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Want to learn from Mike Maples and Max Skibinsky? Join Startup School

Posted by Stefano Bernardi On August - 3 - 2010

If you’re working in August, you should take a few hours off whatever it is you’re doing to attend this two new amazing classes on Startup School.

Founders Interview with Max Skibinsky : August 6

Max has been 14 year veteran of Silicon Valley. He bootstrapped his first consulting startup in 90ties, working with clients such as Netscape/AOL, Celera Genomics and Electronic Arts. Few years later, flush with VC funding Voltage Security singed Max up as their lead software architect. In 2005 startup addiction proven irresistible and Max jumpied heads on into swirling vortex of web 2.0 innovation, social networks and online communities.

He founded Hive7, one of the very first social gaming startups which in following years redefined the world of traditional entertainment. Hive7 was sold to Playdom in 2010. When not designing, recruiting, brainstorming, trash-talking, advising, and building startups Max can be found flying in general vicinity of Palo Alto airspace.

To register and attend click here.

Investor Interview with Mike Maples : August 12

Mike Maples, Jr. is the managing partner of FLOODGATE, and was recently named as one of “8 Rising VC Stars” by Fortune Magazine for his investments in business and consumer technology companies. Before becoming a full-time investor, Mike was an entrepreneur and operating executive who worked in a variety of senior management roles in high-growth companies.

His background spans a variety of markets including consumer technology, small business, and the enterprise, and he has led various functions in product development, marketing, business development, and corporate strategy.

To register and attend click here.

In case you need invites, please leave a comment and I’ll gladly send it over to you.

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Flash: Earlybird Venture Capital adds Jason Whitmire as Partner

Posted by Stefano Bernardi On August - 2 - 2010

Earlybird Venture Capital, one of Europe’s most famous venture capital firms, today announces the expansion of its leadership team with the addition of Jason Whitmire who joins as Partner, focusing on early stage venture investing in mobile services, cloud computing, and digital media technologies.

Until June 2010 he served as General Manager & Vice President at Wind River Systems, where he founded and managed the company’s high growth mobile business (which according to the Wall Street Journal was the motivation behind Intel’s acquisition of Wind River for $884 million in July 2009). Previously Jason was shareholder and Managing Director of open source real-time Linux provider FSMLabs Inc. and played a key role in its acquisition by Wind River in 2007. Prior to that Mr. Whitmire co-founded the software business at Infineon Technologies, where he led the global licensing business for Infineon’s wireless software subsidiary, Comneon GmbH.

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Doochoo releases first app, aims to revolutionize online opinions

Posted by Stefano Bernardi On July - 29 - 2010

Doochoo, a San Francisco based startup which aims to connect massive amounts of opinion data, has announced the release of Couchin, a richly visual application for iPhone (Android coming soon) that allows users to vote, share and discuss their favorite movies and television shows.

Couchin is only the first of several opinion-based applications to leverage the Doocho platform, which will be released sometime in the future and promises to give opinions on the web tangibility and critical weight. Next up for development is PickOne, a service that eases organization and planning for sets of friends by asking the group for a collective opinion.

“Imagine a place where you can go and search for any possible opinion in a very tangible way, filter it, get recommendations and create actions based on the smart information you just found,” says Paolo Privitera, Doochoo CTO. “This is going to be a real revolution, the semantic Wikipedia for the opinions, a Freebase for what people think. And it all begins with Couchin: Nielsen Ratings 2.0″ adds Armando Biondi, Doochoo CEO.

With Couchin, users connect with the friends they already have to watch their shows together, and discover new friends as they participate. Most importantly, each user adds their vote to Doochoo’s database, which integrates all of the single opinions to create a massive collection of information for television networks about their audience’s viewpoint. Instead of relying on word of mouth recommendations for what to watch, Couchin provides a single portal with reviews and recommendations in a social, addictive setting, which aims to specify the usually imprecise public opinion. The core features are a live streaming chat function and Facebook/Twitter sync, to show your friends what you’re watching now and an ”Audience measurement 2.0″ system, a multiple and real-time rating aggregator, crunched into a social graph.

The team also promises to add soon Netflix/Flixster queue sync ability, trivia contests to win badges, gain backstage access, and unlock special features and forum to review your favorite shows and compare them to other reviews. The company is self-funded.

Couchin is available as a free download from the Apple iTunes store.

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Grab your 15% discount for FOWA, thanks to theStartup.eu

Posted by Stefano Bernardi On July - 27 - 2010

After an amazing conference last year, where I was called on stage with Gary Vaynerchuck and Kevin Rose thanks to a post that went on the twitter wall, I’m pleased to offer theStartup.eu an exclusive 15% discount code to Future Of Web Apps London 2010.

The speaker list is really impressive and includes amazing foudners suchs as Jason Calacanis (Mahalo), Nick Halstead (TweetMeme), SandyJen (Meebo), Andrew Mason (Groupon), Mike McDerment (Freshbooks), Andy McLoughlin (Huddle), Joe Stump (SimpleGeo) and Josh Williams (Gowalla). Take a look at the full speakers list.

The conference will be structured as a 2-days 2-tracks event plus one day of workshops (last year I attended Mike’s “The A-Z of building a successful web app” and it was amazing).

So, free up some space on your calendars for October 4-6 2010 and book your flights to London. You can register here, be sure to enter the code 15DISC to get your 15% discount.

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(Not so) Recent VC deals in Europe

Posted by Stefano Bernardi On July - 26 - 2010

These are some of the VC deals that happened until May around Europe, as posted on Techcrunch Europe. Keep an eye out for new posts with all of the latest VC deals.

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An Italian company wins the Techcrunch Europe Summer Pitch Battle

Posted by Niccolo Sanarico On July - 16 - 2010

On Tuesday night TechHub and Techcrunch hosted the Techcrunch Europe Summer Pitch battle.

The venue

TechHub was chosen as the setting for the battle – the recently launched space in central London offering office space and facilities to startups. It represented an optimal scenario for the event.

The contestants

In excess of 35 different startups entered the field to pitch their ideas to a panel of judges coming from Eden Ventures (Ben Tompkins and Katy Turner), Neu Haus Partners (Paul Jozefak) and Moonfruit.com (Wendy Tan White), alongside angel investor Eileen Burbidge. The startups were requested to go through three consecutive rounds: an initial screening based on a written one-line description of their idea, a one minute slide-less pitch and a three minutes aided pitch, before getting to the final podium. Even though the scene was dominated by anglo-american companies, several continental European (and beyond) startups were present to pitch their ideas.

The battle

Around 30 startups pitched their one-minute introduction to the judges and the spectators. The process was a bit hectic, with the twitter feed being overwhelmed by tweets trying to understand the spelling of the startup names.

Only nine startups made it to the slideshow round, where the judges decided for the following podium:

1) Calaboard: presented by Francesco Masia, it promises to enrich video-conferencing by allowing “in-the-air” drawing with your finger – your counterpart will actually see the drawing appear on the conference window.

2) Duedil: complements Linkedin profiles by allowing users to post complete reviews and feedbacks, allowing professionals to build reputation and clients to make better decisions over the professional figure to hire.

3) Geomium: bringing together social and location services, Geomium creates a recommendation engine for things to do in your neighborhood – friends can see what each of them is doing, propose what to do, chat and meet.

The remaining 6 final presenters were:

- ProspectVision: improve the conversion rate of visitors to your website, turning them into sales leads

- Me-Stars: online gaming network, where the user can actually put his face in the game, thanks to a face recognition and digitalization service

- Gourmetorigins: a service to get information about the regional origins of gourmet food, including the possibility to get in touch with the local producers and the local roots of food culture

- CrowdScanner: ever wondered who is attending the same event you are in? CrowdScanner is a mobile app that allows the user to “ask a question” to the crowd, favoring new encounters and easier networking, based on personal interests.

- MindQuilt: Mindquilt is “an enterprise knowledge management platform with intelligent question and answer matchmaking and gaming achievement dynamics”.

- Oneleep: “a shortcut to hard-to-access influentials: the decision-makers, employers, investors, buyers and experts – “Shakers””.

Special mention to the second Italian team pitching, for the first time on the European scene: Fubles.

You can also find the complete list of startups in this other great recap.

The bottom line

Social-geo-location-community are the buzz-words that are closest to the hearts of the entrepreneurs pitching at the event. Many of the startups tried to answer a social question by implementing a location- or community-based layer around (or on top of) their idea. It is notable, on the other hand, how the event winner Calaboard is not a project in the social or location space. Do the VCs see an excessive proliferation of location-based social services? Is the market getting tired of this sudden abundance? It is probably way to early to tell. Or is it?

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