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Archive for July, 2008

Tapulous and the shadow social network

July 31st, 2008

Sometime in next day or so, Tapulous will announce that it has accumulated 1 million users for its free iPhone game, Tap Tap Revenge. That's an accomplishment, but what's really interesting about the company is its overall strategy, since Tapulous is not, ultimately, a games company. I met recently with Tapulous CEO Bart Decrem and COO Andrew Lacy and to learn more.

The company is a social networking play. As Decrem said with glee as he demo'd the two-player version of Tap Tap Revenge with me (when you play, you and your opponent take up position on either end of an iPhone), the game is highly social. "Look how close we are," he said. If I was a 14-year old boy playing with a girl I liked, this game would be, "the best chance to kiss her."

Spin the Bottle for the iPhone generation.

The social underpinnings of the company go much deeper than that, fortunately. Tapulous is building a suite of different apps that connect to each other at a social level. Tap Tap Revenge, for example, will eventually link in to Twinkle, Tapulous' nanoblog service and Twitter client. You'll be able to send your high scores out as Twitter posts, or within Tap Tap, see the high scores of your Twitter pals.

The goal underpinning all the Tapulous apps (these two, plus new ones I'll talk about in a minute) is to provide immediate value to the first users, while at the same time offering network effect benefits as people pile on.

Tapulous has managed that with its current apps: Tap Tap Revenge is a fun music game for one or two players, and Twinkle didn't launch until the Twitter network was already live. In fact, the early version of Twinkle, for Jailbroken first-gen iPhones, was simply a Twitter client. However, the apps are both designed to ultimately support Tapulous' own network; what's especially clever is that Tapulous has, with Twinkle, figured out a way to get Twitter users to establish yet another new network login so they can use the app's unique features: location reporting and easy picture uploading.

In addition to building out its own network, Tapulous is trying to leverage the network that users have already in their phones. Currently, while Apple's apps can send data to each other, cross-app communication between third-party apps on the iPhone is very limited. Tapulous' apps talk to each other by sending all their info through the Tapulous central servers. It looks like each one of Tapulous' apps will have some clever way to leverage your phone's contacts. For example, in FriendBook-- the upcoming FriendBook app that lets you easily send your contact info to another iPhone user by shaking your phone - it might tell you which of your contacts are also Tapulous members and iPhone users, or it might show you which of your contacts are nearby.

Twinkle has its own nanoblog network that shadows Twitter.

Other upcoming apps include a restaurant reviews site (this will compete with Yelp) and a photo sharing service. Of course, both will leverage the Tapulous network of users as well as other Tapulous apps users have on their phones.

The company is flexible about monetization strategies. For Twinkle it will be layering in advertising at some point. For Tap Tap Revenge, there will be a premium version. The company is also looking at deals with musicians who might want distribution to the large Tap Tap audience, and it may sell those tracks to users. Decrem pointed out to me that, unlike on the Web (and on Facebook), on mobile platforms users are accustomed to paying for content - for SMS messages, ringtones, games, etc.

Tapulous is not strictly an iPhone shop, although for now that's its platform. The company is learning about this new market but expects to develop apps on other platforms as they get traction.

I like the way Tapulous is steadily building a collection of standalone apps that integrate at the user base level. It's smart. It's also an investible proposition; I was a bit surprised to hear David Hornick of August Capital say on a recent TechCrunch panel that iPhone development shops aren't good venture capital candidates since the iPhone market is so small. He's right that the iPhone market is small, but the overall mobile market is huge, and the proportion of phones in the world that can run apps is going up, and rapidly.

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Did Nullriver slide the iPhone tethering app past the goalie?

July 31st, 2008

When I saw a bunch of tweets (Twitter messages) go out earlier that a tethering application had been released for the iPhone, my immediate reaction was: “Yeah, for unlocked iPhones.” But I kept seeing the links to the supposed product, so I clicked one and sure enough it fired up iTunes and showed me an app called NetShare by Nullriver. I decided not to download it since it seemed almost too good to be true at $9.99. I wish I would have.

Shortly after it went up, Apple apparently pulled NetShare down with no explanation. (A MacRumors forum users was able to get it and has a full tutorial on it.) Clicking on the link to its place in the store now returns the message: “The item you’ve requested in not currently available in the US store.” So what gives?

Tethering is the process which allows you use your phone’s data plan with your computer. Seeing as the iPhone has unlimited data usage and now has 3G speeds, this is obviously enticing for users on the go. The problem is that AT&T and Apple have never allowed such functionality. That’s why it was so surprising that such an application would show up in the App Store today.

Multiple developers have complained that about the backlog of apps waiting for approval for the App Store because Apple is checking every one before it gets sent out to the world. It would certainly seem that AT&T would want them to check for two things: 1) VoIP apps and 2) tethering apps.

There has been a VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol, the technology that lets you place phones calls over the Internet, bypassing your cellular talk minutes) app available for a little while, Truphone. (But it only works over a Wi-Fi connection and not AT&T’s 3G data stream.) And now a company has gotten a tethering app past the App Store guards. So what exactly is Apple taking all this time to check for?

Interestingly enough, Nullriver also appears to have pulled NetShare down from the product list on its own site. Following the link it was previously at takes you to a page reading: “We’re updating our site.” I wonder if the term “lawsuit” was used today?

[photo: flickr/eric kilby and the MacRumor forum]

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Software Backs Up Human Memory

July 31st, 2008
CWmike writes "Ever try to remember who you bumped into at the store a few days back? Well, you're not alone. And IBM researchers are working on software that just may help you better recollect all the forgotten pieces of your life. This week, the company unveiled Pensieve, software that stores images, sounds, and text on everyday mobile devices, then allows the user extract them later on, to help them recall names, faces, conversations and events. IBM's project is akin to one that Gordon Bell and other scientists at Microsoft Research have been working on for the past nine years."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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NetShare briefly offers iPhone tether at App Store

July 31st, 2008

(Credit: Mac-Addict)
One of the most requested features for the iPhone is the ability to tether the phone to feed 3G or EDGE network data to your computer. That feature was briefly a reality Thursday, thanks to Nullriver's NetShare application. MacRumors reports that, priced at $9.99, the application seems to have, somehow, slipped below Apple's radar, but was pulled down after about 20 minutes of availability in the App Store.



The application basically turns your iPhone into a portable Wi-Fi hotspot, giving all of your Wi-Fi-enabled devices internet, wherever you have a cell signal. There are similar solutions available for iPhone users who have jailbroken their handsets, but they are significantly more complicated than Nullriver's offering, and since they require a hacked phone, don't hold mainstream appeal.

Briefly available, NetShare allowed iPhone users to take advantage of tethering their 3G and EDGE connections to their computers.

(Credit: MacRumors.com)
Wireless carriers have almost always been opposed to tethering smartphones with unlimited data plans. Many telcos even state in your contract that if you tether your phone, you may be responsible for additional fees associated with the data that you use. Of course, for an additional cost, you can tether some phones, such as a Blackberry, but Apple's iPhone doesn't offer legitimate tethering at any cost.



Those of us who were not quick enough to grab the app while it was available on the App Store seem to be out of luck for now. Links to the application now pop up with an error message that reads, "The item you've requested is not currently available in the US store." It's not exactly clear what happened with NetShare, how it slipped through the cracks, or why it was pulled. The app may have accidentally gotten through in the avalanche of new applications that are being added to the store, however it seems unlikely that someone at Apple would have signed off on this app, not knowing what it did. It would appear that either Apple, AT&T, or both had cleared the application, then quickly reconsidered. Apple has not yet responded to a request for a comment on the issue.

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China hits back at US senator’s spying claims

July 31st, 2008

China's Foreign Ministry brushed off but did not specifically deny accusations that Chinese authorities are forcing foreign hotel chains operating here to install Internet eavesdropping devices ahead of the Olympics.

"Those accusations are unfair," the state-run Xinhua News Agency quoted Foreign Ministry spokesperson Liu Jianchao as saying at the ministry's biweekly press conference Thursday. "Privacy is respected and guaranteed in China. China's security measures in hotels and other public places are not beyond the internationally, generally used measures," he said.

On Tuesday, Kansas Senator Sam Brownback accused China again of ordering foreign hoteliers to permit the Public Security Bureau, China's police, to deploy Internet monitoring hardware and software. "The Chinese government has put in place a system to spy on and gather information about every guest at hotels where Olympic visitors are staying," he said in a statement. "This means journalists, athletes' families and other visitors will be subjected to invasive intelligence gathering by the Chinese Public Security Bureau."

Brownback did not identify any of the hotel chains purported to have received the order. The senator's office did not respond to a telephone request for a copy of translated documents he claimed proved the order's existence. He first made the accusations in early May.

Major hotel chains Starwood -- which operates hotel brands including Sheraton, St. Regis, Westin and Four Points brands -- and Wyndham Worldwide -- which operates brands including Days Inn and Super 8 -- did not respond to requests for comment on the senator's claims.

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What If You Owned Your Own Fiber Connection?

July 31st, 2008
Almost five years ago, we wrote about a project in Burlington, Vermont to bring fiber optics to residents there. The idea was that, rather than a traditional "municipally-owned" network, this would actually be owned by the residents themselves. The article focused on the work of economist Alan McAdams, who (it needs to be admitted) was the guy who not only sent me down the path of better understanding the economics of information over a dozen years ago, but also convinced me to start Techdirt in the first place. McAdams has been pushing for the idea that if the end users actually owned the network itself, you would end up with much greater broadband, in part because you might still end up with a single fiber network, but there would be significant competition of service providers on that network. And, indeed, it appears that's where the Burlington fiber project has gone. A more recent case study on the project suggests that, with a slow and deliberate pace, thousands of residents in Burlington now have access to the fiber network, and can choose their own ISP, if they want.

Tim Lee has now written about another example as well, where there's an effort underway in Ottawa (which is only about 170 miles from Burlington), to string up 400 homes with fiber, but where the individual home owners will pay for and own the "last mile" connection to their homes. This is definitely a test on a small scale, but it's a similar situation to what McAdams has been pushing for all along. Let the customer own the connection itself, and then get to choose the service provider. In the Ottawa case, once again, service providers would no longer have to worry about wiring up your home (the most expensive part), but just need to offer service at various peering points, and each individual could choose who to get service from.

In this manner, you still get real competition, which is sorely lacking in the telco arena, and you get the benefits of higher speed networks. It's not as crazy as it might sound, either. As Lee points out, the telephone company used to own not just the wiring in your house, but the actual telephone as well. Over the years, that's been pushed back. Now you own your own phone -- and the wiring inside your house. So is it so crazy to think that you should own the wires outside of your house out to the main network as well? There are still plenty of practical issues that need to be resolved -- and the initial economics may be a bit daunting for many (the idea of paying, say, $3,000, to own your own fiber drop may freak some people out). But, it's experiments like these that are a real step in the right direction towards adding real competition, rather than the faux duopoly we all deal with today.

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Leaf rolls out wide frame AFi 10 camera system

July 31st, 2008

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It looks like those that found Phase One's 60-megapixel P65+ camera a bit too much for them but Hasselblad's 50-megapixel H3DII-50 somehow lacking may now finally have the answer they've been looking for, as Leaf has just introduced its new 56-megapixel AFi 10 camera system. This one's main selling point is its 56mm true wide frame sensor that Leaf designed with DALSA, which promises to "take you to the edge of the medium-format frame." Apart from that, you can expect a one frame per second capture time, exposure times up to a minute, light sensitivity from ISO 50 to 800 and, of course, some 171MB file sizes to impress your friends with. No word on a price and, quite frankly, we're a little hesitant to ask.

[Via 1001 Noisy Cameras]
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About Security Update 2008-005 – This document describes … (Apple)

July 31st, 2008

Apple:
About Security Update 2008-005  —  This document describes Security Update 2008-005, which can be downloaded and installed via Software Update preferences, or from Apple Downloads.  —  For the protection of our customers, Apple does not disclose, discuss, or confirm security issues until …

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NASA finds water on Mars, Web 2.0 credits Twitter [We Read Twitter So You Don't Have To]

July 31st, 2008
VentureBeat gushes, "In yet another powerful showcase of Twitter’s potential power as a disseminator of information, today several people received the first information via the micro me" —...

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Yahoo on Defensive At Shareholder Meeting

July 31st, 2008
Yahoo was criticized by some shareholders on Friday for the way it handled Microsoft's attempted acquisition, but in the end there were fewer fireworks at its annual meeting of stockholders than some had expected.

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Nullriver Introduces 3G/EDGE Tethering App for iPhone [Updatedx2] (Arn/MacRumors)

July 31st, 2008

Arn / MacRumors:
Nullriver Introduces 3G/EDGE Tethering App for iPhone [Updatedx2]  —  Nullriver, Inc. has released NetShare onto the iTunes App Store this evening (via iPhone Alley).  The $9.99 application promises to allow you to share your iPhone's network connection with your computer.

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Ask Engadget: Best digiframe / alarm clock combo?

July 31st, 2008

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Frightening though it may be, the fall semester is just around the corner. You know what that means? You'll actually have to get up at -- wait for it -- an appointed time. Carissa, being the proactive student she is, posed this question:

"Going to school in the fall, I'm looking for the ideal alarm clock to beat the late nights and what not and noticed a few digital photo frames / alarm clocks. I want a decent alarm clock that has battery backup and good resolution on the screen for viewing photos. An auxiliary audio jack would be a major plus. Which one do you guys recommend that falls under the 200 dollar mark? Thanks a million!"

Look at that -- you all even received a thank you in advance! For those who've mastered the art of waking up on time and pretending to be a real live adult, which alarm clock / digiframe hybrid have you found to be supreme? Oh, and you know that question you've been hitting the snooze on? Yeah, send it on over to ask at engadget dawt com.
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Laptops With Certain NVidia Chips Failing

July 31st, 2008
Eukariote writes "An estimated 18 million laptops with NVidia G84 and G86 graphics chips sold in the past one and a half years are experiencing high failure rates. Various laptop models from multiple manufacturers (Apple, Dell, HP, Lenovo, and others) are affected. NVidia blames it on bad chip packaging causing thermal failure. BIOS updates that turn the laptop fan on more frequently or permanently have been released by Dell and HP. The cynical interpretation is that this is likely to only delay the problem until the warranty has expired."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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New York Politicians Think About Repealing Amazon Tax, But Let It Drop

July 31st, 2008
Back in April, we noted that some NY state politicians were trying to put in place a rather sneaky legal change that effectively would force Amazon to collect sales tax in New York, despite not having a physical presence there. The "trick" was to claim that if you had any affiliates in the state, you had a local presence. Affiliates, of course, can be nothing more than an advertiser. So, based on this change of law, effectively anyone who has an advertiser in NY is considered to have a local presence there and must collect sales tax. Both Amazon.com and Overstock have sued over this law, and Overstock has even gone so far as to cut off all NY affiliates in response (showing how the law probably hurts NYers a lot more than it helps them).

Saul Hansell, over at the NY Times, picked up on an odd fact, however. Just weeks after this passed, a separate bill was introduced to repeal it. Yet, that bill appeared to have no sponsor, but the state Senate actually voted and approved it. After some digging, Hansell got an explanation: saying that the original bill was part of a larger bill that was approved, but many felt that they wanted to address just this specific issue. Of course, it appears that the state senators' interest is not matched by the corresponding state assembly (who would also need to pass such a bill). Over there, they'd just as soon leave the matter as is, and let the courts (and taxpayers) sort it out.

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Apple drops first build of Mac OS X 10.5.5 with warning (Aidan Malley/AppleInsider)

July 31st, 2008

Aidan Malley / AppleInsider:
Apple drops first build of Mac OS X 10.5.5 with warning  —  As expected, Apple on Thursday afternoon provided its vast developer community with the first pre-release build of Mac OS X 10.5.5, but warned developers not to use this initial version of the software with Macs that contain integrated graphics chips.

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