понедельник, 31 марта 2008 г.

Yahoo Shines A Light On Women 25 To 54

shine.jpgYahoo has launched Shine, a new content portal aimed at women aged 25 to 54.

At its core, Shine is a large blog with magazine style layout. Content is broken up into various subcategories with the front page highlighting the newest content from across the site. Topic areas include parenting, sex and love, healthy living, food, career and money, entertainment, fashion, beauty, home life, and astrology.

The Wall Street Journal quotes Amy Iorio, vice president for Yahoo Lifestyles saying internal research shows women are looking for a site to aggregate various content and communications tools:

“These women were sort of caretakers for everybody in their lives,” she said. “They didn’t feel like there was a place that was looking at the whole them — as a parent, as a spouse, as a daughter. They were looking for one place that gave them everything.”

With Shine, Yahoo will find itself competing with offerings from Glam Media, Sugar and iVillage. Screenshots as follows.

shine2.jpgshine3.jpgshine4.jpg

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

Six Months In, And 600 Posts Later . . . The Worlds Of Blogging and Journalism Collide (In My Brain)

colliding-galaxies.jpgBlink, and six months go by. Ever since I made the move from Time Inc. to TechCrunch, my life has become a whirlwind of nonstop blog posting, little sleep, and a growing addiction to news feeds, Techmeme, and my Blackberry. Last week, I wrote my 600th post (this one is No. 617). The boxes I brought over from my previous career are still stacked, unopened, in my TechCrunch office. A lone painting from my three-year-old son adorns the wall. I have not had time to unpack or even buy a bookshelf to put things on. Fourteen years worth of stuff, and it still amazes me I don’t need any of it.

The journalist in me has been avoiding this post (too navel-gazing, too self-absorbed), but the blogger in me can’t help it. Media is changingâ€"how it is produced and how it is consumed. The worlds of blogging and journalism are colliding and I want to get some thoughts down on this transition before I forget what the old world was like or feel too comfortable in the new one. (Fair warning: If you don’t like long posts, skip this one).

techmeme-leadeboard-330.pngJust as more and more blogs are building up professional writing staffs, more and more newspapers and magazines are requiring that their writers start blogging. A quick glance at the Techmeme Leaderboard, for instance, shows that its top spots are almost evenly split between blogs and traditional news organizations. Note that the blogs are all of the professional variety, complete with writing staffs (TechCrunch, ReadWriteWeb, Ars Technica, Silicon Alley Insider, GigaOm, VentureBeat, etc.) and that the highest ranking news sites (CNET and the New York Times) also have the most active journalist bloggers.

But remember that all the big blogs that have turned professional and are now out there trying to build small media businesses started out as personal. Also, remember that these blogs (TechCrunch included) represent a tiny, tiny sliver of the millions of blogs out there. Unlike others, I don’t draw as sharp a dividing line between professional and personal blogs. Any blogger can rise to the level of contributing to the public discourse. Those that do so on a consistent basisâ€"such as Dave Winer, Robert Scoble, Nick Carr, Mark Cuban, Fred Wilson, and othersâ€"gain wide followings, and with that a responsibility to their readers that is equal to any journalist’s.

A more useful distinction is that there are sources of information that readers trust and sources of information that they don’t. Once someone reaches that level of trust, their responsibility is to tell the truth as best they can.

For me, blogging and journalism began to blur long ago. I took over the Business 2.0 blog (which became the Next Net) from Damon Darlin, now technology editor at the New York Times. That was back in May, 2005, one month before Michael Arrington started TechCrunchâ€"which just goes to show that Michael and I have been on the same wavelength from the start. Of course, back then, he took blogging much more seriously than I did.

At Business 2.0, my blog was always a side projectâ€"although it grew to 50,000 feed subscribers. I was paid to write, package, and orchestrate articles for the print magazineâ€"in addition to other sidelines, which included organizing mini-conferences and dabbling in Web video. Eventually, blogging became more important to the magazineâ€"all writers and editors had to start one. But it could never quite shake that extracurricular tinge.

Working at TechCrunch is a completely different experience. For one thing, I no longer write long-form, narrative journalism. There is not much time for story-telling (except for weekend posts like this one). It is mostly breaking news, reporting facts and providing analysis. At TechCrunch, I am completely focused on blogging, 24/7. With a few exceptions, no single post is very difficult to write (unlike an in-depth magazine article that can require 50 interviews and weeks of travel, for instance). But taken as a whole, blogging is actually harder. That is because the blogging never stops. Just ask my wife and kids, who now mock me by repeating back my new mantra: “I’m almost done, just one more post.”

technoati-100.pngPutting out TechCrunch is like riding a bullet train. When I jumped aboard, it was already going 150 miles per hour. Six months ago, the main TechCrunch site was attracting about two million visitors a month and it was ranked No. 4 on the Technorati 100 list of the most linked-to blogs. Today, six months later, we are within spitting distance of three million visitors a month (2.9 million, to be exact), and last week we overtook Engadget for the first time to reach the No. 1 spot on the Technorati 100. (We’ll see how long that lasts, the Hufifngton Post is right on our tail).

So what is the TechCrunch formula? It is hard to say other than obsession. The main TechCrunch blog is written by four of usâ€"Michael, Duncan, Mark, and me. (When I began, there were five, but Nick Gonzalez decided to opt for the comparatively saner hours of a startup). Despite our small size, we are a global organization. When not traveling, Michael and Mark write from California, Duncan writes from Australia, and I write from New York. Somebody is always onlineâ€"often all of us. Michael literally never sleeps. It is really unhealthy.

What we do at TechCrunch is actually pretty simple. We write about Web startups and the larger tech companies that try to either copy or acquire them. Depending on the day, I could be liveblogging the launch of the Amazon Kindle, arguing about free speech in the Internet age, uncovering secret projects at Google, giving Yahoo unsolicited acquisition advice, or writing about a hot new startup.

There is always something else to write about, and not enough time to cover it. But we live or die by how fast we can post after a story breaks, if we can’t break it ourselves. We hardly have time to proofread our posts, as anyone who’s come across one of the frequent typos in TechCrunch knows. Luckily, our readers love to point out our mistakes in comments. They are our copy editors and fact checkers. (We love you guys). Our philosophy is that it is better to get 70 percent of a story up fast and get the basic facts right than to wait another hour (or a day) to get the remaining 30 percent. We can always update the post or do another one as new information comes in. More often than not, putting up partial information is what leads us to the truthâ€"a source contacts us with more details or adds them directly into comments.

Some people question whether TechCrunch is even a blog anymore rather than a professional media site. But that distinction is becoming increasingly meaningless. The truth is that we are both. We compete with traditional news organizations, but with a small fraction of their staff. That is our competitive advantage. We certainly cover the news and do original reporting, but we also discuss news reported by others and are not shy about voicing our personal opinions. We are as much a filter as a source.

There is something about bloggingâ€"the immediacy, the give and take, the point of viewâ€"that helps it compete with traditional media for attention. And we don’t want to lose that. We like to speculate, argue, and debateâ€"sometimes in ways that traditional journalists may think is unseemly. That’s okay, as long as our readers keep coming back for more.

Because what is a blog? It is a conversation with readers. And you don’t have to start a conversation knowing all the facts. But it helps if you end up with more than you start out with, and if you turn out to be right more often than wrong. Otherwise, people will stop listening to youâ€"the same as they would with any media source.

(Hubble Telescope photo of colliding galaxies via Oswaldo).

Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0

WordPress Gets Major Overhaul

WordPress 2.5 has been released with a major overhaul to the interface and a range of new features.

The biggest change is in the appearance of the administration backend, which is described as being a “Cleaner, faster, less cluttered dashboard.” The WordPress dashboard is now widget friendly, and users can include items such as stats, offering similar functionality to MovableType.

Other new features include multi-file uploading, one-click plugin upgrades, built-in galleries, salted passwords and cookie encryption, media library, code friendly WYSIWYG, concurrent post editing protection, full-screen writing, and improved search.

A demo video from Automattic’s Matt Mullenweg above, and further details on the WordPress blog here.

Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.

European news roundup

As European startups prepare to march en masse to The Next Web conference in Amsterdam next week, the European tech scene is still feeling buoyant, whatever the global economic outlook. Certainly that was the feeling at Plugg in Brussels last week, a conference I chaired, and where the startups presenting were all now showing an increasing quality, in contrast with perhaps a few years ago. According to new data, 2007 was a bumper year for tech company exits - but reality has bitten in 2008, and there remains a debate amongst VCs about whether we are in a slump or a market correction.

TechCrunch people are starting to make a habit of chairing conferences in fact, as our own Eric Schonfeld will be doing just that at Next Web. To give him and you a heads-up, I’ve prepped a short outline about the companies presenting. And if you’re going, be sure to say hi to Eric and I. In the meantime, here’s a roundup of news from this side of the pond:

• Last.fm expanded in Germany and plans to “scrobble” video/TV as well as music… more

• XING, the European business social network competing with LinkedIn hit revenues of $30.98 million and the member base increased to nearly 5 million … more

• 100 Euro Tech startups were picked out for the Red Herring’s annual European competition… more

• The Guardian newspaper hired Matt McAlister, currently the director of Yahoo’s developer network to begin building a development platform… more

• Zemanta launched its alpha for blogging on acid… more

• Facebook’s UK figures bounced back after the holiday period… more

• 3i re-terated that it was exiting from early stage in Europe… more

• IBM started a Cloud Computing Centre in Dublin… more

• We reviewed Intruders.TV, Europe’s answer to FastCompany.tv… more

• Video startup BlinkBox inked a deal with FreemantleMedia… more

• France’s Wikio RSS news aggregator launched in the UK… more

• EU startups competed at the Plugg conference… more

• Myrl launched a Web-based virtual world… more

• Spinvox raised $100m (as story we broke) … more

• Isango raised $8 million for its ‘travel experiences’… more

• WAYN.com looked like it was on the block again… more

• CloudMade raised €2.4m to supercharge open source maps… more

• WeLoveLocal sold a majority stake to a local radio group… more

• Pointlessly, EU taxpayers were forced to fund a $306m Google rival… more

• We reviewed Forkd - a social network for recipes… more

• 20 UK startups are to visit Silicon Valley in April - come meet them… more

• The Russian government to buy YouTube clone for $15m… more

• Scott Rafer joined Polldaddy… more

• Google had strong European growth… more

Elsewhere:

• Online video viewing stats tripled in the UK… more

• UK real estate startup Zoopla! got off to a cracking start… more

• European mobile Internet users will triple, reaching 125 million by 2013… more

• Russiona search player Yandex questioned Google’s claim to dominance in Russia… more

• UK startup Reevoo received funding from a French VC firm… more

• The EU officially endorsed DVB-H for handset TV video… more

• Apple appears to be waiting for 3G iPhones before launching in Spain and Italy… more

• Behavioural targeting firm Phorm has been branded ‘illegal’ by a policy group amid further criticism of the company’s plans to track users via their ISP… more

Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.

воскресенье, 30 марта 2008 г.

Could China Throw a Wrench in Microsoftâs Yahoo Deal?

wrench.jpgIf Yahoo agrees to Microsoft’s buyout offer, the deal would still have to be pass muster with antitrust regulators here in the U.S, in Europe, and in China. As John Markoff points out in the NYT, a new Chinese law that will go into effect in August gives the Chinese government regulatory oversight over any merger that “involve acquisitions of Chinese companies or foreign businesses investing in Chinese companies’ operations.” Yahoo owns a big stake in Chinese Web marketplace Alibaba, which also runs Taobao, Alipay and Yahoo China. It is unclear what China’s position would be on a Microsoft-Yahoo merger, but it could be the first big test of how it is going to exert its new regulatory muscles. Speeding up the deal before the Chinese law goes into effect probably wouldn’t help avoid a Chinese regulatory review, since it is unlikely that any deal would be approved by both the U.S. and Europe before August. (DoubleClick took a year, XM/Sirius took longer).

If China tries to use this opportunity to extract unreasonable concessions from Microsoft, there is always the option to sell Yahoo’s Alibaba stake, which is worth at least $3 billion. But that would mean abandoning a strong foothold in China, a market no Web company can ignore. On the other hand, China could go the other way and show its pro-market stance by being the first to approve the deal. That would be a great goodwill gesture to put out there during the Beijing Olympics.

Does Microsoft Need to Worry About China Blocking A Yahoo Deal?
View Results

(Photo by HVargas).

Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0

Craigslist, Coming Soon In A Language Near You

The Craigslist phenomenon continues, and it isn’t just in English any more.

The site dominates the U.S. market for classified advertisements, with nearly 27 million unique monthly visitors (Ebay’s Kijiji, by contrast, has just 2.3 million U.S. visitors/month). But the fact that the service was available only in English hurt it internationally, where Kijiji is a close second.

Craigslist is now available in Italian, French, Portuguese and German. “Basque, maybe Klingon” are coming soon. :-)

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

Amazon Muscles Print-On-Demand Services

amazon.jpgAmazon has announced that it will only sell print-on-demand books printed by its own print-on-demand service BookSurge.

The print-on-demand book business has thrived in the last few years as players such as Lulu, Blurb and others have catered to publishers looking to reduce overhead on inventory. It will be very difficult for anyone to compete with Amazon in the print-on-demand space.

The decision may also cause book prices to rise with the Wall Street Journal reporting that Amazon BookSurge prices are higher than other print-on-demand providers.

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

хуй