Archive for July, 2010

boganmartin The Flickr Bogan Martin Award For “Media Overreaction”One thing you can say about the Flickr team – there’s some fight in ‘em. They apparently were not super pleased with our coverage of their annual (and unofficial) Grant-Pattishall Award given each year to the Yahoo engineer who “who breaks Flickr in the most spectacular way.” I’m not sure why, I think the award is fun.

So now they have a new award, called the Bogan-Martin Award: “The Bogan-Martin Award is given yearly to the Flickr staff member who inadvertently generates the most spectacular media overreaction to a personal comment or inside joke.”

So who won? Daniel Bogan this year, who was also this year’s winner of the other award. And last year was Chris Martin. Both winners names link to previous posts we’ve done. Suggesting that we’re the media that is engaging in the spectacular overreaction.

Ok, Flickr. You won this round.

Information provided by CrunchBase

 The Flickr Bogan Martin Award For “Media Overreaction”  The Flickr Bogan Martin Award For “Media Overreaction”  The Flickr Bogan Martin Award For “Media Overreaction”  The Flickr Bogan Martin Award For “Media Overreaction”  The Flickr Bogan Martin Award For “Media Overreaction”  The Flickr Bogan Martin Award For “Media Overreaction”

 The Flickr Bogan Martin Award For “Media Overreaction”

 The Flickr Bogan Martin Award For “Media Overreaction”
 The Flickr Bogan Martin Award For “Media Overreaction”

 The Flickr Bogan Martin Award For “Media Overreaction”  The Flickr Bogan Martin Award For “Media Overreaction”  The Flickr Bogan Martin Award For “Media Overreaction”  The Flickr Bogan Martin Award For “Media Overreaction”  The Flickr Bogan Martin Award For “Media Overreaction”  The Flickr Bogan Martin Award For “Media Overreaction”

 The Flickr Bogan Martin Award For “Media Overreaction”

img 0018 Chamillionaire Just Wants Your Business CardGrammy award winning artist Chamillionaire (a.k.a Hakeem Seriki) has become a regular at tech conferences, perhaps because the hustle and flow culture of the rap business and the hustle and flow culture of the tech business are surprisingly similar. His stories of struggles between artists and music labels are resonant to anyone who’s experienced the relationship intricacies of startups and VCs.

Chamillionare got his first taste of the magic of the Internet in 2004, with the launch of his first website Chamillionaire.com. The community around the site’s message boards exploded unexpectedly, “at the time it was really creative and really cool,” he told Mike Arrington at today’s Social Currency CrunchUp.

Other highlights from the interview include Mike Arrington calling the hip hop artist’s entourage “goofy,” asking, “What kind of rims are cool now?” and ending the memorable,”You guys know how to manipulate the tech industry to get what you want, but you have the lamest phones …”

In retort, Chamillionaire insisted that he carries around his 3 phones, a Blackberry Curve 8700, an iPhone 3Gs, and a Sidekick XL, for “simplicity” and joked that he checks in as “Mike Arrington” when he stays at hotels. On why he attends tech conferences, “I just want to get a business card from each of you.”

Curious, we caught up with the artist after the panel and asked him what exactly he thought the tech community had to offer?

“Everything. Access to people through social networks. We don’t build these social networks, we don’t blog on TechCrunch. People here are like what would a rapper care about TechCrunch for? It’s crazy, it’s about distribution of information. It’s just getting information to people, that’s just what major labels are. They’ve got companies that distribute for us now so it’s like cutting the record labels out – I’m doing you a favor, you’re doing me a favor and I’m getting to where I need to get to.

On his future plans? “I just want to innovate.” He said, insisting that he couldn’t reveal any more information.

Video of his onstage interview, below:

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 Chamillionaire Just Wants Your Business Card

 Chamillionaire Just Wants Your Business Card
 Chamillionaire Just Wants Your Business Card

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 Chamillionaire Just Wants Your Business Card

rover fcc hed rm eng Rover Puck WiMAX hotspot gets FCCd, traction on ice subject of fierce...

The pool of choices for WiMAX hotspots continues to expand, and thanks to the FCC, we now know of another up-and-comer. The Rover Puck -- trademarked by Clearwire and previously unheard of -- joins the ranks Sprint's Overdrive and its various rebrandings by providing pocketable 4G WiFi service. Unlike its predecessors, however, we finally have a new, more aerodynamic form factor. There isn't much to the glean from the user manual at this point, and the oft-referenced Rover website still isn't live -- a WHOIS lookup reveals it was last updated via GoDaddy on July 2008 with no other details disclosed. So, until we get some word from the official news pipelines, a plethora of external / internal photos and user manual screenshots are only a mouseclick away.

Rover Puck WiMAX hotspot gets FCC'd, traction on ice subject of fierce debate originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Jul 2010 21:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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500 startups Dave McClure Files For $30 Million Venture Fund: 500 Startups

In January, we broke the news that prolific Silicon Valley angel investor Dave McClure was to set up its own venture capital fund.

Yesterday, the man filed for the fund with the SEC, providing us with more details (hat tip to FormDs.com). The name will be 500 Startups – McClure has long called himself the master of 500 hats – and the initial fund will amount to max. $30 million according to the filing.

McClure has turned to 99 Designs to come up with a logo for the fund (my favorite so far).

Here’s part of the brief for the logo design:

500 Startups is a new, edgy, risk taking seed fund which invests in early stage consumer internet companies.

Incubator/seed investment funds are popping up left and right and we’re looking to differentiate ourself through edgier design. Our founder likes to swear. In public. A lot. Think Ari Gold, but for tech companies and without a suit.

We are not — *not* — your typical fund composed of a bunch of stiff white guys sitting around a board table. We’re young. We’re diverse (Women! People of color!). Our investments are blustering balls of sleepless eagerness, And the markets we’re looking to dominate are murky and emergent.

Our values:

- “Fun at All Costs”… authentic, down-to-earth, *real*
- Creative, Smart, Innovative Environment
- Learn & Educate at Same Time
- Move Quickly, Take Risks, Make [Manageable] Mistakes

Sounds like McClure, alright.

For your reference: McClure has been investing in early stage startups for years.

He is a direct angel investor in a half dozen or more startups, including Mint, Simply Hired, Mashery, bit.ly, UserVoice, SlideShare, TeachStreet and others. And he has invested in dozens more through fbFund, a $10 million Facebook investment fund backed by Founders Fund and Accel, and FF Angel, a Founders Fund early stage fund.

 Dave McClure Files For $30 Million Venture Fund: 500 Startups  Dave McClure Files For $30 Million Venture Fund: 500 Startups  Dave McClure Files For $30 Million Venture Fund: 500 Startups  Dave McClure Files For $30 Million Venture Fund: 500 Startups  Dave McClure Files For $30 Million Venture Fund: 500 Startups  Dave McClure Files For $30 Million Venture Fund: 500 Startups

 Dave McClure Files For $30 Million Venture Fund: 500 Startups

 Dave McClure Files For $30 Million Venture Fund: 500 Startups
 Dave McClure Files For $30 Million Venture Fund: 500 Startups

 Dave McClure Files For $30 Million Venture Fund: 500 Startups  Dave McClure Files For $30 Million Venture Fund: 500 Startups  Dave McClure Files For $30 Million Venture Fund: 500 Startups  Dave McClure Files For $30 Million Venture Fund: 500 Startups  Dave McClure Files For $30 Million Venture Fund: 500 Startups  Dave McClure Files For $30 Million Venture Fund: 500 Startups

 Dave McClure Files For $30 Million Venture Fund: 500 Startups

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