The Latest from TechCrunch |
- Women, Tech, And Tone
- Why Entrepreneurs Should NOT Buy Homes
- Get Rich or Die Trying
- Pinterest Updates Terms Of Service As It Preps An API And Private Pinboards: More Copyright Friendly
- Forget Today’s Drama, Dustin Curtis’ Svbtle Is About Pushing Blogging Forward
- Pair Is A Path For The Two Of Us
- Inside The NewMe Accelerator 2012 Startup House [TCTV]
- FCC Documents Show Sony Chromebook, Potentially Running On ARM
- 6waves Lolapps’ CTO and Chief Product Officer Rue And Sethi Step Down
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Posted: 24 Mar 2012 09:01 AM PDT Earlier this week a startup named Geeklist was called out on Twitter for a promotional video which apparently featured a woman dancing around in her underwear. (I say “apparently” because the video has since been made private.) The Geeklist founders acknowledged that this was problematic — and then, inexplicably, they went right off the rails. Click through that link to see some jawdropping bad judgement; they responded to the woman who complained by Twitter-cc’ing her employer(!) while calling on her to “take it offline” and explaining they “weren’t cool with the angry tone.” While their own haughty tone, of course, was perfectly acceptable… At which the geekosphere erupted. This will be an interesting test of “no such thing as bad publicity”; I’d never heard of these guys before, and based on the available evidence hopefully never will again, but suddenly they were all over my Twitter feed, in a context of furious condemnation. Best of all was the darkly amusing bug report filed by Coda Hale, which, alas, has since been deleted. Thankfully, somebody managed to screen-shot it. In the end, Geeklist apologized, more or less. End of story, right? Weird hyperoverreaction, public rage and shaming, concession and apology. Well, if you consider their apology an apology — and a lot of people don’t –
I’m still baffled by why Geeklist’s founders went berserk in the first place. Baffled, but not surprised; a co-founder of a startup I mentioned in a recent TC post responded with a similarly bizarre and erratic (although, to his credit, not actually insulting, so I won’t link to it) Twitter rant. Have these guys never been criticized before? Are they so deluded and entitled that they think the slightest hint of disapproval gives them license to break out the flamethrower? Does everyone out there need online skin-thickening training? More important, though, is the demonstration that sexism in tech is an ongoing trend rather than an occasional aberration.
I like to think — in fact, I genuinely believe — that the tech world, despite the fact that socially awkward young men are currently massively overrepresented in its ranks, generally wants to be helpful and welcoming. And believe me, it could be worse; a friend of mine is an NYPD cop, and she reports that the entrenched sexism there makes Silicon Valley seem like Utopia. But it’s hard to argue that things are getting better. “This industry is one of subtle sexism. I almost prefer outright sexism, because at least that you can point out.” It was especially disheartening to see a claim that the Hacker News community was flagging and downvoting posts about the Geeklist controversy; to quote that discussion, ‘Did you really just say “HNers aren’t ostriches, they just don’t want to talk about sexism”?’ Similarly, I expect comments on this post complaining that it isn’t appropriate for TechCrunch. Unfortunately, subtly but systematically excluding a huge pool of capable people from the tech community is a very large tech problem indeed, and all the ostriching and fauxpologizing in the world won’t help to solve it. Image credit: Ostrich, by David Lewis, on Flickr. |
Why Entrepreneurs Should NOT Buy Homes Posted: 24 Mar 2012 08:00 AM PDT Editor's note: James Altucher is an investor, programmer, author, and entrepreneur. He is Managing Director of Formula Capital and has written 6 books on investing. His latest books are I Was Blind But Now I See and FAQ ME. You can follow him @jaltucher. Many people have said to me in the past few months, "I'm going to buy a home." Or, "What do you think of the idea of me buying a home?" Everyone thinks: Well the housing crisis is now over so I should buy a home. They think: It’s probably a good investment. They think: Time to put down “roots”. I’ve owned a home. A couple of times. I bought a home once after I sold a business. I then lost that home. I then went almost completely insane trying to sell it. Two things: If you are about to do a startup or if you are in the middle of startup-phase then you definitely can’t afford to waste the time or money to buy a house for reasons I explain below. Second, when you sell your startup — everyone wants to buy a house with the proceeds. Don’t. It’s just part of the American mythology. You know the myth: the white picket fence, the yard, the pool, the walls that you can paint, the keeping up with the Jones family. Just don’t. You’ll go broke. At least, if you are as stupid as me. I might be dumber than most though. The other story I have of owning a home is still too personal. It’s filled with about as much pain as I can fit onto a page. Oh, I have a third one also from when I was growing up. But I don't want to upset anyone in my family so I'll leave it out. Oh, I have a fourth story that I just forgot about until this very second. But enough about me. Let’s get right to it. There are many reasons to not buy a home: [By the way, I also put this in the category of Advice I want to tell my daughters, including my other article: 10 reasons not to send your kids to college.] Financial: A) Cash Gone. You have to write a big fat check for a down payment. "But its an investment," you might say to me. Historically this isn't true. Housing returned 0.4% per year from 1890 to 2004. And that's just housing prices. It forgets all the other stuff I'm going to mention below. Suffice to say, when you write that check, you're never going to see that money again. Because even when you sell the house later you're just going to take that money and put it into another down payment. So if you buy a $400,000 home, just say goodbye to $100,000 that you worked hard for. You can put a little sign on the front lawn: "$100,000 R.I.P." Much better for an entrepreneur is to invest in yourself. Take 1/20th of the down payment amount. Start a business. Your investment might go to zero (which it might also do with a house) but it might also go up 10,000%. Eventually, as an entrepreneur, if you are persistent enough, you will get one of those 10,000% returns. And you will be able to be persistent because you didn’t waste all the money and time that a house would’ve cost you. B) Closing costs. I forget what they were the last two times I bought a house. But it was about another 2-3% out the window. Lawyers, title insurance, moving costs, antidepressant medicine, therapy. It adds up. Two- to three-percent. Do you like flushing your money down the toilet? But, people say: isn’t that what you are doing with rent money? Absolutely not. See below. C) Maintenance. No matter what, you're going to fix things. Lots of things. In the lifespan of your house, everything is going to break. Thrice. Get down on your hands and knees and fix it! And then open up your checkbook again. Spend some more money. I rent. My dishwasher doesn't work. I call the landlord and he fixes it. Or I buy a new one and deduct it from my rent. And some guy from Sears comes and installs it. I do nothing. The Sears repairman and my landlord work for me. When you are an entrepreneur, two things: A) you need every last dime for your business. Not for your dishwasher. And B) you need every last second for your business. Not for your dishwasher. D) Taxes. There's this myth that you can deduct mortgage payment interest from your taxes. Whatever. That's a microscopic dot on your tax returns. And guess what, that whole thing about how rent will go up with inflation? Well your property taxes will go up even faster than inflation. So you lose. E) You're trapped. Let’s spell out very clearly why the myth of home ownership became religion in the United States. It’s because corporations didn't want their employees to have many job choices. So they encouraged them to own homes. So they can't move away and get new jobs. Job salaries is a function of supply and demand. If you can't move, then your supply of jobs is low. You can't argue the reverse, since new adults are always competing with you. That’s one reason for the myth. The other reason is that we have a 15 trillion dollar mortgage industry. That’s a lot of money vested on you believing that owning a home is “the right thing to do”. And, the benefits of being an entrepreneur is that all choices are open to you. Mobility is not just an option, it’s often a necessity. You aren’t tied down to one factory. The world is your opportunity. F) Ugly. Saying "my house is an investment" forgets the fact that a house has all the qualities of the ugliest type of investment:
Investing in yourself is also illiquid. But it involves less money, and allows you more choice. So do that instead. Personal reasons to not own a house. A) Trapped, part 2. Some people like to have roots. But I like things to change every once in a while. Starting March, 2009 I was renting an apartment directly across the street from the New York Stock Exchange. It was fun. I'd look out the window and see Wall Street. How exciting! Before that I lived in The Chelsea Hotel with Chubb Rock. Last year we decided to relax and move a little north. Now I look out the window and see the Hudson River. And it’s quiet and I can walk along the river in the morning with no noise. It took us two weeks to pick a place and move. No hassles. I like to live a hassle-free life. I’m constantly involved in other activities that I care about and love. What do I want the hassle of owning a home for? What if, god forbid, I want to focus on my next start-up? B) Walls. You can't change the walls when you rent. A lot of people seem to want to tear down walls. Or paint them. Sometimes when you rent you can't do these things. Well, make sure you have a landlord that lets you tear down walls. There must be some ancient evolutionary tic that makes us want to tear down walls or put nails in them or paint them. I don't get it. I like the walls to stay right where they are. C) Rent. People will argue that the price of the mortgage, maintenance taxes, etc is all baked into the price of rent. Sometimes this is true. But usually not. And often maintenance and taxes will go up faster than your rent. D) Psychology. Look at your personal reasons for wanting to own. Do you feel like you can't accomplish something in life until you own a house? Do you feel like its part of getting married and "Settling down", i.e. creating a nest for your future children? For you, is it a part of becoming an adult. Is this what your parents taught you? Examine the real reasons you want to own and make sure they are coming from a good spot in your heart. E) Your time. Do you really want to spend all that time working on your house? Is this where your time is best spent towards creating a happy and fulfilled life for yourself? F) Choices. I feel when I rent I always have the choice to leave. To live wherever in the world I want whenever I want. Adventure becomes a possibility even if I never take advantage of it. G) Stress. For me (not for everyone) owning a home equals stress. I saw what my parents went through at their worst moments owning a home. I saw what I and others went through in the Internet bust when I first owned a home. I saw what people went through in 2008. People were killing themselves. I don't like that sort of stress. This is how I deal with stress. H) Cash is king. I like cash in the bank. I like having access to it. I don't like it all tied up in one illiquid investment. I want to fill a bathtub with all the dollar bills I would've used as a down payment on a house. I want to bathe in that bathtub. I'm going to do that later today in fact. By the way, this is going to sound like a contradiction: but I think housing is a great investment right now. I think housing prices have gone down far enough and I can list the reasons why housing as an abstract investment concept is going to go higher from here. Suffice to say there are many stocks/REITs you can buy, with leverage if you want to take advantage of the rise in housing. But those are liquid investments. You can get your money back. There’s also probably many companies you can build where you will get 10,000% returns where you can take advantage of the rise in housing that is about to occur. But I'm never going to buy a home again. And sit there in the middle of the night thinking, "Why the hell did I do this to myself again?" |
Posted: 24 Mar 2012 06:00 AM PDT Editor's note: Contributor Ashkan Karbasfrooshan is the founder and CEO of WatchMojo, he hosts a show on business and has published books on success. Follow him on Twitter @ashkan. "Nothing in this world can take the place of persistence. Talent will not; nothing is more common than unsuccessful people with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb. Education will not; the world is full of educated derelicts. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent." Determination is critical to success as overnight successes actually take years to build; indeed, "overnight successes" are a myth. If a Cat has Nine Lives, How Many Does a Startup Have? In fact, examples of perseverence include: - Pandora was nearly bankrupt; today it's valued at $1.75 billion. - A year ago, OMGPOP was nearly dead. But one hit led to a $200 million exit to Zynga. - Angry Bird's Rovio staved off bankruptcy to become an IPO candidate. - Jeff Bezos was lauded and ridiculed early on, but he ignored the haters to make Amazon one of the most valuable brands in the world. - Even a large multinational like FEDEX overcame its share of obstacles, legend has it that founder Fred Smith "won enough hands of blackjack in Las Vegas to help meet a payroll." - And last but not least, Apple came back to become the most valuable company. You've Got Hope! Comebacks aren't restricted to sports, they happen in business, too. But does that mean you should put your head in the sand, charge ahead, ignore the critics and warning signs? It depends. After all, when you consider that Fab and Groupon pivoted their way to greatness, it begs the question: how do you determine what advice to take when it comes to sticking to your guns or not? Let's Remember the Basics Humans value success, money, power, respect and fame differently. But ultimately, while simpler things like health and happiness measure our satisfaction, in business the most common standard for success is some kind of liquidity event. Options vs. Talk An advisor once told me that entrepreneurs sometimes think they have options with regards to exits when all they have is talk. It's thus important to differentiate interest, intent and action with regards to deal-making. "Wanna Know What I Think?" “Many receive advice, only the wise profit from it.” Publilius Syrus While the journey is rewarding to the entrepreneur, it's the outcome that matters to other stakeholders who will tell you what they think, regardless of whether it makes any sense (or you want to hear it) or not. Advisors, Consultants, Mentors Advice can be: - Practical, Applicable and Realistic OR Impractical, Inapplicable and Unrealistic - Sincere OR Self-serving - Relevant OR Irrelevant - Stuff you know OR Stuff you don't know - True OR False (only over time do you know if was true or false). Ultimately, some genuinely like to help others (the "missionaries") and vicariously live the entrepreneurial dream; others don't generally root for you unless they have skin in the game (the "mercenaries"). Each group may have something to offer and teach you, but you may have to incentivize them one way or another; to quote John Doerr: "no conflict, no interest". To the mercenary the incentive may be equity; to the missionary, it may be an advisor title. Advice: The Good, Bad and Ugly Advice can be good, bad and ugly: - Good advice is usually Practical, Applicable and Realistic, though sometimes Impractical, Inapplicable and Unrealistic advice may prove useful, too. - Bad advice tends to be wrong, though it comes with good intentions. - Ugly advice is self-serving, spiteful and envious. You really need to weed out those who give you ugly advice. Bad advice can still be helpful in general ways provided you can find ways to apply and adapt it to your reality and business. Lessons of Advice Giving/Seeking (file under "obvious, but worth stating") Advice is a double-edged sword:
An entrepreneur's ability to communicate is an undervalued skill. So What Do You Do? But it's what you do with advice that ultimately matters. The common denominator in successful businesspeople (executives or entrepreneurs) is knowing when to follow your gut, mind and heart – each one is usually saying something different. Using the data and applying it to your industry and business is paramount. Be Realistic How do you quantify and qualify success? For example, tech is a zero-sum, winner takes all game. Despite your traction, maybe you're fighting a losing battle. Content isn't, and most content companies take a long time to become big businesses. If you can stay in the game, maybe that's not a bad strategy. While the grass is greener on the other side, pivoting non-stop to chase the latest fad isn't a strategy either. Sometimes it's the macro backdrop: location hasn't lived up to the hype, video is underwhelming, and online media remains small. Be Honest With Yourself Mainly, be honest with yourself. You're the man in the arena, after all. If you're having fun and are passionate about what you do – and can manage the emotions that come with the highs and lows of entrepreneurship – my advice is persevere even if the definition of insanity is doing the same things and expecting a different outcome. Sometimes you don’t need to trade the whole team, you just need to make some mid-game adjustments. After all, to win the championship, you have to stay in the game and keep it close, for you're always only a lucky play away from winning. |
Pinterest Updates Terms Of Service As It Preps An API And Private Pinboards: More Copyright Friendly Posted: 24 Mar 2012 04:56 AM PDT Pinterest is growing up fast: just last week the image-based social network rolled out redesigned profile pages, and now it’s following that up with an updated Terms of Service, Acceptable Use Policy and Privacy Policy that sharpen how the company interfaces on a number of commercial points, as it rides its wave and rapidly reaches and passes 12 million users. “We think that the updated Terms of Service, Acceptable Use Policy, and Privacy Policy are easier to understand and better reflect the direction our company is headed in the future,” CEO Ben Silbermann wrote in an email late on March 23 to Pinterest users informing them of the changes, due to take effect on April 6. From the looks of it, that future direction involves not just more private experiences on Pinterest but also stronger push to get Pinterest working in a whole lot more places, and with a whole lot more partners. The new terms put a much stronger emphasis on how Pinterest can commercially use the information you post on the site. Specifically, Cold Brew Labs (owner of Pinterest) says it is changing its terms to spell out that Pinterest does not have the right to sell your content — something it says it never intended to do in the first place. “Our original Terms stated that by posting content to Pinterest you grant Pinterest the right for us to sell your content,” Silbermann writes. “Selling content was never our intention and we removed this from our updated Terms.” Conversely, users are not allowed to use the site for commercial purposes, either. “We grant you a license to use the Service, including accessing and viewing Pinterest Content, for your personal, noncommercial use to allow you to express yourself, discuss public issues, report on issues of public concern, engage in parody and as expressly permitted by the features of the Service.” And speaking to all the controversy around the use of copyrighted material that has surrounded how Pinterest users pin copyrighted content — raised by Flickr but also touching rights owners like Getty — the site says it now has “simpler” tools to make it easier to report infringements on copyrighted or trademarked content. But while it looks like it might be getting easier to report infringements, it appears that it will still be up to Pinterest to approve whatever changes need to take place as a result. Given that at the moment over 80 percent of content is re-pinned rather than original content, it’s not likely that this will be the last we hear of the intersection of Pinterest and content infringements. The company also gave more indication of what products might be on the horizon. Silbermann writes that across all of its revised terms the company has “added language that will pave the way for new features that include a Pinterest API as well as Private Pinboards.” The Pinterest API will likely bring more of the functionality of Pinterest out of the site, but also make it easier for users to pin content to Pinterest from other places. But Pinterest content, of course, is already being used on third-party sites, and in some cases for commercial gain by those doing the integration. (We wrote only yesterday about the social marketing company Vitrue, which offers a product to its clients to port Pinterest content to its Facebook brand pages. It’s doing the same with Instagram.) Another key area of change, and one that Pinterest really had to address as it continues hone its credibility as it continues to grow, is that it is now formally no longer allowing pins that “explicitly encourage self-harm or self-abuse.” Silbermann writes that these revisions were devised partly in response to user feedback — or in his words, “help from our community”. One wonders how much its 80-percent-female user base played a part in this change. |
Forget Today’s Drama, Dustin Curtis’ Svbtle Is About Pushing Blogging Forward Posted: 24 Mar 2012 02:45 AM PDT Widely read designer Dustin Curtis has come up with a new blogging platform called Svbtle, that’s meant to help you take blog posts from ideas to well-presented articles. At first, it looks like a better Tumblr, based on the work he showed off on Thursday. And in fact it looks so good that a couple developers had copied the design within hours, and offered new versions for the world to install. Which, in turn, sparked a big debate about the rights that creatives have over their work… I’m going to skip over all that because it’s not a new topic, and it misses the point. Curtis has a plan for this project that ties in the minimalistic admin and public interfaces of the platform with his larger goals as a writer, and possibly as an entrepreneur. He’s creating an exclusive blog network. He’s using his clout in design and startup circles to attract other thought leaders who blog, including Dom Leca of the beloved email client Sparrow, and John Collison of payment startup Stripe. The idea is that the design of the blogging platform should be a vital part of the creative process, that helps some of the best minds in the business refine and present their thoughts. The interface includes a section for brainstorming ideas, and an easy flow for turning them into posts. It removes the array of options, like advanced markup features that you’ll see on WordPress and other established platforms, to focus writers on core ideas. I got a bit more from Curtis about his plans on Thursday night, before his work got engulfed in a wide-ranging debate in the hacker community. Svbtle is an experiment. I wrote it for myself; it was only very recently that I decided to build it into more of a platform. My goal is to eventually open it to the public, but I want it to be really good before any kind of official release. Finding only the absolutely essential features that are required for something as complex as blogging takes a lot of work. For something like this, to paraphrase Antoine de Saint-Exupery, the design is finished not when there is nothing left to add, but when there is nothing left to take away. In the meantime, he’s following a proven strategy for seeding quality. Until I feel the design and workflows are good enough for a wide release, I’m working on building a private network of extremely well-vetted bloggers. I’m running it with more of a newspaper model than a blogging platform model; I plan to offer copy-editing and other benefits to help improve the writing of members on the Network, for example. This is key. Lots of professional blogs have little or no copyediting. The network is intended to help writers polish the writing and reading experience, just like the design is. Because Svbtle is designed from a philosophy that focuses first and foremost on writing and the curation of ideas, and not on social features or personalization, I don’t see much of a chance of competing with Tumblr. I wouldn’t want to, anyway. They’re really good at what they do. So forget Tumblr. Curtis is trying to scale the type of brand experience that long-time bloggers like Jason Kottke and John Gruber have captured. People who read Daring Fireball aren’t just on the site because they also love Apple stuff. They also identify with the the clean feel, the form-plus-function design principles that Apple embodies, that Gruber writes about. And, indeed, Kottke.org and Daring Fireball show how Curtis could turn his platform into a business. Both use The Deck, the self-described “ad network of creative, web and design culture.” Its business is running quality, non-intrusive ads alongside the words of thought leaders. Here’s how Curtis responded when I made the comparison: If the Svbtle Network works as well as I hope, there is nothing stopping me from building an exclusive ad network similar to The Deck. I haven’t really thought about it, but that would almost definitely be the best way to monetize this platform. Innovation, as many of Curtis’ critics have been proclaiming, is about everybody taking a creator’s work and building on top of it. That’s exactly what Curtis is doing. He didn’t invent the first blog platform, and he isn’t building the first blog network that the world has seen. But he is taking the best elements of all the work that has come before, and building a new brand — the sort of thing that could prove quite defensible regardless of who scrapes the words or copies the design. |
Pair Is A Path For The Two Of Us Posted: 23 Mar 2012 06:03 PM PDT Let’s say you’re in a serious relationship, but you work all the time and you’re long-distance. How do you stay close to the other person? I’ve personally had this situation for the last year and a half. My girlfriend and I use Skype, email, our phones, Facebook, and everything else we can to stay connected. We’ve even been using Instagram as a two-person social network to share photos about what we’re up to each day. But now there’s an app to solve this exact problem. It’s called Pair, and it’s packed with the features you see in private social networks like Path, but designed for two people. The interface starts out deceptively simple. You start by taking a photo of yourself, and then shooting a quick video on your phone (iOS only for now), that you send with the invite to your significant other. Once they “pair” with you, you’ll be put into the app together. The interface is organized like text messages. You appear on the left, your partner on the right. But you’ll get an impressive range of options for how to stay in touch. There’s simple messaging, videos and photos (complete with the option to touch them up in Camera+). But there’s also a “thinking of you” button, which is a simple notification that’s most similar to Facebook’s classic Poke. And, there’s a draw feature. So you can scribble all the silly pictures and sweet little ditties that you want. The Y Combinator-backed company also provides a bunch of other smart and subtle features. A button at the top lets you turn on Facetime with a single swipe. A feature called “thumbkissing” shows your partners thumbprints whenever they’re touching the screen, and both phones will vibrate if your thumbs are on the same place. You can also create shared to-do lists and set reminders for birthdays and anniversaries. A Moments section contains all your shared photos. The main downsides, at least in the opinion of my girlfriend, are the following: you can’t unselect photos, you can’t create captions, the text from multiple messages gets “mushed together” and makes you “look like a babbling loon.” And that’s not all, in her opinion (at this point I’m just transcribing the rants that she left for me in the app). “The search feature is nice. But would be way more useful if they enabled photo captions. Who the fuck searches for text blurbs? If I used search, it’d probably be to locate a photo. And if I’m using an app called Pair with one other person, isn’t it implied that I’m thinking of that person? Otherwise, why wouldn’t I be posting my brilliance to Facebook?” Maybe she needs to start blogging about tech startups or something. And cofounder Oleg Kostour tells me that they’re aware of these issues and working on them. But it doesn’t matter. Because despite all her complaints, this app is way better than our kludged Instagram setup and Skype and everything else. Get used to it, honey! |
Inside The NewMe Accelerator 2012 Startup House [TCTV] Posted: 23 Mar 2012 05:06 PM PDT
Sounds pretty intense, right? So of course, we at TechCrunch TV were keen to check it out. At the moment, NewMe is smack in the middle of its 2012 program, so we made a visit to its house in San Francisco to see how things are shaping up so far. In a word, being at the NewMe house is invigorating: The environment of eight strong entrepreneurs living together is certainly heady, but in a really good way. Everyone at NewMe is psyched about what they’re working on while also being super encouraging and proud of what their fellow founders have built. In the video embedded above, you can watch NewMe partner Wayne Sutton talk about how the program has grown in recent years, the challenges that face minority entrepreneurs in tech, and much more. You also get an introduction to NewMe’s Class of 2012, and a brief introduction to some of the 7 companies that are being built inside the accelerator. For a more in-depth look at the NewMe startups, you can watch each founder’s pitch in the video embedded below. NewMe’s Class of 2012 startups, in the order in which they appear: AgLocal Butlr PictureMenu Helpr Kairos Modul.us Ubi Video |
FCC Documents Show Sony Chromebook, Potentially Running On ARM Posted: 23 Mar 2012 04:25 PM PDT Google’s Chromebooks haven’t exactly made a splash, but apparently not everyone has been scared off. Sony seems to think there’s gold in them thar laptops, and they’re making their own. For now it’s known as the VCC111 (probably shorthand for “Vaio Chromebook Computer, series one, 11-inch display”), according to documents and pictures from FCC testing. The understated look continues with these Vaio Chromebooks, even as far as what appears to be a matte black unbranded shell. A white version is also shown in the test setup photos. But the most interesting thing is the processor, which is listed simply as T25, and may in fact be Nvidia’s Tegra 2 chip by that name. An ARM laptop? Hey, if Microsoft can do it, why not Google and Sony? At 1.2GHz, with 2GB of RAM and a few of the other usual fixings, it isn’t a stunner spec-wise, but that’s kind of the point. It’s a tastefully-designed netbook designed to boot fast and get on the internet. It isn’t an ultrabook or work laptop or what have you. So it should fulfill that purpose admirably, and sell well below $500 to boot. Release date is unclear, but they filed a confidentiality request for 180 days after August 15, 2011, so this unit has been around for a while — but they probably weren’t planning a release until at least 2012, judging by their request to keep the external photos secret for half a year. Perhaps they’re waiting for Google I/O? Seems a bit of a long wait to release something that was more or less ready late last year. Hopefully we’ll see an official announcement soon and get our hands on the device for some real-world testing. [via Laptop Reviews] |
6waves Lolapps’ CTO and Chief Product Officer Rue And Sethi Step Down Posted: 23 Mar 2012 04:01 PM PDT Just a few days after social gaming company 6waves Lolapps said it was laying off most of its development staff to focus on publishing, its chief product officer Arjun Sethi and chief technology officer Brian Rue have stepped down. 6waves Lolapps was born last July out of a merger between a Facebook game developer Lolapps and a publisher 6waves. The publisher had been instrumental to the success of Lolapps’ hit Ravenwood Fair, which was considered one of the best games on the platform in late 2010 and early last year. Clearly, the merger didn’t work exactly as intended. But with the deal, 6waves Lolapps picked up some valuable technology that helped boost revenue per day from players across the publisher’s network of titles. Sethi said his resignation after more than four years at the company was planned ahead of the layoffs. “After more than four amazing years with Lolapps, I find it so hard to say goodbye to the team and to the impressive products that we've built together,” he said in a statement on his personal blog. After joining Lolapps as its chief executive, Sethi saw the company transition from simple, very viral quiz apps in the early days of the Facebook platform when distribution was easy to more intensive games like Ravenwood Fair, which was like a mix between Frontierville and a business sim game. Rue added in his own blog post: “It's been a crazy ride of ups and downs and it feels very strange that it's come to an end. I'm proud of the culture that we built, and it was especially evident this week as suddenly-former employees banded together to commiserate and find new companies to call home. Up until recently, it looked like 6waves Lolapps was going to be a dual publisher and developer. After the two companies merged, they raised about $35 million in funding from Insight Venture Partners and South Korean gaming giant Nexon. Not long after that, the company ponied up to buy a developer in China called Smartron5 and a mobile development team through a deal to buy Escalation Studios. Sethi hasn’t planned his next move yet. Going forward, 6waves Lolapps will focus on publishing. Its existing titles will continue to work and 6waves Lolapps is looking for a third-party team to service them. The titles that were still in development including Ravenshire Castle will still come out. Sethi and one of Lolapps' original co-founders Kavin Stewart will personally fund a spin-off to make that happen. All in all, the layoffs are just another sign of how challenging the environment is for gaming companies on Facebook. It’s a very bittersweet week that underscores just how fickle the gaming industry week is with OMGPOP’s stellar turnaround and sale to Zynga and 6waves Lolapps’ sad layoffs. |
Facebook The Patent Buyer: Even Before IBM, The List Includes HP, Friendster, BT… And Halliburton Posted: 23 Mar 2012 02:29 PM PDT Facebook, according to reports, is buying up a boatload of patents from IBM — 750 in all — that will help the company shore up against potential legal attacks from Yahoo and other companies claiming the huge social network infringes on their intellectual property. But for the past couple of years, Facebook has already been taking steps to build up its patent portfolio through the acquisition of patents from a host of other players, from large IT companies, to a patent troll and a defunct social network. And a few surprises. Of the 60 patents that Facebook now owns that are listed with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, there are 15 from Facebook itself; and nine patents from HP, 11 originally from Philips Electronics (but sold to IPG and then sold by IPG to Facebook), three from UK telecoms operator BT, nine from patent holder Walker Digital, one from Divan Industries, one from Applied Industries and 11 from Friendster — the pioneering social network that died a Facebook death and eventually got sold to Malaysian company MOL, which turned it into a gaming network. These were reportedly bought for $40 million in 2010. The patents cover a wide range of areas. Some are very much in the wheelhouse of what we know as Facebook today — managing social relationships, newsfeeds and contacts, for example. Some are about technical processes that happen behind the scenes. And some seem to cover functions that Facebook doesn’t really offer today. One relates to playlists for music or other media (“Method and apparatus for priority-based jukebox queuing”, patent number 6421651). Others seem to have a distinct e-commerce bent (“Systems and methods wherein a buyer purchases products in a plurality of product categories”, 7188080; “Method, computer product and apparatus for facilitating the provision of opinions to a shopper from a panel of peers”, 7526440). The U.S. Patent Office also lists another 140 patent applications that have yet to be either approved or formally rejected. Many of these have been initiated by Facebook itself. But there are also some that Facebook has picked up while they are still pending. These include four more patents originally owned by Friendster, one more e-commerce patent from Walker — and, surprisingly, one from the energy and services giant Halliburton, related to data centers (“Cooling computing devices in a data center with ambient air cooled using heat from the computing devices”). Digging into some of the back-and-forth around pending applications gives a glimpse as to why it’s so important for Facebook to acquire patents rather than try to build up the portfolio itself. (One, for example, filed by Facebook for “Facilitating Interaction Among Users of a Social Network,” was originally filed in July 2010, and just last week had a “non-final rejection” of all of its claims. Facebook can still modify and resubmit.) It can take years to get a patent approved, and in the case of social media and gaming the process can take even longer, typically up to six to eight years or more from the time the application gets filed. Meanwhile, the potentials for lawsuits appear to be building up. “Facebook is really the new kid on the block and they need to gird and prepare themselves with IP because the bigger kids have it,” a patent lawyer explained to me. “They have definitely been very proactive, though. Someone at that company understands that the key to a good defense is a good offense.” So is 60 the definitive number of patents that Facebook owns today? Not necessarily: this is the number listed by the U.S. Patent Office but the patent lawyer tells us that there could be more that it has simply not registered. “There's no requirement to record every patent with the USPTO,” he said. “It’s only something you do if and when you want to enforce it.” Although he does point out that it’s generally good practice not to stockpile patents. |
Spotify Needs Big Funding To Pay Big Content’s Tax On Success Posted: 23 Mar 2012 02:12 PM PDT There’s a fundamental problem with startups that depend on premium licensed content: If you succeed, the content owners will jack up their licensing fees. This is why Business Insider’s rumor that Spotify is raising a big round of funding makes sense. In the seven months since Spotify launched in the U.S. it’s made huge strides, signing up over 3 million paying subscribers, and hitting 17.4 million monthly and 5.3 million daily users. Even though the record labels own a stake of the company, Spotify’s success make it a lucrative target for extortion. Unfortunately, this is why investing in Spotify may not be wise and why firms like Andreessen-Horowitz may have passed. It’s a great service with a big lead on other music streamers. But as it scales and gains traction, the record labels will increase their tax. There’s no way Spotify will pay the same fees if it hits 15 million subscribers as it does now. That will make it harder for Spotify to return the multiple most investors want any time soon. In most industries, if a partner charges you too high a licensing fee you can go to one of their competitors. That’s not how it works in music. You can’t get a cheaper equivalent to Michael Jackson or Lady Gaga like you could for enterprise software. If you want “Thriller” you have to pay whatever the labels ask. And even if it does, Spotify isn’t getting exclusive access to that content. MP3.com CEO Michael Robertson writes for GigaOm that Spotify’s deal with the record labels likely has some terrible terms already. Spotify may be paying a pro-rata share of $X per subscriber, or $Y per song streamed, or Z percent of total revenues — whichever’s highest. Whether subscribership explodes, free ad-supported listening booms, or Spotify finds another revenue stream, taxes increase. Spotify subscribers and free listeners pay their money or attention to get on-demand access to the world’s music. A year from now it will be very difficult to tell them “Hey, 1/4 of your favorite songs are going to disappear because we refused to pay the rising fee.” Spotify is therefore seriously disadvantaged in licensing negotiations. The hope for Spotify comes at truly massive scale. It needs to survive until MP3 downloads die off. Meanwhile it has to grow so big that it becomes both a significant direct source of revenue to the labels via licensing fees, but also a crucial discovery and awareness tool that inspires concert ticket and merchandise sales that labels take a cut of in new 360-deals. At that point, some of the power will shift back to Spotify and it may be able to secure a more reasonable fee structure. That’s years away, though, so Spotify needs the runway of a big funding round. |
MOG Finally Gets Around To Releasing A Native Windows App Posted: 23 Mar 2012 02:11 PM PDT MOG has been making headlines this week because of their potential acquisition by Taiwanese phone manufacturer HTC, but their newest announcement sadly doesn’t mention anything of the like. Instead, the popular on-demand music service has finally pushed out a a version of their desktop player for the Windows-running masses. The move seems to have come just in time too — some of the MOG natives have been getting restless lately. I can’t say I blame them, as MOG has long since released applications for OS X, iOS and Android, not to mention their appearances in a few cars. Heck, MOG first announced that they had a Windows version of the application in the works way back in September when they first released their Mac client. Such a tease! Joking aside, Windows fans hoping for a few extra features to make their seven-month wait worthwhile may come away a little disappointed — this new Windows build packs all the same features the Mac version (except for support for a remote control). Still full support for AirPlay, keyboard shortcuts, and the ability to play music at a 320 kbps bitrate is nothing to sneeze at when you’ve only ever been able to fiddle with the service through a web browser. If you’re a Windows-devoted MOG user you’ve probably already taken the plunge, but the client can be downloaded here in case you’ve yet to get your groove on. |
Groupon Acquires FeeFighters, The BillShrink For Business Services Posted: 23 Mar 2012 01:53 PM PDT FeeFighters, a three-year old comparison shopping site for credit card processors, is announcing today it has been acquired by Groupon. The Chicago-based startup, which provides businesses with a way to find the best merchant account provider for their needs, has also been offering businesses other tools such as its new payment gateway called Samurai. FeeFighters says that the acquisition will not impact any major changes to its product line, and that most of the team will be transitioned to Groupon. In a company blog post, FeeFighters CEO Sean Harper writes:
He notes that the Samurai gateway and the FeeFighters and Samurai brands will all continue on as before, post-acquisition. Groupon has been on a shopping spree lately, buying up a number of startups, including Kima Labs, Hyperpublic, Adku, and others in recent weeks. With the FeeFighters acquisition, the focus is clearly on gaining technology aimed to help Groupon’s merchant partners, an area which the company has been diving into more deeply lately, with this month’s launch of the Groupon Scheduler booking service, another product that came out of an acquisition (OpenCal), as an example. FeeFighters (formerly TransFS) is backed by $1.6 million in venture funding, which includes investments from Excelerate Labs, Hyde Park Angels, 500 Startups, Sandbox Industries, OCA Venture Partners, and Arizona Bay Technology. As of its January round, FeeFighters stated it had saved customers $30,000,000 in processing fees, with a typical user saving 40% in fees. The company had been planning to expand its current payments business product to other business financial services (including payroll processing and employee health insurance plans). |
RunKeeper Co-Founder And COO Michael Sheeley Exits Company Posted: 23 Mar 2012 01:23 PM PDT Michael Sheeley, the co-founder of super popular health and fitness analytics app RunKeeper, stepped down from his role as COO and Chief Product Officer at the company this week. He announced his departure in a post on his personal blog Thursday, and the news was first picked up by the Boston Business Journal. Details around Sheeley’s abrupt departure from FitnessKeeper (RunKeeper’s parent company) are scant. In his blog post, Sheeley alluded to starting a new business, but that seems to be in the idea stage:
Sheeley, a repeat entrepreneur who was trained as a software engineer, started developing RunKeeper with FitnessKeeper CTO Joe Bondi back in 2008. Since then, FitnessKeeper has raised $11.5 million in venture capital (most recently in a $10 million Series B round in November 2011) and is reportedly on track to employ more than 40 people this year. We’ve reached out to FitnessKeeper and Sheeley for more details about the departure, and will update this post with any additional information we receive. |
Posted: 23 Mar 2012 01:11 PM PDT Apple’s third-generation Apple TV didn’t really enjoy the limelight upon arrival. Something flashier stole the show. But it’s still an important product, especially considering that the way we consume media is rapidly changing. Matt and I discuss this, and actually end up arguing a little bit more than I expected, in this episode of Fly or Die. In fact, the conversation actually delves into the way both Matt and I feel Apple has changed the tech ecosystem. But as far as Apple TV goes, we’re both fans. Upgraded innards, including 1080p playback courtesy of that A5 chip and upgraded RAM, only leave new buyers without a reason to resist. Current Apple TV owners may even be swayed by the fact that they can now view 1080p and enjoy the magic of AirPlay for another hundo. “It’s an easy fly.” |
Gillmor Gang Live 03.23.12 (TCTV) Posted: 23 Mar 2012 01:02 PM PDT |
Tagstand Relaunches NFC Task Launcher App, Makes NFC Way Less Geeky Posted: 23 Mar 2012 12:55 PM PDT YC-backed Tagstand, a company intent on helping make NFC more of a mainstream technology, is rebooting its Android app, NFC Task Launcher with a whole new feature set and user interface. The app was already one of the top NFC-based utilities in the The company also says it saw a big uptick in demand for NFC tags when Google released the Galaxy Nexus, and it’s now selling as many tags in a day as it did during the entire month of June, when the service first launched. Tagstand, you may remember, raised a $1.1 million funding round back in October which included many notable angels. The full list at the time: Yuri Milner, SV Angel, Naval Ravikant, Paul Buchheit, Yael Shazeer, Christina Brodbeck, Anand Agarawala, Mike Berolzheimer, Bee Partners, Quotidian Ventures, TEEC (Chinese angel network), Vaizra Investments (Israeli fund), Dean Smith, Christopher Morton, and Anand Swaminathan. The company says that it’s since added new investors to its round, including YC partners Harjeet Taggar, Garry Tan, and Alexis Ohanian, and Kavin Bharti Mittal of Bharti Telecom in India. At the time of the funding, Tagstand was focused mainly on offering tools and other special NFC-equipped stickers to individuals, companies and brands. But since then, the creator of the Android app NFC Task Launcher, Joshua Krohn, joined the team, bringing his experience on mobile with him. Before the app, users would first visit Tagstand’s website to purchase NFC starter kits, tags or stickers. The NFC tags can be configured using a web-based control panel or, now, the Task Launcher app itself. For Android users familiar with the popular Automator application, NFC Task Launcher is very similar except that the tasks it automates are kicked off by scanning an NFC tag, rather than some other sort of pre-programmed event. For example, Tagstand co-founder Kulveer Taggar tells me that he has a tag on his keychain that’s configured so that, when he enters a coffee shop where he wants to work, he simply taps that tag with his phone, and his laptop is instantly tethered to his phone’s Wi-Fi hotspot. When finished working, he taps it again to switch the hotspot off. Meanwhile, co-founder Omar Seyal likes to use the app when cooking – he set timers for 10, 20 and 30 minutes, which he begins by tapping the phone to an NFC tag. You could also use NFC Task Launcher to switch between “office” and “home” settings on your phone, turn on or off your ringer or alarm, instantly check-in on Foursquare, send tweets and about a million other things, many of which are detailed here on the app’s description page in the With the recent relaunch of the app (version 3), the user interface has gotten a big overhaul to be more user-friendly and the app itself has seen a number of improvements. It now offers better saved task management, improved Switch creation, improved dialogs for writing tags (both for success and for errors), and it has added support for newer tag types. There’s also a new pack of tags designed especially for fans of the Android app. If you remember what the app looked like before, this is great update. As for making NFC more mainstream, that may prove to be more of a challenge. NFC, while a promising technology, faces a number of adoption hurdles ranging from OEM adoption to business partnerships that encourage use (as in the case of mobile payments). And, of course, there’s always what Apple ends up doing – still a big unknown. But for those Android users already ahead of the curve, or who just like doing cool stuff with their phones, the NFC Task Launcher app is a good one to try. |
Tracks.by Scores Likes For Lil Wayne, Now The Music Promo Platform Is Giving Out Invites Posted: 23 Mar 2012 12:20 PM PDT One-hundred top hip-hoppers and indie rockers use Tracks.by to release their music and videos on Facebook. Now after a year of private work with a handpicked roster, Tracks.by is for the first time publicly offering invites to its music promotion platform. Artists and their managers can use Tracks.by to send out content that requires a Like or an email signup to play. Big name investors see potential in Tracks.by’s focus on style, the feed, and building email lists. Path’s Dave Morin, Menlo Ventures, Lil Wayne’s manager Cortez Bryant and others have seeded Tracks.by. TechCrunch readers can sign up for an invite to Tracks.by below. What makes Tracks.by so powerful is its Love button campaigns that let artists squeeze more dollars out of their existing Facebook fans. See, Tracks.by artists can publish Like-gated songs and music videos that play in-line within the feed, but they’ll mostly reach fans who’ve already Liked. Love button campaigns go a step further, allowing artists to ask existing fans “If you love me, sign up for email notifications to get early and exclusive content”. Fans click the Love button and accept a Facebook data access permission, and their email address is automatically provided to the artist. Then when the performer releases an album, new merchandise, or concert tickets, they can send emails to people who love them, activating their most loyal followers to nab them a viral and sales boost. Since Like- and Love-gated campaigns are value exchanges, they work best for established artists who have fans eager for their content. Smaller acts may want to just freely distribute their music rather than putting up a barrier to potential fans they haven’t won over yet. Tracks.by’s campaigns integrate with YouTube, VEVO, and Soundcloud, as well and include analytics. Tracks.by was founded in June 2011 by Matt Schlicht and Mazy Kazerooni of Ustream, where they made connections with some of the world’s biggest musicians while leading product and VIP support. Node.js contributor Chase Sechrist and FbFund’s Erik Smith are also founders, and Matt and Mazy picked up their old boss at Ustream Bryan Kim as their first hire to complete the five-man team. Beyond Morin, Menlo, and Cortez Bryant, Tracks.by’s investors include Greylock’s Josh Elman, Automattic’s Matt Mullenweg, Venture51, Zynga’s Alex Le, Mob Wars’ Dave Maestri, Naval and Nivi of Angelist, and Redpoint’s David Wu. Drake, Pitbull, Diddy, and Kimbra are some of the artists on the platform, and it works. Lil Wayne made a song available only to those who Loved him, and picked up 100,000 Loves and email addresses in 24 hours. Fellow rapper Gucci Mane picked up 600,000 plays of his album in 3 days via Tracks.by. The fledgling music startup faces stern competition from more full-featured and well-funded music profile apps like BandPage and ReverbNation. It will need to move away from the grind of its old custom service model and keep innovating on its scalable platform. Otherwise it could be copied and become just a feature of another service. To stay current and differentiate itself, Tracks.by is working on Twitter publishing, a transition to the Timeline Page format, and a Facebook Open Graph integration that will post to the Ticker whenever someone Loves an artist or plays/downloads one of their songs. I also wouldn’t be surprised if Tracks.by one day started catering to brands in addition to musicians. I asked Ayal Kleinman, VP of New Media for Warner Brothers Records who has some artists on Tracks.by what he thought of the tool. He told me “rather than trying to replicate Myspace, it really embraces Facebook and how people are sharing music.” Marketers constantly ask ‘what’s the value of a Facebook Like?’. The answer is follow-up marketing, but a Love on Tracks.by can generate even more cash money. Musicians and artist managers, visit this exclusive TechCrunch readers’ URL http://tracks.by/#beta-invite-tc to request an invite to use Tracks.by |
A Twitter Conversation With NASA Led To Angry Birds Space Posted: 23 Mar 2012 11:48 AM PDT Angry Birds Space, Rovio Mobile’s first genuinely new game in a year, has some humble origins. The idea for Angry Birds Space actually originated in a challenge NASA made to Rovio nearly a year ago on Twitter. Asserting that smartphones today have more computing power than the machines that powered the lunar landing in 1969, NASA said it would help Rovio launch birds if pigs could fly in space. (Yes, really.)
A year later, it’s really happening. The Finnish mobile gaming juggernaut attached a giant Angry Birds slingshot to the Seattle Space Needle yesterday and had an astronaut demo the game from the International Space Station two weeks ago. NASA scientists even helped out in designing the physics-engine for the new game. Inventiveness and spontaneity have made Rovio the company it is today. Hardly anyone working there has a deep marketing background and yet Rovio is pulling off stunts on the Space Needle — for free (thanks to T-Mobile). “It helps to be a bit crazy,” says the company’s chief marketing officer and Mighty Eagle Peter Vesterbacka. “We’re naive enough not to know what we can’t do.” The crazy seems to be working. Rovio is probably the most unorthodox mobile gaming company in the industry given its history, revenue mix and ownership. Over time, the company is actually becoming less reliant on pure gaming revenue as it pulls in cash from licensing, merchandising and books. A film and animated shorts are in the works too. The company plans four more totally new games this year, not counting the usual seasonal releases and the versions of Angry Birds that show up on other platforms like Facebook and Chrome Web Store. “We want to make Angry Birds a permanent part of pop culture,” Vesterbacka says. He adds, “Last year was about building the infrastructure, and this year we’ll be doing five new games.” Would this finally include a game from the pig’s perspective? “Maybe. That’s not a bad guess,” he says. Rovio also has a very unique ownership structure as a family-owned business, given the company’s long history of making 52 failed games before producing Angry Birds and its Scandinavian roots. Kaj Hed, who is the father of Rovio chief executive Mikael Hed, owns close to 70 percent of the company, giving him the power to block outcomes like a sale. That father-son dynamic has caused tension from time to time over the years. In 2005, the current CEO Mikael Hed left out of a disagreement with his father about how to grow the company and didn’t return until four years later when he was able to lay the groundwork for Angry Birds’ launch in December 2009. The $42 million round the company raised last year was even dubbed the “father liquidity” round by one insider, as the proceeds largely went to cash Kaj Hed out, according to several sources with knowledge of the terms. “We’re 100 percent sure he’ll do the right thing,” Vesterbacka said of Kaj Hed. “He’s great. He’s very strategic. He’s very smart and he knows what he’s doing.” As for this year, it’s all about stepping up Rovio’s reach into other mediums and its capacity to produce more games. Last year the company sold 25 million plush toys, ranging from $5 to $99 and it earns a single-digit percentage revenue share from those sales. The Angry Birds Space launch is also coupled with all kinds of merchandise including a National Geographic book about space and a special edition of News Corp.’s iPad magazine The Daily that explains the development of the game. There’s also a load of Angry Birds Space-themed apparel, plush toys, phones and fruit snacks that are coming to Walmart soon. Hidden on the price tags and packaging are clues that unlock extra levels in the game. “This is the first time ever that you have a mobile-originated game launching with a full line-up of merchandise at Walmart,” Vesterbacka says. “It’s like a bigger launch than a movie.” Plus, the company is still an advertising juggernaut with more than 10 billion impressions per month, a number that’s sure to rise with the launch of Angry Birds Space. (I hear the effective cost per thousand impressions for a casual mobile game generally runs from $0.20 to $0.50, so a back of the envelope calculation suggests $2 to $5 million a month in pure ad revenue.) Rovio is also ramping up in China, where the company has just four employees. While it’s often difficult to build a profitable mobile app business in China because of piracy, jailbroken phones and fragmentation, Vesterbacka is optimistic. “We’re not there yet, but we’re the most copied brand and most loved brand in China,” he says. “You should be very, very concerned if you don’t have copies in China. That means that there is no interest.” The game is already pre-installed on Lenovo tablets and many kinds of Nokia devices there. Then there’s the Facebook version of Angry Birds, which is up to 18.1 million monthly active users. Daily active users are holding at around 2.5 million players, putting it just behind EA’s Sims Social on app tracking service AppData. Vesterbacka says that he’s not worried about exhausting the Angry Birds brand and going the way of Pokemon or Mighty Morphin Power Rangers as a passing childhood fad. He says Angry Birds is a universal brand, not just one for children. “We don’t feel like we’re anywhere even close. On my way to the U.K., I bumped into four people who had never heard of Angry Birds,” he says. “We’re just scratching the surface. Not everybody knows about Angry Birds and there are 7 billion people on the planet.” And why stop at Earth? |
AT&T Exec Gives FCC The Finger After T-Mobile Announces Layoffs Posted: 23 Mar 2012 11:33 AM PDT Really? I mean, really? Yesterday, 1,900 T-Mobile employees got some very bad news — they would all soon be out of jobs, as the company announced their intention to shut down seven call centers. That in and of itself is a shame, but AT&T’s reaction to the announcement is even more shameful. You see, AT&T’s Jim Cicconi (their Senior Executive Vice President of External and Legislative Affairs, no less) took to the company’s public policy blog to say that “AT&T promised to preserve these very same call centers and jobs if our merger was approved.” Don’t you see? AT&T could’ve saved those jobs, if only the merger was approved! This didn’t need to happen! Please. “We also predicted that if the merger failed, T-Mobile would be forced into major layoffs,” he went on to say. "At that time, the current FCC not only rejected our pledges and predictions, they also questioned our credibility.” I’ve read the thing a few times, and I sort of get where Mr. Cicconi is coming from — the FCC called them out specifically on their stance on the merger creating jobs, and AT&T was (sadly) correct in this case. But really, Mr. Cicconi, 1,900 people just found out they would be out of a job in three months. Did you really, honestly think that this was the best opportunity to give the FCC an “I told you so?” It apparently almost didn’t happen, as Mr. Cicconi notes that the company wouldn’t comment on a matter like this. Methinks you should’ve gone with the standard protocol on this one, Jim. AT&T doesn’t always occupy the most favorable spot in consumers’ minds (their performance in the J.D. Power service rankings speak rather nicely to that), and shit like this doesn’t help their case at all. [hat tip to The Verge] |
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