Here’s the latest action:
Yahoo Photos to be phased out — Yahoo will announce the closure of Yahoo Photos tomorrow, which will occur over a few months. Users will be shunted to the hipper Flickr, which has just overtaken Yahoo Photo in traffic. Techcrunch has the Comscore data and news.
Joost launches to public, but broken — Too bad for Joost, the new Internet TV company started by co-founders of Skype, Niklas Zennstrom and Janus Friis. They’ve impressively crafted hype around this throughout its development, only to have it crash upon launch. They apparently weren’t ready to handle traffic needs. Bottom line, it says something about lack of preparation, because the ability to scale is crucial. Happened to us at VentureBeat when we launched. Toni Schneider of Automattic/Wordpress says many people neglect scale; WordPress lead developer Matt Mullenweg, he said, goes to bed every night thinking about how to scale. The problem killed Friendster.
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Big-brother nation — Video surveillance technologies are getting more advanced, some would say creepily so. Companies use them to crack down on employees slouching off at at work and other abuse. 3VR, of San Francisco, offers that. Its software recognizes employees and follows them around as the come and go. There’s Pixim in Mountain View, which can take video in dark, shady places, and NiceVision, in Rutherford, N.J, which searches for “unusual’ activity, as in un-patterned. See Merc story. The Brits are considering introducing a lip-reading technology for its pervasive surveillance cameras.
Boo.com bought by new owner — The dot-com company that epitomized excesses of the boom, Boo.com, a flashy online clothing retailer that was difficult to use, burned through $125 million in capital. It has now been bought, and made part of a travel site, reports the Financial Times.
Breakthrough on solar cells? — That’s what Rice University is saying about its project on quantum dot technology. This is essentially a press release; we haven’t confirmed how significant this is.
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Calacanis project not as broadly ambitious as earlier implied — We pointed to rumors entrepreneur Jason Calacanis, backed by high-powered venture capital firm Sequoia Capital, is creating a search engine that crosses Wikipedia with Google — a compelling idea. As mentioned, it was just speculation. Now there are more facts dribbling out: The start-up is reportedly called Kokua, and mix of Wikipedia and podcasting, with a focus on automobiles and video games. This is more focused, and possibly still attractive, given the possibility of targeting ads, but more predictable too.
Techdirt launches Insight Community — At the Plug&Play Expo this week, Techdirt showed off the testing version of its new service, just launched. We mentioned it last year here. It solicits the input of expert bloggers in niche fields to inform a corporate client in areas in which the client is interested. Techdirt wants Insight to outperform traditional analyst work for Fortune 500 companies. After receiving funding from entrepreneur Mark Fletcher and others, it’s looking to raise another round.
IBM saves Moore’s Law — IBM unveiled today a breakthrough in chip design to reduce power loss. Called “airgap,” the technology will use nanotechnology to insulate wiring in the chip. An IBM senior vice president crows: “I think it extends Moore’s Law another decade or so.” It follows other reportedly significant breakthroughs by Intel and IBM earlier this year to reduce power loss.
Spock launches private testing version — We’ve written a lot about Spock, the people search engine. It has just launched its private beta version, and it’s the first time I’ve had free access to the service without one of the founders controlling the demo. I checked out my profile, and it has pretty relevant tags on me, noting that I’m a blogger, related to VentureBeat, and have some affiliation with the Mercury News (the newspaper, my former employer, syndicates VentureBeat content), and so on. No insulting tags, yet.
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It takes you through an initial sign up stage, where you can type in your logins to services like Gmail, LinkedIn and other services so that you can automatically reach contacts if say, you land on their profile page and want to reach them. Past coverage.
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