Archive for August, 2009

Rails Rumble 2009 - Vote For Your Favorite App

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

Ruby on Rails is well-known for being a powerful tool to help developers quickly turn ideas into working code. Rails Rumble harnesses that power and drives it to its only logical conclusion: a 48-hour programming competition pitting more than 200 teams of coders against one another for some pretty serious prizes. Each team of up to four people is provided with exactly the same thing: a virtual private server from Linode, a private repository on GitHub, and a really tight deadline. BYO caffeine.

The competition has ended and now that many of the contestants are awake again, it’s time for the public to kick the tires on these mini-applications and vote to decide who will take home the championship belt (and no, that’s not a figure of speech in this case. There really is a belt). The 22 finalists include something for everyone, whether you’re a developer working to nail down requirements, a boozehound trying to figure out what cocktails you can make with the leftovers from last night’s party, an old-school arcade nut looking to play multi-player Asteroid, or a hopeless romantic trying to employ Twitter to woo a crush.

TechCrunch50 Conference 2009: September 14-15, 2009, San Francisco




Dads Say The Darndest Things…On Twitter (Probably NSFW)

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

Twitter is used for a lot of things these days, but this has to be one of my favorites. A 28-year-old guy named Justin has set up a Twitter account simply to tweet out random things his elderly father says. The title of the feed: “Shit My Dad Says.

Apparently, I’m a bit slow stumbling upon this; even though it was only started at the beginning of August, Justin’s account for his 73-year-old father’s sayings already has over 150,000 followers. But I don’t care, it needs to be pointed out again how awesome this idea is.

TechCrunch50 Conference 2009: September 14-15, 2009, San Francisco




Live From Tokyo: Cerevo Debuts Digital Camera That Automatically Uploads Pictures To Multiple Social Media Sites

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

I just came back from the CNET Japan Innovation Conference 2009 [JP] in Tokyo, where Cerevo, currently one of the most ambitious tech start-ups in Japan, showed its self-developed digital camera aimed at heavy social media users for the first time.

The company has just seven employees (two of them are part-timers) but big plans: Cerevo intends to dramatically simplify the process of uploading and sharing pictures online by providing both an extra-easy to use camera (the “CerevoCam”) and a photo sharing site (”CerevoLife”) specifically geared towards owners of that camera. And the company wants to bring its idea in front of a global audience.

TechCrunch50 Conference 2009: September 14-15, 2009, San Francisco




AJAX Search: Is Google Sweating Bing Or Just Feeling The Need For Speed?

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

Since February, Google has been quietly testing a new type of search functionality: AJAX search. Basically, Google uses more advanced JavaScript to make search result pages load even faster by only loading new information as needed on new queries. And while it doesn’t appear to be rolling out on a large scale yet, more users are starting to notice it.

One such user is Mike Stoppelman, a software engineer at Yelp. But Stoppelman’s take on it is interesting, and worth noting because before he worked at Yelp, he was an engineer at Google for four years. As Stoppelman sees it, Google is bringing out AJAX Search to combat Microsoft’s Bing search product, which has garnered quite a bit of attention since its launch a few months ago. Some claim that Bing is faster than Google, but an AJAX Google would undoubtedly be faster than Bing.

TechCrunch50 Conference 2009: September 14-15, 2009, San Francisco




Br.st Throws Its Hat Into The URL Shortener Ring

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

Big surprise. There’s another URL shortening service that wants to throw its hat in the ring and into a field that’s pretty much saturated. Do we really need another URL shortener? Brinkster, the web-hosting startup behind Br.st seems to think so.

Similar to many of its competitors, Br.st offers statistics (in your own time zone) about your links, including number of clicks, referrers, and origin (by country or region) of all of the clicks. Bit.ly, which is one of the current leaders in the URL shortening space, offers all of these analytics as well. Additionally, Br.st filters submitted links through malware filters.

TechCrunch50 Conference 2009: September 14-15, 2009, San Francisco




What Cleantech Should Learn from Nanotech (Before It’s too Late)

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

Back before we had Web 2.0 and cleantech to obsess about the Valley was abuzz about nanotech—the idea that sub-atomic particles would suddenly be the building blocks of, well, everything. It would make the paint on our houses last longer, the non-stick on our pans stick less, and our pants impervious to wrinkles. Somewhere, someone was probably promising their board they could use nanotechnology to make Harry Potter’s invisibility cloak a reality.

It seemed like a great investment thesis for a few reasons: There was actually real patentable science there and because the possibilities seemed so limitless, it was a huge market. A February 2005 BusinessWeek cover pegged it at nearly $300 billion by the end of the decade. (You know, now.)

TechCrunch50 Conference 2009: September 14-15, 2009, San Francisco




Philip Garrido Blog: Kidnapper Had Disturbing Online Diary

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

Philip Garrido, the man accused of kidnapping an 11-year old girl in 1991 and holding her hostage for 18 years, apparently maintained a blog.

The blog (which is available here, although knowing the nature of these types of things may not remain online) is titled “Voices Revealed” and the author makes claims about hearing voices, speaking in tongues and controlling sound with his mind.

The news is reminiscent of earlier this month, when George Sodini went on a shooting spree in a Pittsburgh fitness center, killing three people and injuring ten. It was later discovered that he had a blog that foretold his heinous actions.

Although Garrido’s blog offers no allusions or references to the crimes he committed or his victims, it does offer up a disturbing portrait of the convicted sex offender. Police say Garrido confessed to abducting 11 year-old Jaycee Lee Dugard in 1991 and fathering two children with her.

As social media becomes more and more pervasive in our lives, an unfortunate side effect is that not only “good” people use blogs to communicate their thoughts. Dangerous individuals use these tools to express themselves too, and unfortunately, the vastness of the Internet and its distributed nature makes stopping or discovering these individuals before something terrible happens almost impossible.

Reviews: blog

Tags: BLOGS, crime, philip garrido