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  • The Small Business Carnage That Shows The Real Reason Jobs Aren’t Being Created In America

    Small BusinessWhile some parts of the U.S. economy show early signs of an economic rebound, for small business, the situation remains extremely tough.

    Latest December small business conditions reported by the National Federation of Independent Business makes this very clear.

    None of the optimism shown by major U.S. corporations can be found.

    Until this dichotomy ends, we shouldn’t expect major improvement on the U.S. employment front given that small businesses are the most important employers in America.

    The real reason jobs aren’t being created right now >>>

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Chrome OS Moves the Login Process to the Browser

    Chrome OS is very much in the early stages and the release we saw last month is likely very different from the one we’ll be getting about a year from now. So, it’s no surprise that things, even fundamental ones, are changing sometimes significantly so. Recently Chromium OS, the open source project on which Chrome OS is based, developers introduced a brand new login system using the web browser to manage the process rather the built-in, Linux-based one with which Chromium OS came when the source code was released.

    The plans to move the login from the operating system to the browser were being fleshed out even before the source code was released, but have only recently the actual code was added to the project. “Using Chrome as our login manager has a number of potential benefits. Explore these tradeoffs and decide what to do about the login manager,” the first entry read inviting developers to add their opinions. 

    “An early version of this change is finally in. It’s not ready for daily use yet, and we haven’t gotten the network picker on there or anything yet, but at least we’ve got a baseline in there. I’m filing issues for the follow-on work,” reads the announcement that the code was available in the Chromium OS repository.

    There are a couple of advantages of usi… (read more)

  • Burning the Brand

    Obama came in with the best brand as a candidate in the last fifty years; through mismanagement, he’s frittered a lot of the value away. It costs a lot to create a brand, and once it’s gone, it’s almost impossible to rebuild. Here’s neuroscientist Drew Westen on the topic:

    Somehow the president has managed to turn a base of new and progressive voters he himself energized like no one else could in 2008 into the likely stay-at-home voters of 2010, souring an entire generation of young people to the political process. It isn’t hard for them to see that the winners seem to be the same no matter who the voters select (Wall Street, big oil, big Pharma, the insurance industry). In fact, the president’s leadership style, combined with the Democratic Congress’s penchant for making its sausage in public and producing new and usually more tasteless recipes every day, has had a very high toll far from the left: smack in the center of the political spectrum.

    What’s costing the president and courting danger for Democrats in 2010 isn’t a question of left or right, because the president has accomplished the remarkable feat of both demoralizing the base and completely turning off voters in the center. If this were an ideological issue, that would not be the case. He would be holding either the middle or the left, not losing both.

    What’s costing the president are three things: a laissez faire style of leadership that appears weak and removed to everyday Americans, a failure to articulate and defend any coherent ideological position on virtually anything, and a widespread perception that he cares more about special interests like bank, credit card, oil and coal, and health and pharmaceutical companies than he does about the people they are shafting.

    The problem is not that his record is being distorted. It’s that all three have more than a grain of truth. And I say this not as one of those pesky “leftists.” I say this as someone who has spent much of the last three years studying what moves voters in the middle, the Undecideds who will hear whichever side speaks to them with moral clarity.

    Read the whole article.

  • Ping – Google Goggles, Searching by Image Alone – NYTimes.com

    The future is now.

    THE world, like the World Wide Web before it, is about to be hyperlinked. Soon, you may be able to find information about almost any physical object with the click of a smartphone.

    This vision, once the stuff of science fiction, took a significant step forward this month when Google unveiled a smartphone application called Goggles. It allows users to search the Web, not by typing or by speaking keywords, but by snapping an image with a cellphone and feeding it into Google’s search engine.

    How tall is that mountain on the horizon? Snap and get the answer. Who is the artist behind this painting? Snap and find out. What about that stadium in front of you? Snap and see a schedule of future games there.

    Goggles, in essence, offers the promise to bridge the gap between the physical world and the Web.

    via Ping – Google Goggles, Searching by Image Alone – NYTimes.com.

  • Sticky, Gooey, Messy, Chewy Treats for Kids

    Sticky, Gooey, Messy, Chewy Treats for KidsIt’s fitting that there is a kids version of the cookbook Sticky, Gooey, Messy, Chewy for kids – because as much as grown-ups like indulgent desserts that fall into one (or all four) of these categories, kids are the ones who really appreciate something a little bit messy. Sticky, Gooey, Messy, Chewy Treats for Kids is a cookbook designed for kids, with recipes that kids will want to eat and make themselves.

    The book covers both breakfast and dessert, since they’re the two meals where you’re most likely to find sweet, gooey foods. The recipes included things like Banana Split Pancakes, Chocolate Pudding Cake and Bumblebee Sting Cupcakes. They are divided into three chapters and grouped by topic, breakfast food, holiday food and party/celebration food, though the recipes are easy enough to make on a daily basis. All of the recipes are well-laid out in a traditional cookbook design (unlike some kids books where you have to search a too-colorful page for the list of ingredients!), and the book is spiral-bound to lay flat while you read it. The recipes are made from scratch, so you won’t find things that start with a log of cookie dough, but are well-explained and easy to follow along with.

    There are only 30 recipes in the cookbook, but they are varied and that is more than enough for most kids to choose from. It also means that they’re likely to remember the things that they’ve made and want to go back for more. If you needed any more incentive, the photos in the book are outstanding and really make your mouth water.

  • Do the Gute: A Few Good Horses

    For some reason this morning I thought of this stirring poem by Robert Browning: How They Brought the Good News From Ghent to Aix. It’s an old favorite. I read a lot of Robert Browning in high school, and if that surprises you, it is because you aren’t familiar with Robert Browning, who is way different from his wife. Both are great poets, but Elizabeth Barrett wrote sentimental sonnets (e.g., “How do I love thee? Let me count the ways”) and Robert wrote tough-nosed narratives poems, stories that were often thrilling and as often grotesque. Poetry for teenaged boys, you might say.

    This is one of his most famous poems, and is simply about three men on a furious horseback ride. We never know what the good news is, or why it is so urgent. It doesn’t really matter. There is no historical incident that inspired it, Browning said. It’s just a poem that occurred to him. It’s not about the men and their good news. It’s about the ride, and the heroes are the horses.

    The poem is incredible for the way it maintains the same urgent, desperate pace as the horses. It’s a master class on poetics. Enjoy the ride.

  • More pics of the Alfa Romeo Giulietta appear

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    Alfa Romeo Giulietta — Click above for high-res image gallery

    The Interwebs have discovered some additional snaps of the Geneva Motor Show-bound Alfa Romeo Giulietta. Although there’s a full-on rear shot, these are more about details and lighting elements than taking the entire car in. The new hatch won’t suffer from any lack of LED’s, with an array of four in the headlights and a basket full of them in the rear taillights and third brake light.

    Fiat’s aims to sell around 100,000 units per year, and with five engine choices on offer at launch, the company is doing its best not to leave any potential customer out. If we’re lucky, that pool of potential customers will include Americans that aren’t ex-pats… Have a look at what’s coming in the gallery of high-res images below.

    [Source: Blog Motori (translated)]

    More pics of the Alfa Romeo Giulietta appear originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 21 Dec 2009 09:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Roubini: Latin America Will Have Killer Growth In 2010

    nourielroubini generic tbi

    Although bearish for the U.S. economy, Nourel Roubini can’t get enough of Latin America. To wit, he recently upgraded his growth outlook for Latin America in 2010 from 3.3 to 3.8.

    The economist explained this upgrade in an interview with the Americas Society:

    AS: What is behind this increasingly positive outlook for Latin America?

    Roubini: There are two things. One is that global economic and financial conditions are improving. There is a recovery of growth even if it’s going to be anemic. Commodity prices have been rising. Financial conditions remain easy. Capital is flowing back to emerging markets. So that is the global outlook.

    And two, these countries have shown their own resilience. Their economic policies have been sound and they’ve been able to conduct countercyclical policies. They’ve not experienced a financial crisis in these episodes. Their overall fundamentals are sound, so the combination of maintaining sound fundamentals and right economic policies with improvement in the global economic outlook implies a recovery.

    The key word in Roubini’s answer is “anemic.” Even anemic global recovery will continue to feed stable emerging economies; whereas it will fail to sustain developed economies like the U.S.

    Read the full interview here.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • YouTube Competitor Dailymotion Comes to the iPhone

    dailymotion_logo_dec09.jpgDailymotion, the Paris-based video sharing portal that is extremely popular in Europe, just launched its first set of iPhone applications. Dailymotion launched two apps: a free, ad-supported version (iTunes link), and a paid version for $5.99 (iTunes link) that does not feature any ads. The apps allow iPhone users to play videos from Dailymotion’s catalog of roughly 12 million videos. Dailymotion users can also use the apps to upload videos directly to the service.

    Sponsor

    dailymotion_iphone_launch.jpgUntil now, the only way to access Dailymotion from the iPhone was through a mobile-optimized web interface. Given YouTube’s position as a default app on the iPhone, this put Dailymotion at a significant disadvantage.

    In terms of content, Dailymotion can’t really compete with YouTube, where users now upload more than 24 hours of video per minute, but the app can easily compete with those from other streaming video services.

    One feature of the app we especially like is how easy it is to browse through different categories. This is also where Dailymotion’s international focus shines through, as the app also makes it very straightforward to restrict searches to popular videos in a specific country.

    Discuss


  • Demo: Divinity II

     

    Divinity II - Ego DraconisContent: Divinity II Demo
    Price: Free
    Availability: Not available in Japan
    Dash Text: Summon the dark power in you to free Rivellon from its demonic reign. Only by facing your inner evil, can you defeat the cruel dragon beings. Fulfil your destiny and transform into one of the most dangerous and powerful creatures that ever existed: the Dragon Knight. Be merciless, fight relentlessly and achieve your divine purpose: the salvation of Rivellon.

     

     

    Add Divinity II Demo to your Xbox 360 download queue

     

  • Despite promises, junk food still advertised to kids

    froot loopsChildren’s diet quality has declined to shocking levels, directly fueling the obesity epidemic. There are, of course, many forces affecting the eating habits of children today, such as the widespread availability of junk food, an under-funded school lunch program, and busy, stressed families. However, TV advertising to children has undoubtedly played a major role. Saturday morning children’s shows have seemingly become little more than a continuous food commercial, with beloved, iconic cartoon figures like SpongeBob peddling junk foods during programming as well as ads.

    In response to the threat of governmental regulation and legal action, major food companies like Kellogg, General Mills, ConAgra and PepsiCo banded together in 2006 to create a voluntary advertising code of conduct. Called the “Children’s Food and Beverage Advertising Initiative,” this policy aimed to “change the landscape of child-directed advertising” by encouraging “Better-for-You” foods.

    After three years of operation, has this voluntary program worked? Are food ads aimed at children now promoting healthful products? The results of a study just released by the advocacy group Children Now suggest not.

    The report systematically evaluated ads on children’s programming in 2005, 2007 and 2009. They found that, despite perfect compliance among participating companies, the quality of advertised foods remained atrocious. Indeed, it would require 10 hours of viewing children’s TV shows to see one ad for a healthy product. During that time, a child would see 55 ads for products with the lowest nutritional quality, such as Lucky Charms, Froot Loops and Fruity Pebbles breakfast cereals. So it would seem that the “Better-for-You” program isn’t actually Good for You, especially if you’re a kid.

    As I’ve previously argued, these voluntary industry programs better serve the interests of private profit than public health. The food industry cannot fairly regulate advertising to children any more than the wolf can guard the henhouse.

    The American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Psychological Association have considered advertising to young children inherently unethical, because they lack the intellectual and psychological maturity to understand that the purpose of advertisement is to manipulate behavior.

    So it’s time to take back control of the airwaves aimed at our children. It’s time to ban ALL advertising to young children, starting with food ads.

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  • Copenhagen ‘Deal’ – A Frozen Flop by Piers Corbyn

    Article Tags: Copenhagen Conference, Piers Corbyn

    On with the fight for accountable evidence-based science & policy.

    This WeatherAction News No101 – as George Orwell would be pleased to note – carries news of the worst fears of the Global Warmers coming to pass. Their CO2 driven Global Warming theory is exposed as failed science based on fraud and their call for a world Climate Treaty is mission failed as Viscount Monckton spells out: Parturient montes: nascetur ridiculus mus.

    Carbon trading & all CO2 reduction schemes must be stopped.

    Despite the Copenhagen frozen flop the monstrosity of Carbon Trading continues to expand and the intention of most world leaders is to keep it that way. Carbon trading is a new bubble of false value whereby giant multi-nationals move jobs around the world to increase exploitation and get paid by taxpayers of the world to do it!

    Click source link to download FULL report from Piers Corbyn

    Source: weatheraction.com

    Read in full with comments »   


  • Baby death due to insecticides

    Late last month we heard some bad news about insecticides being linked to autoimmune disorders, and now some far worse news. Insecticide exposure earlier this month resulted in the death of a 10 month old baby and both the baby’s mother, 25-year-old Elizabeth Whitfield, and her 2-year-old son, Kenneth, were hospitalized with severe respiratory distress, also due to insecticide exposure.

    insecticide kills

    Investigators on the case noted that “Whitfield and her children had only lived in the home a short time and she was trying to deal with a serious insect problem.” About half a dozen used insect foggers were found in the home and the contamination was so severe that a hazardous materials team was called out to help get rid of the foggers.

    Now hopefully, you’re never in a situation where you use many foggers over a short period of time, but this is an excellent reminder that insecticides are meant to do two thing well; poison and kill. No matter how careful you are with toxic household chemicals, you can’t be safe enough. When you bring deadly chemicals into your home, they leave a trace. Even if you clean. In fact, one report shows that most US kitchen floors have some insecticide residue on them including traces of organochlorine insecticides, such as chlordane, heptachlor and DDT. All of the former mentioned insecticides were withdrawn from the market or banned in the 1970s and 1980s, so time isn’t even on your side.

    According to that same report above, about 78 million U.S. households, or 74%, use pesticides in their homes annually. The exposure risks to your family are very real and dangerious. Why use harmful pesticides where your family lives? You don’t have to.

    Instead of pesticides, insecticides, and other harmful chemicals you can…

    [image via stock.xchng]

    Post from: Blisstree

    Baby death due to insecticides

  • New cell phone maker NEC-Casio goes America, targets 200% international sales boost

    casio_nec_hitachi

    As MobileCrunch reported back in August, three of Japan’s eight top cell phone makers, namely NEC, Casio and Hitachi are going to merge their cell phone businesses next year. Under the agreement, NEC plans to integrate its handset division into a tie-up that already existed between Hitachi and Casio starting April 2010 (the begin of the new fiscal year under the Japanese business calendar).

    In the meantime, the companies involved decided on a name for the new venture: NEC Casio Mobile. The company’s capitalization stands at a relatively modest $55 million, with NEC holding a 71% stake, Casio 20% and Hitachi 9%. And as I speculated in my previous article, that new company plans to enter the global market in a (relatively) aggressive way.

    NEC Casio Mobile plans to ship a total of five million handsets in markets outside Japan, up more than 200% from the numbers for fiscal 2008 (handset sales of NEC, Casio and Hitachi combined). By the end of 2011, the new company wants to sell handsets, including “smartphones”, in North America. NEC Casio will also enter the Mexican and Australian markets by that time.

    In fiscal 2008, the three companies involved in the new venture shipped a combined 8.9 million cell phones, 1.5 million of which found their way outside Japan. NEC Casio follows both Sharp and Panasonic in their plans to bring made-in-Japan cell phones abroad.

    Via Nikkei [registration required, paid subscription]

    Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.


  • 7-on-7: Brad Childress is 0-for-2 on attempts to bench Brett Favre

    http://a323.yahoofs.com/ymg/ept_sports_fantasy_experts__23/ept_sports_fantasy_experts-592714484-1261408875.jpg?ymrZSZCDpkUSwbvM

    In the third quarter of Sunday night’s game between Minnesota and Carolina, Brett Favre(notes) got into a "heated discussion" (Favre’s words) with Vikings head coach Brad Childress. The subject of the discussion was Childress’ attempt to bench his quarterback.

    After briefly considering the recommendation, Favre denied the request. These were his postgame comments:

    "There was a little heated discussion, I guess you would call it. We were up 7-6 at the time and it’s no secret I was getting hit a little bit." … "I think everyone in the building was like, ‘They’re not moving the ball, they’re not getting points.’ And so Brad wanted to go in a different direction and I wanted to stay in the game. You know, we were up 7-6. Yeah, it’s not 70-6, but we’re up 7-6. I said, ‘I’m staying in the game. I’m playing.’" … "We talked it out."

    Minnesota eventually lost, 26-7. Favre’s statements suggest that if he’d been benched, it would have been for performance issues, not for his own protection. There’s really no obvious reason for the Vikings to rest key players right now. Minnesota clinched a division title earlier in the day when Green Bay lost, but the team has not yet locked up a playoff bye and they’re still in the race for homefield advantage in the NFC.

    Did Childress actually believe that Tarvaris Jackson(notes) gave the Vikings a better chance to hold a one-point lead? We’ll never know. Childress wasn’t particularly forthcoming with the press following the game, unlike his quarterback.

    The Minneapolis Star-Tribune reports that Sunday night was actually the second time this season that Childress has attempted to lift Favre. The coach apparently wanted to pull Favre against Detroit in Week 10, too, but he was rebuffed. These reports raise legitimate questions about who, exactly, is in charge of the Vikings at the moment.

    We know who was in charge of them on Sunday, of course: Panthers defensive end Julius Peppers(notes). Carolina pressured Favre endlessly, sacking him four times. Childress succeeded in removing at least one of his players from the game when he benched tackle Bryant McKinnie(notes) in the fourth quarter. McKinnie had simply been punished by Peppers. 

    The Vikings aren’t really peaking at the right time, but they travel to Chicago next Monday. The Bears are going to make everything OK, at least for a week.

    DeAngelo Williams(notes) exited Carolina’s win in the first half due to a left ankle injury. In his absence, Jonathan Stewart(notes) was an absolute terror, rushing for 109 yards on 25 carries and scoring a pair of fourth quarter touchdowns. The Panthers face a tough run defense next week when they face the Giants, but Stewart obviously abused a respectable defense on Sunday night. [Charlotte Observer]

    The Eagles are calling Michael Vick’s(notes) injury a quad contusion. "We’ll see how it goes this week," said Andy Reid, committing to nothing. It’s tough to believe Vick won’t be available for his usual cameo in Week 16. [Philadelphia Inquirer]

    Titans linebacker Keith Bulluck(notes) had to be assisted off the field in the second half of Sunday’s overtime win over the Dolphins. He injured his left knee and will undergo tests on Monday to determine the extent of the damage. It didn’t look good. Bulluck is having another excellent season (108 tackles, three INTs) and Sunday’s game was his 127th consecutive NFL start. [The Tennessean]

    The Ravens have lost rookie kick returner/cornerback Lardarius Webb(notes) for the remainder of the season due to a suspected ACL tear. Webb had been starting in place of corner Fabian Washington(notes), who tore an ACL back in November. This is clearly terrible news for a defense that’s about to face a quarterback who’s coming off a 503-yard day. [Baltimore Sun]

    When a guy rushes for 286 yards and three TDs, there’s really a lot to talk about. In our coverage of Jerome Harrison’s(notes) huge day against the Chiefs on Sunday, we neglected to mention the very smart thing he did at the conclusion of his final score. Harrison’s third TD broke a 34-34 tie in the final minute, and he actually took a few seconds off the game clock by deliberately running parallel to the goal line before crossing the plane. It was like the Stokley play, but on a shorter field. Kansas City drove to Cleveland’s 26 yard line on their final possession, so Harrison’s move clearly mattered. [NFL.com

    It just wouldn’t be a proper Monday 7-on-7 without the Rams Report Card. Steven Jackson needs to demand a conference with the author. If any player on that team deserves an A, it’s Jackson. [St. Louis Post-Dispatch]

    Photo via AP Images

  • Driven to Distraction, Some Teenagers Unfriend Facebook – NYTimes.com

    Facebook, the popular networking site, has 350 million members worldwide who, collectively, spend 10 billion minutes there every day, checking in with friends, writing on people’s electronic walls, clicking through photos and generally keeping pace with the drift of their social world.

    Make that 9.9 billion and change. Recently, Halley Lamberson, 17, and Monica Reed, 16, juniors at San Francisco University High School, made a pact to help each other resist the lure of the login. Their status might as well now read, “I can’t be bothered.”

    via Driven to Distraction, Some Teenagers Unfriend Facebook – NYTimes.com.

  • Jeff Saut: Prepare For ECB And BoJ Rate Hikes, Sovereign Blowups, A CRE Crisis, And Accelerated Asian Urbanization

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    Raymond James strategist Jeffrey Saut — a bull who has been on the correct side of the rally for the entire year — lays out some of his big themes for 2010, while also expressing serious concern about the stock market action of the last few weeks.

    As for the other themes as we enter the new year, our sense is the U.S. will experience 3.5% GDP growth in the first half of the year and then slow to 2.5%.  Consequently, global growth in 2010 should be uneven.  Near term, advanced economies should experience a bounce in activity that will last into the first half of the year.  Following that, monetary policies will vary.  Emerging markets will
    need to tighten much sooner than the G7.  We do expect interest rate hikes from the ECB and the Bank of Japan in 2010.  However, we also think participants are wrong in expecting interest rate hikes too early given the fragile economic environment.  Further, in 2010 we think investors should be positioned for:  Sovereign balance sheet risk (potential defaults: Venezuela, Ukraine, Argentina,
    Pakistan, Latvia, etc.); increased geopolitical threats; Asian urbanization; a potential commercial real estate crisis; rising taxation/inflation/regulation; the emerging and frontier market consumer; rising global growth, free cash flow beneficiaries; energy and alternative energy; infrastructure plays (electricity, water, etc.); technology (read: volume monetizers); U.S. exports and business spending; dividends; and a return to active portfolio management.  Indeed, stock selection, and active portfolio
    management, are likely to be the key drivers of portfolio returns in the year ahead.  As for style, while we always like special situations, from a macro perspective we favor quality growth, dividend yield, positive earnings revisions, and large capitalization stocks.

    As for last week’s stock market action, we were manifestly disappointed, having believed the SPX was poised to surmount its 50% retracement level at 1115 (measuring the decline from October 2007 to March 2009), triggering upside targets between 1160 and 1200.  Alas, it was not meant to be as the index tried, and failed, for the fourth time to breach 1115, setting the stage for potentially a fifth downside test of the 1085 level.  While we remain constructive, history shows that the fifth test of a support level typically doesn’t hold.  Therefore, in Friday’s verbal strategy comments we concluded, “We think it’s pretty important that the equity markets build on this morning’s opening strength.”  And while that didn’t happen, the markets did stabilize following the “Thursday Tumble” (-133 DJIA).  Still, with market valuations below their 20-year mean valuation, surging earnings and low interest rates, we remain constructive.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Pump and construction work

    I am going to be looking into a pump at my next endo appt. in March. The only concern I have is that I am a Mason so my work environment is extremely dirty, in addition I dont carry my phone with me while working because they get destroyed. Are there any pumpers on here that are in the trades that have some insight!
  • Best LittleCo of 2009 & Most Promising for 2010

    Don’t worry, it’s not Twitter! For our Best LittleCo of 2009, we’ve chosen a small company whose product launched in 2009 and quickly became a leading example of one of the year’s big trends: the real-time web.

    Our pick for Most Promising is something that could change the way people search on the Web.

    Last week we announced that Google was our choice for Best BigCo of 2009, due to its product innovation in 2009. Today we’re announcing Best LittleCo and Most Promising Company, as selected by the ReadWriteWeb writers.

    Sponsor

    This is the 6th year we’ve done this and many of the small companies we choose each year go onto much bigger things. Here’s a quick look back at previous winners:

    • In 2008 we chose web office vendor Zoho as Best LittleCo and Brightkite as our Most Promising. Zoho is still competing well above its weight bracket against office software giants like Microsoft and Google. However it’s fair to say that Brightkite hasn’t delivered as much on its promise as we thought it might, due in part to the emergence of Foursquare as ‘the next big thing’ in mobile social networking.
    • In 2007 Twitter was Best LittleCo and in a break from tradition we named "the open source movement" as most promising. Twitter, of course, has since gone on to make a huge impact on the Web and media.
    • In 2006 YouTube was Best LittleCo and Sharpcast Most Promising. YouTube was acquired by Google in October of that year.
    • In 2005 37Signals was Best LittleCo and Memeorandum (now Techmeme) and Digg were joint Most Promising.
    • In 2004 Ludicorp, creators of Flickr, was Best LittleCo and Feedburner Most Promising. Both went on to be acquired, by Yahoo! and Google respectively.

    Now let’s find out who is ReadWriteWeb’s Best LittleCo of 2009. Then on page 2 we name our Most Promising company for 2010.

    Best LittleCo of 2009: Aardvark

    Aardvark (our initial review and then a comparison review) is a social search engine that combines artificial intelligence, natural-language processing and presence data to create what the company calls “the real-time Web of people.” The company was founded in 2007, but the product only launched in March 2009 at SXSW. It quickly became one of the companies we point to most when we discuss the Real-Time Web, one of the most significant trends of this year.

    In our report on the Real-Time Web released in November, we described how it works:

    "You can ask Aardvark any question, and it will try to find a person in your extended social circles who knows about that topic and is available to answer at that moment. Aardvark facilitates these conversations through a very polite IM bot, an iPhone app with push notifications, the company’s website, Twitter or email. Instead of broadcasting your question to every one’s stream of information, Aardvark delivers the question only to people who are relevant and available."

    Unlike Yahoo Answers or similar services, Aardvark doesn’t keep a repository of frequently asked questions. The service’s mission is to get you current answers from experts in your own social networks. On most days, over 85% of all questions get answered.

    As we noted in our report, Aardvark’s got an all-star team of engineers from Google and Yahoo and high-profile investors. It’s already cutting deals with major tech brands and is rumored to be on Google’s acquisition list. Whatever happens to the company, the use cases for Aardvark are just beginning to be explored.

    In short, Aardvark impressed us a lot this year and it made no fewer than 3 of our 2009 best-of lists:

    Aardvark’s iPhone app was also popular with our writers, two of them putting it in their top 5 mobile web applications of the year.

    Next page: ReadWriteWeb’s Most Promising Company for 2010…

  • Luxury Jewelry Comes Surging Back

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    Surprise: gaudy, expensive jewelry is coming back:

    Marketwatch: As retailers across the board are still struggling to get consumers to spend beyond what they need, affluent consumers are giving a troubled sector — jewelry — a ray of hope.

    Average jewelry spending by shoppers with minimum household incomes of $100,000 jumped 31%, to $4,813, in the third quarter from a year earlier, compared against declines of more than 30% each for clothing and for fashion accessories including shoes and handbags, according to Pam Danziger, president of Unity Marketing. The consultancy surveyed 1,000 luxury shoppers.

    Read the whole thing >>

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