. Sverica International Fund III, and its parallel pool, Fund III-A, closed in 2008 with more than $272 million in committed capital. Wallingford, Conn.-Dexmet develops and makes highly engineered expanded foils and polymers used in a variety of end markets. Abacus Finance Group and Avante Mezzanine Partners provided financing for the deal.

    PRESS RELEASE

    Sverica International Management LLC (“Sverica”) announced today that its Fund III acquired Dexmet Corporation (“Dexmet” or the “Company”) on March 1, 2013. Dexmet develops and manufactures highly engineered expanded foils and polymers used in a variety of end markets. The Company provides solutions for a range of mission critical applications, including lightning strike protection for major composite aircraft manufacturers, anodes and cathodes for advanced battery technologies and supportive materials for filtration and automotive applications. It counts as its customers dozens of global blue chip industrial leaders.

    Dexmet has established itself as the leading provider of precision expanded materials worldwide and is well-positioned for continued growth moving forward. “This partnership with Sverica comes at an exciting time for Dexmet,” stated Bob Bochman, President of Dexmet. “Sverica shares our long-term view of the considerable market opportunity for Dexmet’s products and will help us become even better strategic partners for our customers.”

    Dave Finley, Managing Director at Sverica, added: “We are excited to partner with Bob Bochman and the rest of the Dexmet team. Dexmet will be a great addition to the Sverica portfolio, as the Company fits well with Sverica’s dedicated focus on niche manufacturers of specialty materials with track records of success and demonstrated growth prospects.”

    Abacus Finance Group, LLC and Avante Mezzanine Partners provided financing for the transaction.

    About Dexmet Corporation

    Dexmet is a global leader in the development and manufacturing of highly engineered expanded foils and polymeric materials used in aerospace, battery, industrial, and other applications where precision characteristics are required. With a history dating back to 1948, Dexmet is a pioneer in the development of proprietary material expanding technology and equipment, including industry leading thinness and widths for product-specific applications. Dexmet partners and works closely with its customers to stay at the edge of new industrial technologies and applications. Dexmet is headquartered in Wallingford, Connecticut. For more information, please visit www.dexmet.com.

    About Sverica International

    Sverica International is a leading private equity firm that has raised over $425 million of investment capital. The firm acquires, invests in and actively builds companies that are, or could become, leaders in their industries. Since 1993 Sverica has maintained a “high touch” operating philosophy of taking an active role in portfolio companies. Sverica devotes significant internal resources to help its management teams develop and execute growth strategies. Sverica has offices in Boston and San Francisco. For more information, please visit www.sverica.com.

    The post Sverica Buys Dexmet appeared first on peHUB.

  • LibreOffice 4.0.1 supports Impress Remote for Android

    The Document Foundation has released LibreOffice 4.0.1, a primarily maintenance release for its open-source office suite. Comprising word processor, spreadsheet, database, presentations, drawing and maths tools, LibreOffice 4.0.1 has one notable update, cross-platform support for its LibreOffice Impress Remote app for Android.

    LibreOffice Impress Remote allows users to control Impress presentations over Bluetooth or Wi-Fi using their Android phone or tablet. Only Linux builds of LibreOffice 4.0 supported the app, but as of version 4.0.1, Windows and Mac LibreOffice users can also control presentations using the Android app.

    The simplest way to use an Android phone with LibreOffice is to pair it with the target computer using Bluetooth, allowing both to be used in remote scenarios without relying on other network connections. Users can, however, connect through Wi-Fi by specifying the target computer’s IP address.

    The app allows users to start the currently loaded slideshow, then control it via the volume buttons or touch-screen controls. Users can move between slides one at a time, with accompanying notes for each slide displayed on the mobile for reference. Users can also insert blank screens, plus view all slides as thumbnails for jumping quickly to different parts of the slideshow.

    TDF warns that the app is still a little buggy, particularly on Windows and Mac platforms, but we found that on the whole it worked well when paired with our Mac Mini running LibreOffice 4.0.1.

    As for LibreOffice 4.0.1 itself, over 100 bugs have been fixed with this release, including a significant number that caused crashes. Elsewhere there’s a fix for text rotation in shapes when exporting presentations in PPT (PowerPoint) format, plus users should now be able to format comment text and import MSDraw files without worrying that certain shape properties won’t be handled incorrectly.

    Other editing fixes should ensure that conditional formatting isn’t destroyed when copying and pasting spreadsheet cells, while autofit text should no longer break superscript or subscript text in Impress. Version 4.0 was released last month, boasting a revamped API and host of new features.

    LibreOffice 4.0.1 is a free, open-source download for Windows, Mac and Linux. LibreOffice Impress Remote is a free companion app for Android mobiles running Android 2.3.3 or later.

  • Reminder: Register For Disrupt Hardware Alley

    hardware alley

    I love hardware. That’s why I want you guys to bring some of the coolest hardware projects imaginable to Disrupt NY this year. That’s why I want you guys in our Hardware Alley.

    Hardware Alley is a one-day celebration of hardware startups both young and old. The goal has always been to show off amazing hardware that we have written about over the past few months, as well as a few surprises. Last Disrupt we featured the guys from Thermovape, Makerbot, and Lit Motors. This year we want to fill Disrupt NY with more amazing companies.

    For more details on Disrupt head over here. We’re looking for new or even unlaunched products, as well as potential Kickstarter projects. Prototypes are fine as long as they’re amazing.

    You can see the previous Hardware Alley participants here. You can sign up here. Bootstrappers can contact me directly at [email protected] if you need a break on price. Hope to see you in the alley… the Hardware Alley.

    Our sponsors help make Disrupt happen. If you are interested in learning more about sponsorship opportunities, please contact our amazing sponsorship team here [email protected].

  • Fenwick & West Posts New Version Of Open Source Seed Funding Documents

    Fenwick & West released a new version of its Series Seed documents on GitHub. The law firm first released its term sheet documents in 2010 and says they have been used by many startups and some Silicon Valley venture capital firms. The new documents represent Version 3.0.

    PRESS RELEASE

    Series Seed Funding Documents Go Open Source @ GitHub

    Silicon Valley Entrepreneurs and Investors Collaborate on New Release

    MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., March 6, 2013 /PRNewswire/ – Today, law firm Fenwick & West announced a new version of the Series Seed documents is being released on GitHub. Since the initial release of the Series Seed documents in 2010, they have been used by numerous startup companies including investments from many of the Silicon Valley’s most prominent venture capital (VC) firms. Version 3.0 of the Series Seed documents is being released on the leading open source forum, GitHub, to encourage continued collaboration.

    “The most valuable assets for early stage companies are time and money,” said Ted Wang, a Fenwick lawyer and the current curator of the Series Seed documents. “Series Seed endeavors to save both for young companies by simplifying early stage funding documents, getting signoff from VC firms who have agreed to use them, and making those documents available online for free.”

    “One of our core beliefs at GitHub is to open source (almost) everything: the community benefits from having more resources available and the projects benefit from having the input of the greater community,” said Tom Preston-Werner, co-founder and CEO of GitHub. “That’s what makes the Series Seed project fun to see. Fenwick is bringing open source concepts to early stage funding documents and using GitHub to encourage community participation and collaboration.”

    The new release provides a modern, technology-based approach to easily use traditional financing terms in seed funding documents by providing a standard set of rights, privileges and preferences with “fill in the blank” variables. This helps entrepreneurs avoid spending time and money negotiating over standard transaction terms and more clearly highlights the key variables in these seed transactions.

    The Series Seed 3.0 documents are accompanied by a blog post “for law nerds and real nerds” describing the changes to the current versions and how to use them on GitHub.

    Version 3.0 uses GitHub as the primary platform for managing discussions and updates to the Series Seed documents. GitHub is currently used by engineers to post software projects and highlight their work making it an excellent platform for community comments and facilitating multiple branches of the documents.
    Visit the GitHub Seed Series documents at https://github.com/seriesseed

    For luddites, a Word copy is available at http://seriesseed.com

    About Series Seed
The Series Seed documents are a standardized set of documents that can be quickly and easily deployed for a seed investment:  to help get a company financed properly, legally, quickly, and intelligently.

    About Fenwick & West

    Established in 1972, Fenwick & West is one of the nation’s premier law firms with extensive expertise in venture capital, public offerings and other corporate finance, joint ventures, M&A and strategic relationships, intellectual property, litigation and dispute resolution, taxation, antitrust and employment and labor law.

    The post Fenwick & West Posts New Version Of Open Source Seed Funding Documents appeared first on peHUB.

  • Remember the artificial leaf? Startup turns to making a flow battery instead

    Two years ago the blogosphere hyped the promise of an “artificial leaf,” which is a sheet that uses a catalyst to harness the sun and split water into hydrogen and oxygen. The tech was based on research from MIT spin-out Sun Catalytix, and led by MIT Professor Daniel Nocera. But it turns out the startup won’t try to commercialize the artificial leaf any time soon, and according to a report in MIT Tech Review, it has now turned to using its research to make a flow battery instead.

    Flow batteries are large liquid-filled tanks that are mostly used to store energy for the power grid. A flow battery’s electrolyte is stored in two tanks that are separate from the cell itself, and the flow battery generates electricity when the liquid electrolytes, which are mixed with energy-storing materials, flow through the two sides and react with the electrodes in each side of the cell.

    The idea, which has been around for decades, is to create a lower-cost battery option than, say, lithium-ion batteries. Power companies like them because the batteries are rechargeable, and can be scaled up and down by adding more tanks. Companies working on this technology include EnerVault, ZBB Energy, Prudent Energy, RedFlow, Primus Power and Deeya Energy.

    ZBB's flow battery

    ZBB’s flow battery

    Sun Catalytix tells MIT Tech Review that it hopes to have a prototype of its flow battery later this year, which it can test out with customers, and then raise more funds for additional product development at that point. The end product is supposed to be a 1 MW flow battery that can last four to six hours and fit inside a 40-foot shipping container.

    It’s not uncommon for cleantech startups — or any startup — to pivot and shift their plan as they progress. The artificial leaf was in the research phase and the company realized that commercializing it would take many years and lots of money. Though, as this New Yorker article points out Nocera has a bit of a reputation for hyping his discoveries.

    The problem, though, is that funds for commercializing next-gen energy technologies are very tight these days. And Sun Catalytix already received a $4 million grant from the Department of Energy’s ARPA-E program, as well as a $9.5 million Series B round led by India’s Tata and including existing investor Polaris Venture Partners.

    Venture capitalists have started to move away from investing in energy tech, and government funds could be tight in 2013, too. Funding could be particularly difficult for an early stage technology, where there are clear competitors that are farther ahead.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
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  • LifeBeam Brings Fighter Pilot Heart-Monitoring Technology To Your Bicycle Helmet

    lazer lifebeam

    LifeBeam is kicking off an Indiegogo campaign for a new smart cycling helmet that uses smart sensors to track your heart rate.

    LifeBeam is an Israel-based startup that thus far has specialized in aerospace technology that is used to track the vital signs of fighter jet pilots and astronauts. Instead of bulky chest strap monitors, Lifebeam uses their own specialized sensors that are built into the helmet to track their heart rate and vitals.

    The people behind LifeBeam then asked themselves, “What if we put that technology into a smart cycling helmet?” Thus this helmet was born.

    The aptly named SMART is just that. The helmet uses Bluetooth to relay all the information the LifeBeam sensors collect instantly onto monitoring devices, fitness watches, and smartphones.

    LifeBeam has little experience designing and producing bicycle helmets, of course, so it’s turned to the popular cycling gear outfit Laser Sport to handle things on that end of the business. The finished product, if LifeBeam can raise enough money, should be a pretty handsome looking cycling helmet with some very high-end sensing technology.

    “We are proud to present the world’s first smart cycling helmet,” LifeBeam says in their IndieGogo video. “Our unique sensing technology, partnered with Lazer Sport helmets, create high end cycling helmets that allow continuous measurement of heart rate and motion.”

    LifeBeam is seeking to raise at least $50,000, and a starting contribution of $149 will get you your very own SMART helmet. If you’re an avid cycler and this seems like something you need, you can check out their IndieGogo page here.

  • 10 more communities turned Inside Out by TED Prize winner JR

    This group of activists from Seoul visited New York City, hoping to raise awareness of “Comfort Women” – some 200,000 Korean women who were forced into prostitution by the Japanese Army during WWII. These women, now elderly, have yet to receive reparations.

    This group of activists from Seoul, Korea, visited New York City, hoping to raise awareness of “Comfort Women” – some 200,000 Korean women who were forced into prostitution by the Japanese Army during WWII. These women, now elderly, have yet to receive reparations.

    JR is an artist with a desire to transform our collective streets — from French public houses to Brazilian favelas. As he describes in his talk from TED2011, JR headed to the barrier wall between Israel and the Palestinian territories for his project “Face 2 Face,” JR's TED Prize wish: Use art to turn the world inside outJR's TED Prize wish: Use art to turn the world inside out pasting massive portraits the size of houses on either side of the wall. The goal: to catch both sides off guard with their similarities and give them the experience of relating to the other by staring them straight in the face. JR found that people are thirsty to heal in this way — to be seen and to share a story through a simple image.

    After winning the 2011 TED Prize, JR transformed his mission to a global scale with Inside Out. Through the initiative, any willing participant can send a portrait (or a series of them), and receive the images back as posters, ready to be pasted anywhere with a social purpose in mind. The purposes and messages may vary, but the images hold a common thread. These public exhibits are then documented and shared on the project’s website.

    In August, Inside Out surpassed the goal of dispersing 100,000 posters. But they are hardly stopping there. Below, see images of some recent projects, pasted all around the globe — from Colombia to New Zealand.

    This project went on behind bars in a women’s prison in Medellin, Colombia. The idea was to photograph those incarcerated and interview them about what they plan to do upon release.

    This project went on behind bars in a women’s prison in Medellin, Colombia. The idea was to photograph those incarcerated and interview them about what they plan to do upon release.

    This school in Christchurch, New Zealand, was hit hard by an earthquake, and the community lacks the funds to rebuild it. To increase support, participants of Inside Out pasted posters of the children who attended the school, and their grandparents who -- generations ago -- also studied there.

    This school in Christchurch, New Zealand, was hit hard by an earthquake, and the community lacks the funds to rebuild it. To increase support, participants of Inside Out pasted posters of the children who attended the school, and their grandparents who — generations ago — also studied there.

    This project from Phnom Penh, Cambodia, was undertaken to represent the many different occupations represented in the city, not to mention the diversity to be appreciated there.

    This project from Phnom Penh, Cambodia, was undertaken to represent the many different occupations represented in the city, not to mention the diversity to be appreciated there.

    Cyclists in Utrecht, Germany, began this initiative to share the stories of young bike-riders.

    Cyclists in Utrecht, Germany, began this initiative to share the stories of young bike-riders.

    In Oaxaca de Juarez, Mexico, a group of students pasted the many diverse faces of their community, to instill pride for residents and to help encourage their artistic endeavors.

    In Oaxaca de Juarez, Mexico, a group of students pasted the many diverse faces of their community, to instill pride for residents and to help encourage their artistic endeavors.

    7 - Tokyo

    Some members of Tokyo’s community wanted to give honor to the various volunteers of many fields — their efforts spanning across earthquake relief, domestic abuse counselors and food bank assistants. Their portraits were plastered across the city.

    Amy Lehman runs a floating healthcare clinic along Lake Tanganyika in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Here, in Kigoma, she pasted these posters on the walls of the village.

    Amy Lehman runs a floating healthcare clinic along Lake Tanganyika in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Here, in Kigoma, she pasted these posters on the walls of the village.

    As a form of non-violent protest in Madrid, Spain, these posters were used to display the faces of those who are being harmed by living under corrupt government.

    As a form of non-violent protest in Madrid, Spain, these posters were used to display the faces of those who are being harmed by living under corrupt government.

    In an effort to stand up to bullying, this action, titled “Not in Our Schools,” took place in Palo Alto, California, in order to advocate acceptance in local high schools.

    In an effort to stand up to bullying, this action, titled “Not in Our Schools,” took place in Palo Alto, California, in order to advocate acceptance in local high schools.

    And a bonus video action:

    In the dark of night, these posters of Taiwanese youth were pasted alongside portraits of youth from Mainland China. It’s an expression of hope toward a more united future. These posters were immediately removed by the Chinese public authorities, but not before this footage of the pasting (and subsequent removal) was captured.

  • Ready to Innovate? Get a Lawyer.

    As disruptive innovations enter the market with faster velocity and increased firepower, entrepreneurs are finding themselves dealing sooner and more intimately with the law.

    Sometimes, the innovation is just too new, creeping out consumers and lawmakers who hurriedly work to ban it. Few people remember, for example, that the day after Scottish scientists announced in 1996 the successful clone of a sheep named Dolly, President Bill Clinton issued an executive order banning the use of federal funds for cloning in the U.S and urged Congress to outlaw the technology. (Before that, it had been a subject only for science fiction novels.)

    But more often the imposition of legal constraints comes indirectly, the maneuverings of incumbents caught off-guard by something dramatically better and often cheaper than their core products and services. Performing a bit of regulatory judo, they often respond to such threats by pressuring regulators who oversee their own activities to declare the innovator illegal or otherwise in violation of rules that were never designed to cover it. Internet-dispatched limousines and ride-sharing services such as Uber, Lyft, and Sidecar, for example, are dealing with such challenges on a daily basis, as trade groups press local taxicab commissions to prohibit the new services.

    Incumbents also run to the courts, filing sometimes-dubious infringement lawsuits based on a yellowing sheaf of patents, copyrights, or trademarks. Implicitly, these lawsuits are often aimed not at stopping the new entrant so much as to slow it down, wasting its precious time and limited funds.

    Here, think of the response of the music, film, and other mass media to the advent of digital distribution of content. Much of it, at least in the early days, might in fact have been illegal. But incumbents who continue to rely exclusively on the courts are only putting off the inevitable. The same year the music industry successfully shut down Napster, Apple launched iTunes.

    One result of the uncomfortable and increasingly frequent collisions of once-separate worlds of innovation and law is that entrepreneurs now engage with lawyers much sooner in their lives. They must, if only to secure their own patents and copyright or fight off life-threatening lawsuits.

    Now, more startups are even opening their own policy offices in Washington, Brussels, and other lawmaking capitals. Only four years into its existence, for example, Twitter opened a D.C. office headed up by a former senior Congressional and FCC staffer. Facebook’s D.C. office has almost 30 employees. Google, Microsoft, Yahoo and other Silicon Valley brand names all have their own, often extensive, government operations. For the new breed of disruptive innovators, it’s a necessary evil.

    Beyond being used both offensively and defensively with lawmakers, regulators, and litigants, legal constraints on innovation are increasingly finding their way directly into product design. In the U.S., the Federal Trade Commission has been using its general consumer protection powers to shape how Internet service providers do and do not make use of user-generated information and other content. (In the E.U., regulators are likewise groping to find ways to enforce more specific, but still undefined, privacy directives.) The buzzword for social media these days is “privacy by design,” a concept that unfortunately hasn’t advanced much beyond the purely rhetorical.

    At the extreme are start-ups created specifically to satisfy legal loopholes, and perhaps to push them open just a little further. Think of these as “barely legal by design.” For this category, I’ve collected several recent examples of companies whose major innovation is to creatively adapt new technologies to old laws.

    Perhaps the most interesting is Aereo TV, a start-up launched last year and backed by investors including former Fox Chairman and CEO Barry Diller. For as little as $8 a month or $80 a year, Aereo lets users watch and record TV programs offered by local over-the-air broadcasters and play it whenever they like over the Internet—including on their smartphones, tablets, and home computers. The service is currently available to 19 million residents in the New York metropolitan area, though the company declines to say how many it has actually signed up.

    In essence, Aereo offers its customers a virtual DVR for over-the-air channels, and uses the public Internet to replay live or recorded programs on any connected device. But here’s the catch: unlike cable and satellite providers, who are required by law to pay broadcast stations for the right to retransmit their programming, Aereo is paying the stations absolutely nothing. And, the company has maintained in several preliminary courtroom appearances, it is not violating any law or FCC regulation.

    How’s that? The company is delicately threading the needle — successfully so far—of several important court decisions involving copyright law. Indeed, it is little stretch to say that the company’s entire business is engineered around those decisions. To make a long story short, it does so by maintaining a tiny antenna (about the size of a dime) for each of its customers — completely unnecessary to accomplish the technical feat but a handy way to fall within the “fair use” doctrine established back when Betamax and Cablevision first posed their technology-based threats to broadcasters.

    Aereo is arguing that it is no different than having your own antenna and a VCR at home. Now those are simply located remotely, and you control them through the Internet and not your television.

    Not surprisingly, Aereo has been fighting legal challenges. At a recent oral argument, Judge John Gleeson, appeared skeptical of Aereo’s business model. He characterized the individual antennas as a technical “fiction” designed solely to shoehorn the Aereo service comfortably between the Betamax and Cablevision cases. “You don’t have all these little antennas because it makes any sense,” he said. “It’s a belt-and-suspenders approach to the Copyright Act.”

    That’s clearly the case. But does that make it illegal? As innovation and law bump up against each other more frequently and in more awkward positions, entrepreneurs might actually be well-advised to wear both belts and suspenders, if not a few dozen other technical and legal forms of support. When a single case can make or break your business, there’s no such thing as too much innovation — or too much lawyering.

  • Apple’s Growth Outpaces Samsung’s In Most Recent comScore U.S. Smartphone Share Report

    apple-samsung

    Apple’s iPhone made up some ground in the most recent comScore smartphone OEM market share numbers, covering the three-month period ending in January 2013. Apple’s share rose from 34.3 percent curing the previous quarter to 37.8 percent, a point change of 3.5. Samsung’s share also rose, going from 19.5 percent to 21.4 percent, growth of 1.9 percentage points. HTC and Motorola shed share, maintaining their third and fourth-place spots but each losing nearly as much share Samsung gained.

    ComScore also measured smartphone platform share, and found that Google’s Android accounted for 52.3 percent of overall U.S. smartphone subscribers aged 13 or older, a drop of 1.3 percentage points vs. the previous quarter. Apple’s iOS gained ground, adding 3.5 percentage points to its share, going from 34.3 percent share in the quarter ending October 2012, to 37.8 percent in the one that just ended in January.

    In other words, according to comScore’s number, Apple was the big winner for the holiday season. Which makes a lot of sense, given that it released the iPhone 5 in September, and the device continued to see supply constraints through October and November leading into the holiday sales season. Samsung’s flagship device, the Galaxy S III, had been on the market since June 2012.

    In terms of platforms vying for third place, BlackBerry shed nearly 2 percentage points of its share during the quarter, but a lot of that was likely due to the imminent release of BB10. The first BB10 devices didn’t go on sale anywhere in the world until the end of the month, and they have yet to arrive officially at any U.S. carriers. Next quarter results should be a better indicator of how BlackBerry will fare alongside Microsoft in the U.S. in the war for a third modern smartphone platform.

    Apple’s share of the smartphone market was also up from the three-month period ending in December, when comScore pegged it at 36.3 percent, with Samsung up to 21.0 percent, representing growth of 2.0 and 2.3 percentage points respectively. These two continue to slug it out at the top, but the most recent numbers show Apple pulling ahead at a faster rate. We’ll see if the Galaxy S IV launch, likely coming sometime next week, has any influence on consumer buying choices when it comes to the U.S. smartphone market.

  • Google+ Profiles Just Got Bigger Cover Photos, a New Look for the ‘About’ Tab, and Local Reviews

    Google has just begun to roll out some significant changes to Google+ profiles that bring bigger cover photos, a whole new look for the “about” section, and a new tab for your reviews.

    When you visit your profile today, you’ll see a prompt that says “Cover photos just got bigger” and asks you if you’d like to update yours now. The bigger cover photos now allow for 2120px by 1192px images.

    “This way more images can be used as cover photos, and there’s more room for your selection to shine,” says Google’s Sara McKinley in a Google+ post.

    Your “About” section has also received an update. It’s a completely new design that puts all of your separate pieces of information into their own color-coded cards. Each info card features its own “edit” button as well.

    Lastly, a new “Reviews” tab has been added to the top of your profile alongside the ones for your +1s, YouTube videos, photos, and posts. As you would imagine, this tab houses all of your Google Local reviews.

    “Highlight your favorite restaurants, or hide the tab completely via settings – it’s completely up to you,” says Google.

    If you don’t see your new Google+ profile yet, be patient. Google says that it’s rolling out gradually.