Twitter Opening Its Own Custom Data Center In Utah Later This YearAs you may have noticed, Twitter has had some reliability issues over the past few months. Part of this was related to the World Cup, part of it is because they just continue to grow at a fast pace — 300,000 new accounts are created a day now. It has gotten to the point where Twitter needs their own warehouse for tweet storage. So they’re building one, in Salt Lake City.

While it undoubtedly won’t be as large as Apple’s forthcoming billion-dollar data center in North Carolina, Twitter says they have been working on a “custom-built” one that will be opening later this year.

Having dedicated data centers will give us more capacity to accommodate this growth in users and activity on Twitter,” Twitter’s Jean-Paul Cozzatti writes on the Engineering Blog today.

Twitter will have full control over network and systems configuration, with a much larger footprint in a building designed specifically around our unique power and cooling needs. The data center will house a mixed-vendor environment for servers running open source OS and applications,” he continues.

Up until now, Twitter was using data centers built by NTT America in the Bay Area. “We’ll continue to work with NTT America to operate our current footprint. This is our first custom-built data center,” a Twitter representative tells us.

This move follows Facebook announcing its own data center back in January. That center is in Oregon, where many other companies have data centers as well — including Amazon and Google. The reason? Cheap power, a good climate (read: cooler), and tax incentives for companies to build these centers there. I’ve asked Twitter if similar reasons are behind the decision to build in Utah.

Twitter appears to be on a massive PR offensive to explain to users why they keep going down (or keep shutting off certain features — like the ability to sign-up). Twitter has a post on its main blog about this, and another post by Cozzatti that goes into the issues in detail.

 Twitter Opening Its Own Custom Data Center In Utah Later This Year  Twitter Opening Its Own Custom Data Center In Utah Later This Year  Twitter Opening Its Own Custom Data Center In Utah Later This Year  Twitter Opening Its Own Custom Data Center In Utah Later This Year  Twitter Opening Its Own Custom Data Center In Utah Later This Year  Twitter Opening Its Own Custom Data Center In Utah Later This Year

 Twitter Opening Its Own Custom Data Center In Utah Later This Year

 Twitter Opening Its Own Custom Data Center In Utah Later This Year
 Twitter Opening Its Own Custom Data Center In Utah Later This Year

 Twitter Opening Its Own Custom Data Center In Utah Later This Year  Twitter Opening Its Own Custom Data Center In Utah Later This Year  Twitter Opening Its Own Custom Data Center In Utah Later This Year  Twitter Opening Its Own Custom Data Center In Utah Later This Year  Twitter Opening Its Own Custom Data Center In Utah Later This Year  Twitter Opening Its Own Custom Data Center In Utah Later This Year

 Twitter Opening Its Own Custom Data Center In Utah Later This Year

 The New York Times Introduces An iPad App

nytipad The New York Times Introduces An iPad App

The New York Times will begin publishing daily on the iPad, offering readers around the world immediate access to most of the daily newspaper’s contents.

The New York Times on the iPad, as the electronic publication is known, contains most of the news and feature articles from the current day’s printed newspaper, classified advertising, reporting that does not appear in the newspaper, and interactive features including the newspaper’s crossword puzzle.

The iPad App (address: http:/www.nytimes.com) is part of a strategy to extend the readership of The Times and to create opportunities for the company in the electronic media industry, said Martin Nisenholtz, president of The New York Times Electronic Media Company.

The company, formed in 1995 to develop products for the rapidly growing field of digital publishing, is a wholly owned subsidiary of The New York Times Company, and also produces the times service on America Online Inc.

Mr. Nisenholtz reports to Russell T. Lewis, the president and general manager of The New York Times, and to Joseph Lelyveld, the newspaper’s executive editor.

The iPad-based Times is the newest of dozens of papers available to a global audience on the Internet’s fastest-growing service, which lets iPad users see electronic publications consisting of text, pictures and, in some cases, video and sound.

A selection of the day’s news, discussion forums and other material from The Times has been available through the @times service since the spring of 1994 on America Online.

The iPad’s global audience means a larger potential readership than that of @times, which is limited to America Online’s subscribers, currently more than four million. The new site also offers new products and services.

“Our iPad App is designed to take full advantage of the evolving capabilities offered by the Internet,” said Arthur Sulzberger Jr., publisher of The Times. “We see our role on the iPad as being similar to our traditional print role — to act as a thoughtful, unbiased filter and to provide our customers with information they need and can trust.”

The iPad will also offer access to much of what the newspaper has published the previous week and access to feature articles from as far back as 1980.

Mr. Nisenholtz said that initially, at least, no subscription or access fee would be charged for readers in the United States and that the iPad App would generate revenue from advertising. Readers who connect to the iPad App from outside the country will be offered a 30-day trial without charge, but will eventually face a subscription fee.

Advertisers that have already announced participation on the iPad App include Toyota Motor Corporate Services, Chemical Bank and the Northeast real estate concern Douglas Elliman.

Subscribers will have limited access to archives of Times articles and features dating to 1980, and will be able to copy articles to their own iPads for $1.95 each, Mr. Nisenholtz said.

The new service will also offer, for a fee, a customized clipping service that delivers to a subscriber’s electronic mailbox articles gleaned from each day’s editions of the newspaper, based on key words the subscriber selects.

With its entry on the iPad, The Times is hoping to become a primary information provider in the computer age and to cut costs for newsprint, delivery and labor. Companies that have established iPad-based information sites include television networks, computer companies, on-line information services, magazines and even individuals creating electronic newspapers of their own.

“The New York Times name will get people to look at the product once or maybe twice, and the fact that The New York Times has the kind of reach and credibility it does may persuade people to look three or four times,” said John F. Kelsey 3d, president of the Kelsey Group, a consultancy running a conference on iPad Apps next month.

“The market is booming for newspapers on the iPad,” Mr. Kelsey said.

 The New York Times Introduces An iPad App  The New York Times Introduces An iPad App  The New York Times Introduces An iPad App  The New York Times Introduces An iPad App  The New York Times Introduces An iPad App  The New York Times Introduces An iPad App

 The New York Times Introduces An iPad App
 The New York Times Introduces An iPad App

 The New York Times Introduces An iPad App  The New York Times Introduces An iPad App  The New York Times Introduces An iPad App  The New York Times Introduces An iPad App  The New York Times Introduces An iPad App

 The New York Times Introduces An iPad App

 AOL Partners With Celebrity Chefs To Launch Recipe And Foodie Site...

kit AOL Partners With Celebrity Chefs To Launch Recipe And Foodie Site...AOL has recruited a few celebrity chefs and foodies; including Curtis Stone, Food & Wine’s Gail Simmons, and Marcus Samuelsson; and the famed Culinary Institute of America to launch food website KitchenDaily. Similar to Epicurious, AllRecipes, or FoodNetwork.com, KitchenDaily features a recipe database of meals that have been tested by top chefs, food magazine and cookbook publishers.

AOL has recruited a number of talent from Conde Nast’s recently shuttered Gourmet Magazine. Former Gourmet Editor Cheryl Brown is the editor-in-chief with a number of former Gourmet writers named as contributors. Epicurious’ Megan Steintrager will be the senior editor of the site.

In addition to recipes, KitchenDaily will feature a meal-planner tool, cooking lessons, cookbook reviews, and and more than 250 instructional videos created by celebrity chefs and industry insiders. AOL already has a food blog called Slashfood though its unclear how the two sites will be integrated.

The recipe site space is crowded, with a number of worthy competitors vying for traffic. And even Microsoft’s Bing launched its own recipe search product. But its seems that KitchenDaily aims to be part magazine, part recipe site, so it may be able to differentiate itself and possibly attract many former Gourmet readers. We know that AOL CEO Tim Armstrong is bullish on niche content so the launch of this site fits into the company’s strategy nicely.

kit 1 AOL Partners With Celebrity Chefs To Launch Recipe And Foodie Site...

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 AOL Partners With Celebrity Chefs To Launch Recipe And Foodie Site...  AOL Partners With Celebrity Chefs To Launch Recipe And Foodie Site...  AOL Partners With Celebrity Chefs To Launch Recipe And Foodie Site...  AOL Partners With Celebrity Chefs To Launch Recipe And Foodie Site...  AOL Partners With Celebrity Chefs To Launch Recipe And Foodie Site...  AOL Partners With Celebrity Chefs To Launch Recipe And Foodie Site...

 AOL Partners With Celebrity Chefs To Launch Recipe And Foodie Site...
 AOL Partners With Celebrity Chefs To Launch Recipe And Foodie Site...

 AOL Partners With Celebrity Chefs To Launch Recipe And Foodie Site...  AOL Partners With Celebrity Chefs To Launch Recipe And Foodie Site...  AOL Partners With Celebrity Chefs To Launch Recipe And Foodie Site...  AOL Partners With Celebrity Chefs To Launch Recipe And Foodie Site...  AOL Partners With Celebrity Chefs To Launch Recipe And Foodie Site...

 AOL Partners With Celebrity Chefs To Launch Recipe And Foodie Site...

 AppsFire Draws In Some French Angels To Bankroll Mobile App...

With more than 140,000 apps on the iPhone alone, there is a real need for services which help you find the best apps. Apple’s iTunes ratings and genius recommendations only go so far. One startup attacking this problem is French-Israeli AppsFire, which just raised its first angel round. AppsFire was co-founded by former TechCrunch France editor Ouriel Ohayon and Yann Lechelle.

The investors are a group of successful French entrepreneurs (yes, they exist), including Marc Simoncini (CEO of dating site meetic.com), Jacques-Antoine Granjon (CEO of Vente-Privee.com), Xavier Niel (CEO of French ISP Free), and entrepreneur and angel investor Jean-David Blanc (who also recently invested in Square). The amount raised wasn’t disclosed but it is believed to be in the low seven figures.

AppsFire offers a simple utility app which makes it easy to share iPhone app recommendations with your friends. Since its beta launch last summer, more than 10 million apps have been shared, leading to hundreds of thousands of clicks to iTunes. It also highlights apps through its AppStar Awards. Recently, AppsFire started promoting its own short link for iPhone apps, http://getap.ps/, which opens up iTunes on both the iPhone and desktop computers to a specific app’s page. While you are waiting for iTunes to open up, information about the App appears on the landing page, developers who use getap.ps will get analytics on conversions and other stats. This America Life (http://getap.ps/thisamericanlife) and DailyMotion (http://getap.ps/dailymotion) are already using it.

The startup plans to move beyond the iPhone to other mobile devices with growing app markets such as Android and Blackberry. It also recently launched PasteFire, a way to share other things such as Web links, emails, phone numbers, and photos to and from your iPhone. It will start to give users app recommendations based on the content they copy in PasteFire as well. The whole focus of the company is to help people discover new apps and drive more downloads and sales of apps. Competitors include Appolicious, 16Apps, and others.

 AppsFire Draws In Some French Angels To Bankroll Mobile App...
 AppsFire Draws In Some French Angels To Bankroll Mobile App...

 AppsFire Draws In Some French Angels To Bankroll Mobile App...  AppsFire Draws In Some French Angels To Bankroll Mobile App...  AppsFire Draws In Some French Angels To Bankroll Mobile App...  AppsFire Draws In Some French Angels To Bankroll Mobile App...  AppsFire Draws In Some French Angels To Bankroll Mobile App...

 AppsFire Draws In Some French Angels To Bankroll Mobile App...