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Thursday
Aug172006

Startups Given The Floor At Digital Hollywood

Startups Given The Floor At Digital Hollywood: "

I was Digital Hollywood today rubbing elbows with content creators and distributors in San Jose. On the agenda were several entrepreneurial forums where local startups pitched their companies to an audience of competitors, peers and venture capitalists. Given the words ‘Digital’ and ‘Hollywood’ can cover a lot of ground all of the companies generally fit the themes of the conference. I saw some interesting companies, some of whom haven’t been profiled yet on this site.

Here’s a rundown:

TurnHere

TurnHere was founded by Brad Inman who founded HomeGain. Staying within the community arena but moving to the world of travel, TurnHere creates and distributes travel and ‘local experience’ films. They employ 2000 independent filmmakers around the world, with 250 trained in the 90 second ‘Turn Here’ style, which includes a local as narrator to capture the right flavor of a place. The firm experimented with different lengths, but is gravitating towards 90 second to 2 minute features in our short attention span world. The business model is centered on local advertising and advert films in the profiled regions. I watched several films in both genres and they were great. I am really impressed by the site and the films. The food makes you salivate, the sites make you want to hop in your car.

RallyPoint

Started by Jeff Allen, Managing Partner of Rocket Systems, who is taking a break to be CEO, RallyPoint aims to bring the Internet (and interactivity) to your TV. Inspired by a desire to talk smack to friends while watching sporting events, it will offer an array of products like chat, voting, game show participation, pop up alerts, auction watch through applets overlaid on broadcasts. They will create their own device and hope to be integrated with other devices as well. Another device in the living room scares me, but the company is in its very early stages, so they’ll presumably be testing the concept. They plan to offer their service through subscription, targeting the market of people getting score updates on their SMS phones. Sounds like Wink and some other startups from another era, maybe the time is now.

Mediazone

Funded by Naspers, a large South African media company, but based in the Silicon Valley, Mediazone is a secure P2P video delivery platform that supports media portals and live premier events. They recently did live coverage of 300 matches on 9 courts for Wimbledon. There’s a rugby channel and, in the past, they’ve covered things like the Maverick Surf Contest. I’m trying hard not to utter the words long tail, but I really have no choice. That’s what a service like theirs enables. Streaming through their P2P network allows them to deliver multiple channels without the bandwidth costs of other streamers, which makes it sound like they are playing in the RedSwoosh neighborhood. They are working on an interactive television platform, perhaps similar to Rallypoint, which they only mentioned in passing.

Magnify

Magnify is led by Steve Rosenbaum, who created MTV’s ‘Unfiltered’, so he’s a serious veteran of the user generated movement. Magnify is a scalable human powered review system for user generated video. With 70K Youtube uploads per day, they want to help narrow the relevancy of search. Volunteers become reviewers and they start to organize and tag the better material to form communities to share like content. Lo and behold, as we watched a venture video channel, they showed a video of our friend Mike Arrington. Certainly, it did seem to provide relevant content. Whether or not, human editors will ultimately be necessary to create these communities, I don’t know, but they are certainly trying to fill a glaring need in the online content space.

NBOR

The three minutes allotted to Danny Yeager from NBOR (No Boundaries Or Rules) was not sufficient. I’m not really sure what they do. What I did glean is that it will either be the most significant product of my life, will disappear from the face of the earth or fall somewhere in between. They make both software and hardware and have about 70 patents. The software is called Blackspace and is intended to replace the UI of Windows and works across multiple devices and gives a totally open, cross boundary UI that has, well… No Boundaries Or Rules. They’ve also created some tactile devices that turn flat panel devices into blank screens that can be reused for different applications (though I’m not clear how). You’re probably realizing you have no idea what they do. Well, join the club. I can not provide a serviceable summary or review of something that claims to be this big and gets three minutes of my time. This will be a TechCrunch follow up, because there could be a really interesting story here.

Other companies featured (that I missed) who might be worth a follow up: Clip Syndicate, who syndicates video clips to verticals across the Internet; FrameFree, who provides technologies to create motion graphics for the web and mobile devices; Postroller, a video ad network; Mspot, an aggregator and distributes premium video content for the web; Wideorbit, an advertising infrastructure software for content distribution networks; and Teamdating, a dating site geared towards group social interactions, that wasn’t featured in our previous post on online dating sites.

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(Via TechCrunch.)

Thursday
Aug172006

Wireless Binds Tibetan Exiles

Wireless Binds Tibetan Exiles: "Xeni Jardin:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 I filed a story and photos for Wired News today on the innovative tech underpinnings of a community wireless project I visited recently in Dharamshala, India. Snip:



 

 

 

Across the border from Chinese-occupied Tibet, the tech infrastructure in this high mountain village is a mess.

But a former Silicon Valley dot-commer and members of the underground security group Cult of the Dead Cow are working with local Tibetan exiles to change that using recycled hardware, solar power, open-source software and nerd ingenuity.

The Dharamsala Wireless Mesh is an example of 'light infrastructure,' a concept gaining popularity among tech developers: decentralized, ad hoc networks that can deliver essential services faster than conventional means.

Attempts to deploy similar community wireless networks in America have been blocked repeatedly by national phone carriers. It takes a big company like Google to build citywide Wi-Fi networks (the company launched its first in Mountain View, California, this week).

So sustainable network builders are going where they're welcome -- in this case, a rural village 7,000 feet up in the Himalayas.

(...) Some of the technical challenges [network project founder Yahel Ben-David faces] are unique. This may be one of the only networks in the world where antennas must be monkey-proofed.

'Monkeys are everywhere,' says Ben-David. 'Often, you'll see a huge, gorilla-sized monkey hang on to an antenna, swing from it, eat it, try to break it. We lost a lot of cables that way, but now we use very strong equipment so that even monkeys can't break it.'


Link to article, 'Wireless Binds Tibetan Exiles', and Link to an extensive photo gallery: 'Dharamsala Dreamin'.'


Previously:

* Xeni's 'reporter's notebook' trek blog.

* NPR Day to Day radio series 'Hacking the Himalayas':

Thursday
Aug172006

Little Phatty by Moog

Little Phatty by Moog: "



The Little Phatty, by Moog, is a monophonic analog synthesizer with 100 user editable presets. It was also the last product that Bob Moog had any impact on. This beautiful Moog Synthesizer is actually the smaller and cheaper version of the MiniMoog Voyager, and features a 37-note keyboard, spring-loaded pitch wheel, mod wheel, glide on/off, octave down, and octave up.

 

Sound editing of continuous parameters is done from the front panel by enabling a parameter with its switch (its LED becomes illuminated), and then adjusting its value control. There are 4 value controls, one for each section: Modulation, Oscillators, Filter, and Envelopes. Each is surrounded by a ring of 15 LEDs that show approximately the stored or edited value of the current parameter. The value controls are analog, and when a parameter is activated, the analog control signal is switched to directly control that parameter (RAC™ or Real Analog Control). For each section, only one continuous parameter can be activated at a time for editing. For parameters that have multiple possibilities (such as Mod Source) pressing that switch advances through the possible Mod sources. For On/Off type switches like Osc. Sync, the LEDs are on when that parameter is on or off when the parameter is off.

 

Can’t argue with that. The Little Phatty is available for $1475.00.

Product Page [Moog Music] (Via CrunchGear.)

Thursday
Aug172006

TomTom ONE GPS Released In North America

TomTom ONE GPS Released In North America: "

tomtom-one.jpg

The tiny GPS navigation system with a large 3.5-inch screen hits the US shores this month, after much delay. It only weighs 5.6 ounces and is 1 inch thick, which is tiny for a GPS system. Carry this around in your pocket or bag to have whenever your buddies are driving, just in case.

It’s got 32MB of SD memory and access to TomTom PLUS services such as traffic and weather. As an entry-level device, it’s pretty decent. But at $499, it may be a little too costly for entry-level users.

Press Release [Business Wire via Engadget] (Via CrunchGear.)

Wednesday
Aug162006

Planar Xscreen: They Might Think It’s a Plasma TV

Planar Xscreen: They Might Think It’s a Plasma TV: "

big_screen.jpg

We’re hearing a lot of talk about gigantic-screen TVs, some of them costing upwards of $50,000, but if you’re using a projector, you can have a humongous-sized screen at a tenth of that price. This 100-inch selectively-reflective Xscreen from Planar of Norway has a built-in optical filter, reflecting light from the projector while absorbing room light. Perhaps its most appealing attribute is its uncanny similarity to a 100-inch plasma display.

 

The idea solves one of the few drawbacks to using a front projector: the room must be darkened in order to enjoy a bright and contrasty picture. Now all you have to do is hope no one notices that projector hanging from the ceiling or sitting on the shelf on the back wall. A slight drawback to this shrewd scheme is the Xscreen’s price, $4871, but that’s still considerably cheaper than that 100-inch plasma display.

Plana’s TV-like 100-inch screen [AVing.net]

(Via CrunchGear.)