by Jason Wilk on October 12, 2008
Michael Arrington and son of Nigerian President in a heated debate. Someone has to win, so let’s settle it.
[polldaddy poll="992901"]
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by Jason Wilk on October 8, 2008
- Earthcomber owns the patent for ‘System and method for locating and notifying a user of a person, place or thing having attributes matching thr user’s stated preferences’
- The patent is legit and Loopt should be worried. TechCrunch is merely a partner in Loopt’s new ‘Featured Communites’ section that lets you find other TechCrunch readers, so they need no worry.
- Arrington is not happy about the pbulicity stunt from Earthcomber CEO James Brady who just wanted to ‘get mike’s attention’.
- The link to the patent is here.
TC
by Jason Wilk on September 24, 2008

- MySpace has announced that Universal, Warner, Sony and EMI are all officially on board for the launch of the new Music.MySpace.com tonight at 9pm.
- The site will allows users to stream any song ever published for free, although with advertising integrated.
- MySpace users can create a playlist of 100 songs to be played on their page with easy sharing, download (Amazon) and ringtone capabilities (Jamster)
- Advertisers lined up for the launch to support the music streaming are McDonalds, Sony Pictures, Toyota and State Farm.
- Michael Arrington seems very excited about the new offering, but I think it’s another music site I won’t bother going on to. Here’s my reason’s why I think it will fail.
What do you think will happen?
Made tiny from: TechCrunch.com
by John Jorgensen on September 8, 2008

- Session 1 of TechCrunch50 kicked off today with Jasaon Calacanis and Michael Arrington opening the 52 startup showcase event.
- Judging panel includes Chad Hurley (YouTube co-founder), Marrissa Mayer (Google VP), Ron Conway (angel investor) and Dan Farber (Chief CNET Editor).
- Shryk has created a finance-tracking web app for young people called iThryv (think Mint for kids). Helps youngsters track where they spend money and emphasizes saving. Integrates w/ existing bank accounts.
- BlahGirls is a celebrity gossip site featuring a once-per-week cartoon video show hosted by 3 animated girls. Users can make comments to the girls and receive unique responses. Risque content = not for kids. Backed by Ashton Kutcher, monetized by product placement (signed w/ Vitamin Water).
- Tweegee is a social network/content site for kids aged 8-14. Includes email app that’s simple & kid-friendly, calendar with birthdays/pictures, customizable avatars, and casual games. 1 GB of space for file storage.
- Hangout Industries is an embeddable 3D virtual environment aimed at 16-24 yr olds. Like a browser-based version of “The Sims” where users can chat and share media. In-world product placement is key (posters from AllPosters can be hung on the wall and then purchased in real life).
What do you think of the first round of startups?
Made tiny from: TechCrunch.com original post
European And Silicon Valley Culture Clashes Hit The Mainstage
by Jason Wilk on December 13, 2008
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