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TechCrunch blogged What Games Are: Cometh The Hour, Cometh The Xbox? 5 hours ago
With Xbox 360 having started well but ended in a very confused state, I worry that Microsoft is about to carry over much of its baggage to the new console. Will the company make the same mistake of not listening to the market that it has often made in recent years? Will it continue to believe that there is a burgeoning market for an everything box? Or will it refocus on what matters?
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TechCrunch blogged Google Now Introduces Mark Up Tools For Select Partners To Flag Flights, Hotel Stays And Reservations In Emails 1 day ago
Google made a relatively quiet announcement today regarding how it's pushing the developer ecosystem forward around Google Now, its intelligent personal assistant for Android devices. The company has begun extending mark up tools for emails from select partners, which help highlight flight schedules, hotel bookings and various types of reservations, to make sure that Gmail can spot that information and use it to auto-generate helpful reminders in Google Now.
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TechCrunch blogged PSA: The Original Karateka Is Now Available For iOS And Android 2 days ago
I remember waking up 6am, going downstairs, and firing up my Atari 800XL. The disk labeled Karateka inserted, the drive would grunt a few dozen times and the screen would flash. Suddenly, with barely any warning, the opening titles would appear and then the music would start - six notes to signal a game that was menacing in its simplicity. The story was simply told. Characters stood in darkened rooms. The Shogun aimed a finger at a door and the princess was forced into bondage. You were the K...
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TechCrunch blogged Here's A Weekend Project For First-Time Tinkerers: Turn Your Converse Into A DIY Light Show 2 days ago
The weekend isn't upon us just yet, but here's a little project to tuck away for when the Sunday doldrums set in -- the New York-based tinkerers/part suppliers at Adafruit Industries have worked up a way to give your old pair of Chuck Taylors a bit of luminescent DIY flair.
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TechCrunch blogged Instabeat Is Revolutionary HUD For Swimming Goggles You Can Back On Indiegogo 2 days ago
While the world goes gaga for Google Glass, a small startup has come up with an intriguing new take on a device which can display information before your eyes. Instabeat is head-up display unit which attaches to swimming goggles and monitors your heart rate, calories, laps and turns during your swim. It's been live on crowd funding platform Indiegogo for a few days and is already poised to reach its modest funding target, meaning the product will actually ship.
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TechCrunch blogged Google's Three-Hour I/O Keynote Boils Down To These Highlights And One Theme: Foundation 3 days ago
Today's three-hour-long Google I/O keynote came with plenty of announcements, but the company mostly assured us that it is focused on building frameworks that can benefit developers and consumers. We saw a more unified company that needed three hours in one session to get their message across. Breaking today's keynote up into two days would have disrupted the momentum coming out of a company that closed the day at an all-time high on the stock market. Key areas of the business saw updates, al...
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TechCrunch blogged Death By A Thousand Cuts? Google Wallet's Plan To Take On PayPal Leverages Chrome, Android, Google+, Gmail & More 3 days ago
Flying under the radar amid a flurry of announcements coming out of the Google I/O developer conference this morning, is the bigger news of how Google is stepping up its efforts to compete with online payment giants like PayPal with a revamped checkout process for the web, mobile web, within mobile applications running on Android, and more. It’s a proposed death to PayPal by a thousand cuts, leveraging everything from Chrome to Android and even Gmail. What Google hasn’t quite worked out yet i...
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TechCrunch blogged Google Maps API Gets A Visual Refresh, Available For Opt-In Today, Coming To Most Sites In August 3 days ago
At its I/O developer conference, Google today announced a new Maps API for mobile developers, updates to Maps for Android and iOS and a completely refreshed Google Maps experience on the desktop. After the main keynote, however, Google also announced a major visual refresh for sites that use its Google Maps API.
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TechCrunch blogged Google Folds Wallet Support Into Gmail So You Can Send Money As Attachments 3 days ago
Phew. Google just spent the last three hours or so showing off new developer tools, APIs, service overhauls, and the occasional gadget, but not everything the search giant rolled out today got a turn under the spotlights at the Moscone Center. Case in point: according to a post on the official Google Commerce blog, Google Wallet support has been baked into Gmail, so users will soon be able to send each other money by simply shooting each other emails.
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TechCrunch blogged Hasselhoff Has Germany, Path Has France 3 days ago
As one is wont to do, I was checking the French iOS app store rankings this a.m. just to make sure that my old mainstay app "ameli, l'Assurance Maladie" was still in spot No. 3 when sacrebleu! -- Path was the No. 1 free app in France. Now I've never really clicked with Path, rarely checked in with people there (it's super awkward to name drop digitally) and have too much FOMO to stomach scrolling through all the things you people are doing on weekends without me. Though I found the redesign t...
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TechCrunch blogged Cydia Substrate Comes To Android (Cydia Store Next?) 4 days ago
Cydia, a platform commonly thought of as the alternative app store for jailbroken iPhones and iPads, has just today arrived on Android of all places. Though Android is by its nature more open and customizable than Apple's locked-down iOS, it now has a growing collection of apps designed for power users who root their devices - a process that's similar in spirit to the iOS jailbreak. Cydia for Android could soon become home to some of those same tweaks in time - or at least allow developers to...
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TechCrunch blogged Angry Birds Maker Rovio Will Now Publish And Market Select Third-Party Games 4 days ago
Rovio Entertainment, maker of the popular line of “Angry Birds” games, announced today that its expanding its business to include third-party titles, which it will publish, distribute and market to consumers. The new program is being called “Rovio Stars,” and makes available the company’s expertise as well as its marketing teams to other publishers. The first title to be released under the new effort is “Icebreaker: A Viking Voyage,” by Nitrome Ltd. The Icebreaker game, which follows the adve...
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TechCrunch blogged 500 Startups Accelerator Unleashes Its Sixth Class, A Melting Pot Of Mostly International, Totally Ghetto Fabulous Startups 4 days ago
500 Startups today is announcing the next 28 companies to take part in its Accelerator program, unleashing a largely international class of startups who have come to Mountain View to accelerate their startup progress. There are 28 companies in this Accelerator class, and as usual there's a bunch of diversity there.
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TechCrunch blogged Square Debuts Its Latest Hardware, Stand, A $299 Card Swiper For iPad Registers 4 days ago
At an event in San Francisco at Blue Bottle Coffee, Square debuted a stand built specifically for the iPad, which turns the device into a card-swiping register. Hardware has always been a part of who we are and who we want to be, says Jack Dorsey, CEO and co-founder of Square. "We wanted to build software and hardware that matches," he says.
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TechCrunch blogged Study: 57% Of Consumers Worldwide Say They Would Trust Driverless Cars, 46% Would Let Their Kids Ride In Them 4 days ago
Cisco today announced the results of its study into consumer’s thoughts about connected and driverless cars. While a large part of the study focused on the role of technology in the car shopping experience (unsurprisingly, nobody likes car dealerships), the study also looked into drivers’ attitudes about driverless cars. Surprisingly, 57% of all of the respondents said that they would trust driverless cars to drive them around, but there are some clear differences between different markets. A...
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TechCrunch blogged Daft Punk Fights Piracy With Convenience, Streams Entire “Random Access Memories” Album Days Before Release 5 days ago
After weeks of teasing, endless itty-bitty leaks, and about a zillion radio plays of the one track they'd released so far, the entirety of Daft Punk's new Random Access Memories has just hit iTunes, days before the official release. "Why would they do this?" you might ask. "Isn't this just giving pirates a hi-fi copy to spread around?"
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TechCrunch blogged Watch The Arrested Development Trailer Here 5 days ago
Posted without comment because it really doesn't need a comment. I mean, it's the new Arrested Development trailer -- just watch it and count down the days until the Bluth family returns to Netflix on May 26.
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TechCrunch blogged From The Garage To 200 Employees In 3-Years; How Nest Thermostats Were Born. 1 week ago
Editor’s note: Derek Andersen is the founder of Startup Grind, a 40-city community bringing the global startup world together while educating, inspiring, and connecting entrepreneurs. I remember when the press first hit about Nest Labs, the guys behind the iPod/iPhone were taking on thermostats everywhere! A collective “huh?” went through the tech industry. It felt like the tech version of the Avengers got together to build an office park, not save the world. After sitting down with Nest co-f...
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TechCrunch blogged Mark Zuckerberg's Lobby Unravelling As Musk And Sacks Leave 1 week ago
The technology industry’s newest high-powered political lobby, FWD.us, is unraveling just a month after it launched, as two of its biggest partners, Tesla’s Elon Musk and Yammer’s David Sacks, leave the organization. Begun with a reported $20 million of Mark Zuckerberg’s own money, and rare op-ed by the politically shy Facebook founder, FWD.us has faced a torrent of criticism over funding advertisements that praise Republicans who support the controversial Keystone pipeline (below). Environme...
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TechCrunch blogged Nokia Lumia 928 Windows Phone With 8.7-Megapixel PureView Camera Available May 16 For $99.99 On Contract 1 week ago
Nokia has officially pulled back the curtain on the Lumia 928 Windows Phone 8 device, which advertises its PureView camera as its marquee feature. The new flagship phone offers an 8.7-megapixel front-facing camera, which boasts optical image stabilization for better low-light photography and more stable pics overall.
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TechCrunch blogged After 10M Downloads, BlueStacks Takes On OUYA With Game Console And $6.99 All-You-Can-Play Service 1 week ago
BlueStacks, the startup known for bringing Android apps to PCs and Macs, has been growing like a weed. Last week, the company announced that it had passed the 10 million user milestone, nearly half of which were added in the first quarter of this year. Today, hot on the heels of the news that OUYA has landed $15 million from Kleiner Perkins to bring its affordable, $99 Android-friendly gaming console to the masses, BlueStacks is firing back with some news of its own.
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TechCrunch blogged Pomplamoose's Jack Conte Creates A Subscription-Based Funding Site For Artists 1 week ago
Jack Conte is an Internet musician who became an Internet sensation and now, thanks to Patreon, he's an Internet entrepreneur.
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TechCrunch blogged Identified Looks To Solve Social Media's Dirty Data Problem For Recruiters With Help From Former LinkedIn Data Gurus 1 week ago
In November 2011, Identified emerged out of public beta on a mission to create a better professional job search engine. Built on top of Facebook data, Identified set out to nibble at LinkedIn's lead in this space by giving both job seekers and companies a better way to connect -- and find talent. To do that, the startup offered a product that it promised would become something akin to the "Google Page Rank for people," assigning a numerical rank (out of 100) to professionals and companies bas...
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TechCrunch blogged Backed By Rappers Nas And Pusha T, Urban Culture-Focused Media Company Mass Appeal Raises $1.2M 1 week ago
Mass Appeal, a joint venture that's both reviving the Broolyn-based, graffiti-focused magazine of the same name and also moving into online content, is announcing that it has raised $1.2 million in funding. It's backed by a mix of traditional firms and figures from the hip hop world. The rapper, (and one-time TechCrunch contributor) Nas announced last month that he had invested a "six-figure sum" in the company, and he's also serving as Mass Appeal's associate publisher. Publisher Peter Bitte...
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TechCrunch blogged BitTorrent Steps Up Monetization Efforts By Taking Its (Potentially Paywalled) Content Bundles Into Alpha 1 week ago
BitTorrent is taking a new step today in its efforts to help creators make money (and make money itself) — it's releasing a new content packaging format called the BitTorrent Bundle in alpha mode. The company has already been working with different creators to launch promotional bundles. For example, author Tim Ferriss packaged chapters of his book with other supplementary media material as a way to promote sales of his newest work, while musicians like DJ Shadow have used BitTorrent to promo...
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TechCrunch blogged Now 200M Users Strong, Viber Launches Desktop App With Video Calling In Version 3.0 1 week ago
Viber has made quite a name for itself as a global mobile first company, but today that all changes as the company breaks ground in the desktop space. That means that starting today, Viber's 200 million+ users will have access to their Viber contacts from both mobile and desktop. The rollout is part of a bigger push from Viber, including an update to its iOS, Android and BlackBerry apps to version 3.0. But the real story is this desktop app.
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TechCrunch blogged Protesters Smash Google Shuttle Bus Piñata In Fight Against Rent Increases [Video] 1 week ago
Sick of high-paid tech employees driving up rent prices, protestors in San Francisco's Mission neighborhood held a "Anti-Gentrification Block Party" and beat on a Google bus pinata before cops broke up the crowd. The area has long been home to artists and Mexican-American families. But they're being forced out as techies move in, their employers set up shuttle stops, and housing prices skyrocket.
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TechCrunch blogged Adobe's Hardware Experiments Are More Than Just Hobbies: Hands-On With Project Context 1 week ago
At its MAX conference in Los Angeles today, Adobe showed quite a few products that will soon be available to its customers, but it also highlighted a number of hardware experiments, including Project Context, a totally re-imagined way for creating magazine layouts, as well as an advanced stylus and a ruler for touchscreens. After the keynote this morning, I had a chance to sit back with Adobe’s David Macy to talk about both the newly announced Mighty pen and Napoleon ruler for touchscreens, a...
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TechCrunch blogged An Anti-Abuse Ad With A Secret Message Only Children Can See 1 week ago
In order to discreetly reach abused children, one aid organization designed a clever billboard that only displays a hotline number for people shorter than 4'5". The secret is a precisely serrated surface, a Lenticular lens, that reflects light differently to those looking from above and below a specified height. Shorter people (children) see the following message on a street sign: "If somebody hurts you, phone us and we’ll help you," along with a confidential number to call the Spanish organi...
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TechCrunch blogged Tapgram Aims To Make Messaging Easier For People Who Can't Easily Communicate 1 week ago
There were plenty of promising startups showing off at Disrupt NY 2013’s Startup Alley (one of them even became a Battlefield finalist as an audience choice), but none managed to yank on the ol’ heartstrings quite as much Tapgram. Long story short, Tapgram aims to dramatically simplify the process of communicating for people who have trouble doing it otherwise.
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TechCrunch blogged 6 Experts on Speeding Up Data 1 week ago
Speed. That’s what it’s all about these days. The problem: it’s still more effective to use FedEx than trying to squeeze a data load across a network. It’s an absurd reality when it requires a plane to move data from one place to another. It’s not necessary to move terabytes of data all day, all night. Moving hard drives across the continent for a feature film is different from pulling in data to analyze and then presenting in an application. But the loads will have to get heavier with the co...
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TechCrunch blogged Temptation 1 week ago
Editor’s Note: Nir Eyal writes about the intersection of psychology, technology, and business at NirAndFar.com. Follow him @nireyal. How do products tempt us? What makes them so alluring? It is easy to assume we crave delicious food or impulsively check email because we find pleasure in the activity. But pleasure is just half the story. Temptation is more than just the promise of reward. Recent advances in neuroscience allow us to peer into the brain, providing a greater understanding of what...
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TechCrunch blogged Barley Aims To Be The Absolute Simplest Way To Create And Edit Websites 2 weeks ago
Sometimes the simplest product demos can be effective. Take a new web editor called Barley. To show off the product, co-founder Colin Devroe opened me a regular old web page, then changed the wording of the page with just a few keystrokes. A small editing menu opened as he typed, but didn't have to access an admin dashboard, open a separate editor, edit any HTML, or anything like that. To be clear, there was more to the demo — but that was the heart of it. The point is to offer a web page edi...
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TechCrunch blogged Celebrate Star Wars Day By Blinding General Grievous, Losing R2 2 weeks ago
Beep boop boop bee squeee! Happy May 4th a k a Star Wars Day (say the date out loud and you'll figure out why). In celebration, quite a few hardware vendors have released special gear for the day, thereby allowing you to celebrate the magic of George Lucas in proper Mandalorian fashion.
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TechCrunch blogged Audience Development Startup LinkSmart Raises $5 Million From Foundry And Costanoa 2 weeks ago
A little less than a year ago, a little company called LinkSmart launched to help publishers use text links to get their readers reading more. Now it has raised $5 million in Series B funding to take its technology for growing audiences and make it more widely available. The financing was led by Foundry Group and Costanoa Venture Partners.
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TechCrunch blogged With New Service, Any Device Could Run Almost Any Program From Anywhere 2 weeks ago
In the near future, the only difference between a smartphone, tablet, and a laptop will be the size of the screen. Hardcore gamers could play 3D intensive games in a smartphone, and Michael Bay could render “Transformers 4″ from his iPad. Otoy, an LA-based software company, has discovered a way to stream any application to any device, completely through a web browser. It’s difficult to overestimate the potential disruptiveness of Otoy, as a breakthrough streaming service could, in the near fu...
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TechCrunch blogged Here's What The Large Hadron Collider Looks Like Through Google Glass 2 weeks ago
If Google is worried about Google Glass being too "nerdy", they probably wouldn't be sending people rockin' the Glass into the heart of the most gloriously nerdy thing in the world, the Large Hadron Collider. Fortunately, Google doesn't seem to care (nor should they) if their amazing little experiment gets a few knocks along the way. As a result, we get videos like this one.
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TechCrunch blogged Acer Goes To A Whole New Level Of Crazy With The Aspire R7 2 weeks ago
Acer just announced the Aspire R7, a strange hybrid of a desktop all-in-one, laptop, and a tablet that was previously teased in some promotional Star Trek commercials. It’s honestly really, really weird. We always expected that Windows 8 would lead to some really strange convertible touchscreen devices, but the Aspire R7 is a whole new kind of crazy. The first thing you’ll notice about the Aspire R7 is that Acer seems to have forgotten how laptops are made. The trackpad sits behind the keyboa...
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TechCrunch blogged Step Is A Journaling App That Helps You Make Sense Of Your Life 2 weeks ago
There are already plenty of journaling apps out there, but Step stands out as a personal data aggregator that records and helps you make sense of your life's minutiae.
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TechCrunch blogged Songza Launches Version 3.0 With Improved Search, Quicker Navigation, And Revamped UI 2 weeks ago
Songza, the app that matches expert-created music playlists to your mood or activity, has just released a huge update to its iOS app, streamlining the experience quite a bit and cleaning up the UI to ensure that users are getting the best music to match their mood and activity in the fastest time possible. To start, you’ll notice straight off the bat that the Concierge screen has changed dramatically, with new colors in the background and the removal of the navigation bar at the bottom of the...
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TechCrunch blogged Heads Up! Game From Impending Shows How Branded Can Be Beautiful 2 weeks ago
A new game today available for iOS devices called Heads Up! provides an entertaining experience you could only have with a smartphone, with a simple game mechanic and a video sharing feature that means the fun can last well beyond the initial play period. The game also features a big brand tie-in, as it was made by Clear app developer Impending for Ellen DeGeneres, and featured on her show. It's a content marketing play, but one that's extremely well-executed and features a light touch on the...
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TechCrunch blogged Microsoft WebMatrix 3 Web Development Tool Comes With Deeper Windows Azure Integration And Support For GitHub 2 weeks ago
Microsoft has released WebMatrix 3, the latest version of its free web development tool. The new version now comes with deeper Windows Azure integration and support for GitHub. WebMatrix users can now sign in through Windows Azure and create up to 10 sites for free. The capability means users can manage their sites locally or in Windows Azure. In WebMatrix 3, developers can do remote editing of their sites. It has a new visual site gallery that allows the user to open existing sites on their ...
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TechCrunch blogged Snapzoom Gives You A Smartphone Camera Mount That Turns Binoculars Into A Super Zoom Lens 2 weeks ago
A lot of people don't carry cameras anymore, now that they have smartphones. But that means that you could miss opportunities to capture great moments, especially when you're missing out on the great optical zoom available on some more expensive or specialized dedicated camera devices. That's what Snapzoom hopes to fix with its binocular mount for smartphone cameras, and the best part is that it's completely universal, meaning it fits a wide variety of both phones and binoculars.
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TechCrunch blogged ShipHawk Aims To Be The Only Retail Shipping Solution You Ever Need 2 weeks ago
TechCrunch Disrupt NY 2013 Startup Alley audience choice for day two is ShipHawk, a Santa Barbara-based shipping startup that launched this week at the conference. ShipHawk, co-founded by Jeremy Bodenhamer and Aaron Freeman, is a fully-featured online shipping platform that takes care of everything from providing shipping estimates to handling package pickup, delivery, packing, insurance and more for both residential and commercial addresses.
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TechCrunch blogged Fashion-Focused Startups Stylit And Black Tag Offer Free, Personal Shoppers For Both Women & Men 2 weeks ago
E-commerce is booming, but shopping for clothing online can still be a challenge. Unlike many consumer products, clothing is personal and often needs to be tried on for fit. Plus, there are numerous options available via the web, so sometimes it’s tough to even know where to begin with an online shopping expedition. Two companies from TechCrunch Disrupt NY’s Startup Alley are addressing these problems by offering personal stylists and recommendations online. One, Stylit, is targeting women an...
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TechCrunch blogged BuzzFeed's Jonah Peretti Explains If You Don't Like Cute Animal Pics (Hence BuzzFeed), You're Not Human 2 weeks ago
I want to marry Jonah Peretti. Why? Because he just found a way to rationalize why we look at hundreds of pictures of kittens each day on the Internet during his keynote at TechCrunch Disrupt NY 2013. “Cats on the web aren’t about the cats,” said Peretti. “It’s about being human.” Pictures of kittens, and dogs on their hind legs, and baby monkeys and teacup piggies are adorable. Duh. But it’s not about cuteness. Our obsession with photos of animals comes down to our humanity, he explained. Th...