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Seedcamp: 20 top ideas from Europe’s talented dev pool

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Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Seedcamp: 20 top ideas from Europe’s talented dev pool” was written by Jemima Kiss, for guardian.co.uk on Thursday 11th August 2011 23.35 Asia/Calcutta

Twenty pitches is a lot to sit through, but it’s a great way of taking the pulse of some of the most promising ideas trends and talent in the startup community. As ever, a good pitch doesn’t mean a good product, and vice versa. There were presentations today that were slick and funny but failed to succinctly explain the product, while otherwise were softly spoken and modest but quietly impressive at the same time. These three sites, plus 17 others, are buried in intensive mentoring sessions all afternoon.

Some, like Croatian Farmeron, were both. The team, most of whom have grown up with families involved in agriculture, have achieved the increasingly hard task of identifying an as-year undisrupted market with massive potential for what I hesitate to call a Web 2.0 interface – light, easy to use and consumer focused service. Farmeron provides an adaptable data management tool for farmers with a delightful, fun interface a world away form dull, agro-industry rivals – of which there are only two. Very impressive.

Anything that tries to solve the burden of email is worth watching, and ReplyDone is trying to help by learning how you respond to common emails and intervene to automate those replies. Simple, and brilliant. It’s starting life as a Gmail plug in but there’s potential here, at least until email is usurped by something that was actually designed to handle our communications, rather than something that just ended up doing it.

Italian site iubenda is a customisable, embeddable tool for the small print on your website. Great idea, bypassing costly lawyers. For most smaller websites, that will be a real benefit.


Photo by c3o on Flickr. Some rights reserved

Mini Seedcamp, London

CityMapper (London, UK)

Travel tool. CityMapper combines buses, tubes, bikes, taxis and walking to suggest the best routes through the city. How is it different to otters apps on this space? By focusing on design and usability, claims co-founder Azmat Yusuf, a VC turned entrepreneur. With partner Mattias Linnap, who is studying at Cambridge for a PhD in location tracking, CityMapper claims to have a better routing algorithm than the competition, creating use cases around navigation. There’s potential for building an ad network around movement in cities, using navigation is a platform. Expanding in the US would be boring; CityMapper wants to pursue growing markets in megacities like Istanbul and Jakarta.

ComodIT (Liege, Belgium)

IT management tool. ComodIT co-founder Laurent Eschenauer believes IT should be comoditised, greatly simplifying management of corporate IT systems through a web user interface. "The idea is to formalise, integrate and orchestrate your company’s IT system," said Eschenauer, who says ComodIT has started direct sales and is targeting mid-sized firms. A software-as-a-service version is due out next year and ComodIT is hoping to stake out a chunk of the bn IT management market.

ContactUsPlus (London, UK)

Customer service tool. Ever contacted an e-commerce website but had no response? ContactUsPlus estimates that 27% of consumers have had that experience and 45% have abandoned their shopping carts. In the context of a market that has lost £12.8bn in sales, there’s a big opportunity to help firms provide the customer support to complete those sales. ContactUsPlus provides a toolbar that can be added to the top of site, explained co-founder Adi Ben-Ari, inviting consumers to email, live chat or speak to a customer service rep. Response rates are shown to the customer, along with average response time. "We think this adds a new dynamic, a game dynamic, to sites to make them more responsive," said Ben-Ari.

Crowd (Paris, France)

Photo-sharing service. "Crowd is the closest thing to ubiquity until we sort out teleportation," begins Gabriel Hubert, with no shortage of gusto. Crowd lets users experience and share locations through real-time, geo-tagged photo sharing. There’s potential for geo-targeted ads, and to bring in online newspapers who could offer a live feed from professional photographers at news events. Crowd currently has 80 beta testers. Strapline: The World. Live. Now.

CubeSocial (Basingstoke, UK)

Professional relationship management for social networks. CubeSocial’s pitch is about new ways for professionals to win new businesses, and they think the way to do that is through social media. CubeSocial filters the most relevant content from networks, filters out the noise, "join the right conversations" and form the right relationships. Financial services, lawyers, accountants, consultants – these professionals are the target group. There’s a focus on Twitter and LinkedIn and co-founder Linda Cheung (former Morgan Stanley executive director) and Mark Bower (former lead program manager at Microsoft) think there’s far more potential in social networks than pushing daily deals to Facebook fans.

EarningsCast (London, UK)

Shareable, interactive media tool for earnings calls. Earnings calls are the most valuable interaction between investors and a business, but calls are not very accessible, recordable or personalisable. EarningsCast’s attempt to solve this is a management system that lets investors organise a portfolio of earnings calls with private chartroom, integrated live commentary from social networks, and shareable and embeddable files. Co-founder Madhusudana Ramakrishna said the plan is to make money by running advertising around these calls with a freemium model, and the private beta has engaged 3,000 companies so far. Public beta starts next month.

EnergyBob (Munich, Germany)

Smart heating meter. This is a smart domestic energy control system, adjusting your heating through The EnergyBob server which talks to Google’s Latitude’s API to determine when you’re on your way home, and when the heating needs to come on. The price is €99 installation and then €9 per month. There are rivals, but a rich potential market of 300m European homes and partnerships with European telcos and utility firms.

Farmeron (Osijek, Croatia)

Agricultural data management tool. The Croatian team behind Farmeron want to help farmers struggling with boring data management, putting a useable, simple interface on a business management tool. The team come from families with agricultural backgrounds but are trained programmers and have already raised €12,000 funding. In an industry where there are only two major competitors there’s the opportunity to exploit a huge market worth .34bn a year in agriculture and food advertising alone. Farmeron will offer animal and grain management (down to a field that lets users assign names to each animal. Nice) and production planning and performance. The tea is planning to launch the site latter this month.

Fractal (London, UK)

Email design tool. Fractal wants to make it easier to build and distribute email newsletters that work across multiple email clients. Co-founder Abs Farah said it’s a massive problem that isn’t addressed by current solutions, and is providing the service to marketing clients who can package Fractal as one benefit to their clients, as well as direct to designers. Fractal’s beta version launched eight weeks ago and version two is due out in two weeks. Farah quoted LinkedIn Reid Hoffman: "If you’re embarrassed by your first version, you’ve launched too late." "And we’re terribly embarrassed," said Farah. Fractal has finally settled for a cost of a 0 base fee, plus 0 per 1,000 API requests and a subscription model for regular users.

Gnergy (Sofia, Bulgaria)

Energy efficiency service. "Our vision is to enable people to make better energy efficiency decisions," said Gnergy co-founder Martin Gogov. Current solutions demand expensive smart meters or geeky engineering apps. Gnergy, however, asks questions to build a profile of your home and suggests steps for energy efficiency. There’s a gameification element where customers are motivated to create the most efficient home possible. Gnergy is freemium: free for consumers, and paid for industry professionals.

iubenda (Bologna, Italy)

Small print for websites. Any website in the world has a legal obligation to respect privacy, but most companies have the choice of either paying an expensive lawyer or copying and pasting privacy terms from another site that might not be relevant. iubenda offers a customisable, easy to embed tool to frame legal T&Cs for websites, and charges a small subscription fee. "We make lots of money!" co-founder Andrea Giannangelo gleefully exclaims. Six weeks since launch iubenda has already delivered to thousands of sites. And the goal: Conquer the footer of every website in the world.

Myows (Singapore)

Copyright management. Both founders Max Guedy and Chris Human have experienced their deisgn work and photography being reappropriated, but found it expensive and time-consuming to resolve infringement the traditional way. Myows – my original works – lets users store their copyrighted material (photos, artwork, music, videos) in one place, prove ownership of those, organise contracts that prove ownerships, manage rights and pursue infringements. In beta test until now, Myows is already storing 18,000 registered works and has solved 72 infringement cases.

OpenSignalMaps (London, UK)

Real-world maps of mobile signal coverage. Coverage is unpredictable yet vital for mobile users, but coverage maps from operators are useless. OpenSignalMaps is crowd-sourcing coverage information instead – in real time, and for free, explains co-founder Sina Khanifar. OpenSignalMaps’s Android app has had 800,000 downloads, and the site 40,000 site visitors per month so far. But the team of four Oxford physics graduates wants to do more with this data. For B2B, data could be sold back to the networks, who typically outsource this kind of data research. iPhone and Blackberry apps are coming soon.

• ReplyDone (Vienna, Austria)

Email efficiency tool. Ben Freundorfer thinks replying to emails is a waste of time, because humans are good at creating new content, and computers are good at finding old text. So ReplyDone intelligently suggests your reply. Starting as a Gmail extension, ReplyDone will learn how you reply to common emails and suggest replies. The long-term vision is more ambitious, and doesn’t represent current email systems at all but is an intelligent, auto-responding email client of the future. Amen to that.

RolePoint (London, UK)

Employee referral platform that uses social networks. HR managers can encourage staff to refer candidates they know, including the 85% of workers who are ‘passive candidates’- the ones who don’t know they are secretly open to new job offers . Co-founder Chris Le Breton said RolePoint will charge set fees to its target medium-large consultancies depending on organisation size. The target is initially the US. Talent, the strapline goes, knows talent.

Sntmnt (Amsterdam, Netherlands)

Market information service. Dutch startup Sntmnt helps pick stock to invest in by picking through market and online activity around companies and trends. Machine learning and predictive analysis tools are used to give a prediction of the "bullishness" of a particular market, accurate to 61% so far for the next 7 days. The Sntmnt team has been working on this for three months, but co-founder Vincent van Leeuwen says there’s huge potential in a market where many of the rivals are academics who have tried unconvincingly to commercialise research tools.

StorkUp (Troon, UK)

Shopping tool for parents. Shopping for baby products for first-time mums is expensive, time-consuming and expensive. StorkUp lets new mums create shopping lists and recommendations for other new mums, with personalised responses, price comparison and then allows them to buy online. Beyond birth, StorkUp wants to create lists for birthdays, school and beyond. The market is huge, with 4 million babies born in the US every year alone and an average ,000 spend in the first 12 months. Big parenting sites like Mumsnet and BabyCenter aren’t product focused and price comparison sites aren’t focused on specific communities.

TransferWise (London, UK)

Money transfer service. Taavet Hinrikus was the first employee at Skype, but his latest project is a money transfer solution that avoids expensive currency exchange fees. He said he knows of a North American bank that makes 0m profits per year from currency exchange alone. TransferWise is a P2P currency exchange; users say how much they want to send and to whom, transfer the money to a UK holding account, and TransferWise transfers the equivalent amount – based on market rates – to your friend for a flat fee of £1. Most clients are ex-pats, foreign students – and there’s one guy who uses the service to send his alimony payments. This time next year, TransferWise wants to be enabling £300m in transfers and will be adding support for US dollars and Swiss francs.

Travelstormer (London, UK)

Travel organisation tool. There’s an ugly truth about organising travel for your friends – it’s a big burden, and they are often ungrateful, say founders Colin Armstrong and George Coltart. Travelstormer wants to make the process much smoother, helping organise the research, discussion, purchase of tickets, itinerary building and departure for travel groups of more than three. It’s a very Facebook-like interface with maps for locations of hotels, voting tools to help decide on options and booking incentives that show deals available for various options. A nice touch is that the organiser gets a small commission if the group decides on the option he or she suggested – gameifying the decision making process. There’s a lot of noise in the travel sector but the biggest competitor is email where most research and decision takes place.

UntapTV (London, UK)

Mobile ad tool for TV. Why isn’t TV more engaging? When we don’t like ads, we find something to do for a few minutes. UntapTV wants to make ads more engaging by giving users incentives to keep watching the TV ads and interact more using their mobile, whether by entreating a competition, playing a game or giving feedback. It’s fast, scalable and brand-specific, says co-founder Tee Vachiramon. Brands can customise the ad experience by using the app, tap social networks and build relationships with consumers. UptapTV has an iPhone app in alpha, is in discussion with various brands over trials and plans to make money through fixed fees or pay per interaction.

• Read: Seedcamp’s Saul Klein on four years of tapping startup trends

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Apps rush: Say What?!, City Trading, Boxee for iPad and more

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Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Apps rush: Say What?!, City Trading, Boxee for iPad and more” was written by Stuart Dredge, for guardian.co.uk on Wednesday 10th August 2011 12.39 Asia/Calcutta

A burst of 6 apps for your consideration

Say What?!

We wrote about London startup 8linQ earlier in 2011: a joint venture including former developers of DJ Hero, it’s focusing on mobile and tablet music games. Say What?! is its first effort: a game based around tapping icons to match the lyrics of songs from Kasabian, the Zutons, Scouting for Girls and – yes! – The Nolans.
iPhone

City Trading

City Trading is a BlackBerry OS 6 app from financial trading firm City Index. It claims to be the first live spread betting and CFD trading app for BlackBerry, letting people trade around the clock.
BlackBerry

Kinsky

Hi-fi firm Linn has released this iPhone and iPad app for people who want to remotely control their Linn DS system at home.
iPhone / iPad

Boxee for iPad

Boxee is best known for its set-top box, but now the company has a spin-off iPad app. It lets users stream video from their computer to their iPad over Wi-Fi, while also pulling down web videos shared by friends on Facebook, Twitter and Tumblr. Video can also be sent wirelessly to the Boxee box itself, for bigger screen viewing.
iPad

Bon Appetit: Pasta Perfect

The latest iPad cookbook app to hit the App Store comes from Bon Appetit, offering 100 old and new pasta-based recipes. It’s the work of Conde Nast Digital.
iPad

Sketch Pad

Sketch Pad is an innovative app for HTC’s Android tablets. Well, the ones that support its Scribble technology anyway. The idea: draw, write musical notation or scribble notes using the stylus from the HTC Flyer.
Android

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Facebook buys e-book publisher, largest-ever state cyberattacks uncovered, and more

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Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Boot up: Facebook buys e-book publisher, largest-ever state cyberattacks uncovered, and more” was written by Josh Halliday, for guardian.co.uk on Wednesday 3rd August 2011 13.00 Asia/Calcutta

A quick burst of 7 links for you to chew over, as picked by the Technology team

Amazon App Store: Rotten To The Core >> Shifty Jelly’s blog of mystery

This is a big problem for Amazon: “Amazon’s biggest feature by far, has been their Free App Of The Day promotion. Publicly their terms say that they pay developers 20% of the asking price of an app, even when they give it away free. To both consumers and naive developers alike, this seems like a big chance to make something rare in the Android world: real money. But here’s the dirty secret Amazon don’t want you to know, they don’t pay developers a single cent.”

Biggest-ever series of cyber attacks uncovered, U.N. hit >> Reuters

“Security experts have discovered the biggest series of cyber attacks to date, involving the infiltration of the networks of 72 organizations including the United Nations, governments and companies around the world.”

McAfee said there was just one state behind all of the attacks, but declined to point the finger. A security researcher apparently briefed on the study said that the evidence points to China. Over to you, China.

Why Did Facebook Buy an e-Book Publisher? >> NYTimes.com

The most plausible theory is, as ever, that it’s more about the talent behind the product than the product itself.

We’ve been acquired by Facebook >> Push Pop Press

“Although Facebook isn’t planning to start publishing digital books, the ideas and technology behind Push Pop Press will be integrated with Facebook, giving people even richer ways to share their stories. With millions of people publishing to Facebook each day, we think it’s going to be a great home for Push Pop Press.”

Zero-day vulnerability in many Wordpress themes >> Mark Maunder

“The Exec summary: An image resizing utility called timthumb.php is widely used by many WordPress themes. Google shows over 39 million results for the script name. If your WordPress theme is bundled with an unmodified timthumb.php as many commercial and free themes are, then you should immediately either remove it or edit it and set the $allowedSites array to be empty.”

Internet Explorer users have lower IQ says study >> BBC News

“The results suggested that Internet Explorer surfers had an average IQ in the low eighties. Chrome, Firefox and Safari rated over 100, while minority browsers Opera and Camino had an “exceptionally higher” score of over 120.
“AptiQuant stressed that using IE doesn’t mean you have low intelligence. “What it really says is that if you have a low IQ then there are high chances that you use Internet Explorer,” said AptiQuant CEO Leonard Howard.”

No, don’t ask him to explain it again.

Health warning: this turned out to be a bogus story.

Bing’s battle with Google: how long is “long term”? >> Search Engine Land

Points out that Microsoft’s protestations that it’s into Bing for the long term (a good thing, since it really started in 2005; all that’s happened since then has been two rebrandings) don’t mean much if you don’t define “success” or quite when you have entered the “long term”.

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Boot up: white iPhone explained. RIM’s profit warning, Notion Ink reviewed and more

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Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Boot up: white iPhone explained. RIM’s profit warning, Notion Ink reviewed and more” was written by Charles Arthur, for guardian.co.uk on Friday 29th April 2011 13.00 Asia/Calcutta

A burst of 12 links for you to chew over, as picked by the Technology team

BlackBerry maker RIM’s shares plunge on profit warning >> Financial Times
“RIM’s stock fell .17, or 11 per cent, to .43 in late trading on Thursday, after earlier closing at .59 on Nasdaq.
“Underscoring its problems, RIM said BlackBerry shipments would be at the lower end of the range of 13.5m-14.5m units it had projected last month and the mix of devices it sells would shift towards cheaper models. ”In a tense call with analysts after the profit warning was announced, Jim Basillie, RIM’s co-chief executive, insisted the company’s current problems were transitory rather than the start of a longer-term decline. “We all wish we could have got the new products out quicker,” he said, “but that just hasn’t happened.” Not a call they’d have wanted to make just as BlackBerry World – the fiesta for developers and clients – is kicking off in Florida.

We thought ’sold out’ sounded better than ‘awaiting delivery’ >> AllThingsD
More tricks to play with sales channels, this time from Asus: “J.P. Morgan’s Mark Moskowitz’s informal survey of Best Buy and Target outletts… found that most hadn’t received any Transformer tablets yet. “All stores we spoke to had not even received the Transformer tablet,” Moskowitz says. “The general read was that supply would not reach most stores until mid-May. As a result, we ask how the Asus tablet can be sold out when it did not arrive in the first place.”

How the iPhone knows where you are >> Macworld
Read this and you will, finally, understand this whole saga.

The unedifying arrogance of PC journalists >> Ian Betteridge
“he reason that Barry [Collins] – and plenty of other tech journalists – call Apple arrogant is mainly because Apple doesn’t jump when the journalists tell them. Apple, in fact, has a very bad reputation amongst tech journalists for being one of the least responsive companies out there. And that reputation is, I can tell you from years of experience, entirely justified.”

Biggest Threat to Apple: Google Chrome OS >> TheStreet
“Starting some time around July or August, Google’s partners Samsung and Acer will launch laptops and perhaps also a desktop or two, based on Chrome OS. I am guessing laptops will start at 9 and “naked” desktops at 9. Given the superb performance of these Chrome OS PCs, with boot-up times (from cold) of less than even Apple’s MacBook Air, some consumers and enterprises will pick Chrome OS PCs over the much more expensive Apple PCs.”
A good example of how price can blind you to why people buy computers. Would someone who buys a ChromeOS computer really have been in the market for an Apple device? Far more likely they’d have been looking at cheap PCs.
Don’t forget either that the first generation of netbooks running Linux had huge returns because people couldn’t make them work: they expected (and later got) Windows. Expect something similar for ChromeOS.

Microsoft net income vs Apple net income from 1980 >> Wolfram|Alpha
Interesting to compare, using the smart statistical search engine. Note how Apple’s profit falls well below zero in 1996-8.

The Great White iPhone: How Apple Spun A Tech Fail Into A PR Win >> Fast Company
Worth it for the illustration alone, but interesting analysis: “It didn’t arrive when the iPhone 4 went on sale in mid-2010 because Apple couldn’t get its hardware working properly–the white coloring, combined with the iPhone 4’s unusual glass frame meant the phone’s proximity sensor and camera unit didn’t function as they needed to. In other words, it was a big technological failure, from one of the world’s biggest companies on one of its market-defining products.”

Apple’s Not Spying on You; You’re Spying for Apple >> Gottabemobile
“Apple asks for diagnostic and usage information about your iPhone, which is fair enough to do. However, I don’t believe tracking tower and hotspot locations counts. That information is external to the device, not part of it. If Apple wanted to collect data on my iPhone’s location, I would consider that a fair part of that agreement. But instead they’re using my iPhone to collect tower and hotspot locations, and that’s not right. I only signed up to give info about my device, not those belonging to other people. ”The lack of transparency on that point is a serious problem, far more legitimate than the paranoia circulating. To be clear, I don’t think there’s anything wrong with reporting tower and hotspot locations back to Apple. I just think this falls outside the range of “diagnostic and usage information about your iPhone”. It’s about property that belongs to others. Therefore, it requires separate, specific permission, as well as a detailed explanation of the risk involved.

With iPhone’s secrets, Apple loses track of reality >> ZDNet UK
Rupert Goodwins: “Steve Jobs normally talks to the press about as often as the Earth gets visited by Halley’s Comet. And, like the comet, it’s usually a portent of doom.  ”There have been three sightings in living memory: the iPhone 4’s Antennagate, the as-yet-unexplained rant against Android and tablets in last October’s earnings call, and yesterday’s response to the discovery of iOS 4’s unexpectedly good memory for location. Let’s call it Trackergate. ”Leaving aside the Android rant — perhaps Eric Schmidt ran over the family cat — the two other responses show strong similarities, and make a fascinating insight into how a company reacts when it’s backed into a corner and can’t ignore the flack.”
Suffice it to say, Goodwins ain’t buying it.

Notion Ink Adam review >> Engadget
“Notion Ink truly did come up with a number of fantastic ideas for the Adam tablet. They do show. But so little of their light shines through the muck of buggy software and touchy hardware that we’re afraid even the best of them will be completely dismissed and ignored… ”Features like USB host functionality, a desktop-class web browser, a sunlight-readable screen and a multitask-friendly interface aren’t just value-add bullet points that justify a higher price — they’re the difference between a tablet that can augment an existing computer, and one that can replace it altogether and thrust users into a new paradigm. We’re sad to see the Adam couldn’t make it happen, but there’s still an opportunity for other manufacturers to take up the torch.”

Free anti-virus for Mac named Best Anti-Malware solution at SC Awards >> Naked Security
Beating the Windows products. We’ve no idea what the criteria for winning actually were.

First Day PlayBook sales: is 50,000 too big a number? >> AllThingsD
“Jeffries analyst Peter Misek figures RIM sold about 45,000 PlayBooks Tuesday, with pre-orders accounting for about 25,000 of the total. RBC* analyst Mike Abramsky’s first day sales estimate is in the same range, but a bit higher: 50,000, including pre-sales. ”‘The launch appears to have been stronger than the launch of Motorola’s Xoom Tablet, or the Samsung Galaxy Tab, although it’s too early to judge sustainability,’ said RBC analyst Mike Abramsky in a note to clients, adding that, as of Wednesday, checks of 180 stores across 10 cities in the United States and Canada show rising PlayBook stockouts. ”But some analysts I’ve spoken with feel those estimates are overly bullish, given the device’s limited availability. 50,000 sold seems an awfully big number when even the Broadway Staples store in downtown New York City had just 10 PlayBooks on hand at launch and a clerk at the Bay Area Best Buy I called described inventory as ‘a handful.’”

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