by Jason Wilk on January 15, 2009

- If you haven’t heard of Oberon Media, I’m sure you’ve played a casual game or two on one of the many sites that they power. Since their inception, Oberon has become the king of casual games, providing partners like MSN, MySpace, MTV, Walmart.com, NBC and more with their game player.
- Enter Heyzap, the latest product launch out of the Y Combinator college of startups. Founded by serial entrepreneurs, and my friends, Immad Akhund (recently sold Clickpass) and Jude Gomila, HeyZap is to become the longtail competitor to Oberon by creating an easily embeddable casual games player for use by any website or blog. Webmasters now have the ability to offer their users 4000+ casual games with a simple strip of code.
- Immad says “Currently, publishers don’t have easy access to highly addictive, online casual games content, but HeyZap intends to change this. Heyzap will shift where users play casual games and bring casual games to a larger audience”. The player aggregates and filters casual games from major game portals, game developers and Mochi Media, recommending users with the most popular games titles in their favorite categories.
- Some of the benefits to adding HeyZap to a site or blog include increasing user engagement, such as higher on-site time and potentially more page-views.
- The platform also hopes to help promote new game developers who aren’t getting exposure on the major networks, offering them ad-revenue shares and a home for their games.
- Casual gaming is now a $2.2bn market, predicted to grow at 25% this year. With the success of Oberon Media, HeyZap stands a real chance in the market for providing game tools for the rest of us. Somebody like DemandMedia, who offers tools for publishers could be setting their eye on this company very soon (Acquisition maybe?) Stay tuned….
Try it out here:
by Jason Wilk on December 13, 2008

- It’s crossed everyone’s mind since the cell phone and text messages collectively became a new standard for communication; why not let people vote via SMS for the Presidential election? Given there is a certain pride that comes with standing in line for an hour to cast your vote, it would certainly increase poll numbers and jumpstart apathetic voters who just don’t feel like leaving the house nor care.
- Well, some Parliament members of Estonia are taking the concept seriously and have approved a law for that might see there next leader elected by texting.
- Voters who want to cast their vote will receive an authorization chip or code that will correspond to their voter registration. As soon as you have followed the proper instructions, send your vote and you’re done. It’s a great idea, although one that probably won’t ever make it over to the states. We’ll just have to wait and see how the first run goes with Estonia. I’d recommend testing it on a mock-election first to test out the system.
by Jason Wilk on November 29, 2008

- When consumers shop online, Amazon is still the destination of choice, but Walmart and Target are steadily catching up in the online e-commerce game says JP Morgan’s Survery
- 50 percent of online shoppers this year will shop at Amazon, compared to 35 percent at Walmart.com, 32 percent at eBay, 27 percent at Target.com and 12.5% at Sears.
- If trends stay on path, Walmart.com will pass up eBay in total number of online shoppers this year as well as total revenue. More proof eBay is on the outs.
- In terms of total spending, 44% of consumers say they will be spending less this year compared to 33% who said the same thing last year.
- If you are really trying to save this winter, I recommend 101 Great Gifts To Make.
by Jason Wilk on September 15, 2008

- Zemanta makes the process of creating content on your web site or blog easier with recommendations.
- As you compose your post, Zemanta suggests related content, images and links that might enhance your work. (it recommends words to with their spell check)
- It achieves this all by way of a plug-in, which can be downloaded Here.
- New York-based Union Square Ventures placed a $650,000 bet that this is the future of intelligent content creating. Brings total funding to $1.5m.
Made tiny from : TechCrunch UK original article