Thursday, March 28, 2013

Sweet? Biz Stone Is Poised to Launch New Mobile Startup Called Jelly.

Sweet? Biz Stone Is Poised to Launch New Mobile Startup Called Jelly.

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According to sources, Twitter co-founder Biz Stone is close to launching a new startup called Jelly, which one person called a “native mobile” effort.

While it’s not clear exactly what that means, sources said the well-known entrepreneur has already hired four or five employees to form a team on the mystery product that will likely be aimed at smartphones and tablets.

It’s an interesting move, since Stone is also running a small incubator called Obvious with one of his Twitter co-founders, Ev Williams. They left their daily roles at the high-profile microblogging service to create Obvious, which has startups such as Lift, Branch and Medium in its portfolio.

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There has been low-level chatter in Silicon Valley about Stone’s startup, which some have taken to mean he is no longer working as much with Williams at Obvious. But sources said that is not the case and both are involved in helping their small group of startups.

That said, Williams has been focusing more on Medium, an effort to rejigger blogging and content platforms. Meanwhile, another Obvious principal, Jason Goldman, has been focused on Branch, an online conversation-focused site.

Presumably, Obvious will invest in Jelly.

AT&T Samsung Galaxy S4 Preorders Start April 16

AT&T Samsung Galaxy S4 Preorders Start April 16

AT&T announced today that it will start taking preorders for the Samsung Galaxy S4 on April 16. Pricing is set at $ 250 with a two-year contract, but the carrier stopped short of revealing when the device will actually ship. Details will be provided closer to launch, and customers can sign up for email updates on AT&T’s website.

Klout Hooks Deeper Into Bing and Instagram Data

Klout Hooks Deeper Into Bing and Instagram Data

Social media influence scoring startup Klout announced Thursday that it will more fully integrate users’ Instagram and Microsoft Bing accounts. Now a users’ Instagram influence will be factored into a user’s overall Klout score. Bing accounts are able to be connected, but the data will be considered in Klout scores in the future. In the past, the company connected to a number of other accounts to measure social influence, including Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.

Rosewill Blackhawk Ultra Case Review: Were It Not For Competition

Rosewill Blackhawk Ultra Case Review: Were It Not For Competition

Introducing the Rosewill Blackhawk Ultra

We've long maintained that Rosewill's Thor v2 is one of the best deals floating around for enthusiasts. In that enclosure, Rosewill has a product that's fairly feature rich, quiet, and offers stellar performance. Yet the Thor v2 isn't the flagship of their enclosure line, but today we have that flagship in house. Given its predecessor's stellar performance, expectations are pretty high for the Blackhawk Ultra.

This case is huge, enthusiast class through and through, but it's far less ostentatious than the Thor v2. Our rep at Rosewill has repeatedly cited the Blackhawk Ultra as a bestseller and consistently highly rated enclosure, and it's not hard to see why users might buy it without a second thought: in every sense of the word, this case has a lot of fans. Just about anywhere Rosewill could put a fan, they did, and you'll see when I start breaking it down exactly what I mean.

Rosewill Blackhawk Ultra Specifications
Motherboard Form Factor Mini-ITX, Micro-ATX, ATX, E-ATX, XL-ATX, HPTX
Drive Bays External 4x 5.25" (5.25" to 3.5" adapters included)
Internal 10x 3.5"/2.5"
Cooling Front 2x 140mm red LED intake fan, 2x 140mm intake fan (behind drive cage)
Rear 1x 140mm exhaust fan (supports 120mm)
Top 2x 230mm red LED exhaust fan (supports 2x 180mm, 3x 120mm/140mm)
Side 1x 230mm red LED intake fan (supports 9x 120mm)
1x 120mm/140mm fan mount behind motherboard tray
Bottom 1x 120mm/140mm fan mount
Expansion Slots 10
I/O Port 4x USB 2.0, 2x USB 3.0, 1x Headphone, 1x Mic
Power Supply Size ATX
Clearances HSF 170mm
PSU 220mm
GPU 404mm
Dimensions 9.45" x 25" x 25.99"
240mm x 635mm x 660mm
Weight 36.6 lbs. / 16.6 kg
Special Features USB 3.0 via internal header
Hotswap SATA bay
Secondary power supply bay
Internal fan hubs
Price $ 179

Rosewill cites the Blackhawk Ultra as supporting the Corsair H100, which is almost like saying something might explode in a Michael Bay film. The reality is that the Blackhawk Ultra has very healthy radiator support, and a lot of that is due to the substantially increased height as a result of the secondary power supply bay at the top of the case. This bay is blocked off initially, and you'll have to remove one of the 230mm fans from the top to use it.

In keeping with the Thor v2's design, though, it's interesting to see just how much mileage Rosewill is willing to get out of these enormous 230mm fans. Suffice to say that cooling shouldn't be a huge issue, but at eight fans installed stock, it's easy to suspect the Blackhawk Ultra will have trouble with noise. That trouble may be compounded by the one feature the Thor v2 has that the Blackhawk Ultra lacks: a fan controller. Rosewill opted instead for a pair of fan hubs inside the enclosure that support five fans apiece, and the whole thing comes wired and ready to go for the most part.

Twitter's Developer Event Will Deal With Cards

Twitter's Developer Event Will Deal With Cards

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Like I said before: The future of Twitter’s platform is all in the cards.

Twitter plans to introduce a new set of mobile-focused features to third-party developers at an event at the company’s San Francisco headquarters next week, making it easier for outsiders to create and fill the Twitter-verse with higher-quality content.

The crux of the event is focused on Twitter’s “Cards” technology, according to sources familiar with the matter. Cards are essentially a way for third parties to incorporate rich multimedia â€" article snippets, video and images â€" inside of tweets themselves, instead of only including text-based links.

At the event, Twitter plans to announce additional types of Cards beyond the three that third parties currently have available, according to sources. The aim, Twitter will argue, is to help app developers incorporate their content into the tweets themselves, which will help drive traffic back to developers’ applications.

Since the company debuted the feature last year, Twitter Cards have slowly rolled out to select big-brand partners, and then subsequently to smaller organizations after completing an application and review process. Twitter will continue to encourage developers to incorporate the Cards technology into outside apps, and continue to ask developers to apply for the program.

twitter_gearI pinged Twitter to ask for more details, but the company had nothing to share with me.

The initiative is one of a series of moves for Twitter’s grand developer platform plan, as the company aims to create a full ecosystem of rich media content on the service. Over the past year, the company has moved beyond simply providing a stream full of text to users, making the service more visually oriented. The rationale is simple â€" people engage with and click more on rich, visual content. It’s true for Facebook, and it’s true for Twitter. So pushing outsiders to provide more of that content and push it into Twitter’s stream is definitely good for Twitter’s long-term engagement prospects on the whole.

As Twitter will argue next week, it’s not just good for Twitter. Developers who build tweeting options into their apps, and subsequently include the Cards technology in those tweets, have a much better shot at distributing their applications to a wider audience. Right now, small-time developers are stuck buried inside Apple’s App Store or Google Play, making it difficult to gain users.

Currently, I’d say Twitter isn’t necessarily viewed as the go-to social platform for app distribution. Facebook, on the other hand, has made a massive pitch to third-party developers over the past year, asking them to not only build apps atop the Facebook platform, but also to use Facebook’s mobile application installation advertisement products â€" basically a way of paying Facebook to promote your app â€" in order to increase distribution. I’ve heard those ads work fairly well for developers who are using them.

Twitter doesn’t want Facebook to be seen as the only social platform for app distribution.

So yes, it’s sorta nerdy stuff, and no, it’s not an earth-shattering announcement. But it’s still another small step for the company on the road to creating a more robust, developer-friendly platform.

Viral Video: Apples, Not Apps

Viral Video: Apples, Not Apps

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Or perhaps an apple and not Apple.

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Cyber Attack on Spam Fighter Said to Be Over

Cyber Attack on Spam Fighter Said to Be Over

Companies that monitor Internet traffic said Wednesday that an intensive cyber attack against a European spam-fighting organization has ended.

The attack against the Spamhaus Project Ltd., a nonprofit group that tracks spammers, was massive enough to slow some of the traffic on the Web to a crawl.

Read the rest of this post on the original site »

//PART 2