Tag Archive | "bands"

Backed Or Whacked: Get Together With The Band

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Editor’s note: Ross Rubin is principal analyst at Reticle Research and blogs at Techspressive. Each column will look at crowdfunded products that have either met or missed their funding goals. Follow him on Twitter @rossrubin.

Last week, Backed or Whacked look at a trio of wristbands that can hold a buck, make a bun and prevent a burn all without any assistance from a successful mobile app platform. But as a host of digital fitness products has shown, the usually limited interfaces of fashion accessories can be boosted by pairing them with smartphones.

Whacked: Embrace+. The Embrace+ could be described as a smartwatch for people who would rather rave all night than know what time it is. The transparent band, to be available in three shapes, has embedded LEDs that illuminate in different colors depending on the kind of notification being received.

With 13 different services and alerts intended to be supported out of the gate, there’s a good chance that those with an active social (networking) life will find their wrists becoming a rainbow of a light show throughout the day. And if the unlimited colors aren’t enough for you, the band also offers options for the number and duration of blinks, light brightness and speed interval and whether to include a subtle vibration.

The Embrace+ campaign attracted interest, with nearly 1,500 backers ponying up nearly $84,000, but that represented less than half of its ambitious $220,000 goal. Almost immediately after it ended, the team vowed a relaunch at a new web address, but so far clicking it turns up a generic web-hosting admin page.

Whacked: WeLoxx. Those who have pursued the quantified self only to discover there is too much of their self to quantify for their liking have access to a whole battle of the bands to help them with calorie expenditure. These include offerings from Jawbone and Nike with more on the way from Fitbit and Samsung. But at CES, much attention was lauded on a connected utensil called the HAPIfork that keeps track of how often you shovel food into your mouth, coaching you to eat more slowly.

That’s the basic idea of the WeLoxx, which moves the sensor from the fork to the wrist and thus enables it to work with spoons, chopsticks or your grubby bare hands. The project, originating in Bern, Switzerland, proposed two different models for the WeLoxx — a more watch-like design, the WeLoxx 300, and band-like design, the WeLoxx 900. Both featured an array of traffic lights to signal how fast you’re eating. For the near term, though, we won’t be loxxing, as the campaign collected only $584 from six backers en route to missing its $80,000 goal.

Whacked: LinkMe. The LinkMe is a paradox. On one hand, or perhaps wrist, notification bands are supposed to be unobtrusive. The Embrace+’s light show may even be pushing it, but at least only you know how to decode its glowing rainbow.

In contrast, the LineMe wraps an LED billboard around that hand-joining joint. The advantage is that the band can display specific messages instead of just notification lights, possibly saving you more trips back to the 5″ LTE-packing behemoth weighing down your pocket. On the other hand, it could enable anyone close enough to your resting arm to read the digital sweet nothing intended just for snookums. The creators, New Yorkers Matt and Colin, would counter that you can set up a system of abstract characters to get back to the Embrace+ level of abstraction.

The LinkMe would last about two weeks on a charge and, like the Nike FuelBand, the LinkMe can default to a time readout when nothing private is being broadcasted to it. One month in, the campaign has raised only about $13,000 of its $100,000 goal.

Article courtesy of TechCrunch

TechCrunch Giveaway: Nike+ Fuel Band Plus 2 Free Tickets To The #Crunchies

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As you’ve no doubt heard by now, the 6th Annual Crunchies Awards are nearly upon us! Voting concluded last night and the last set of tickets are on sale now. If you want to purchase them in time for next week’s show you’d better hurry, because the tickets are going fast.

Next Thursday is going to be a night you will never forget. We have all-star surprise guests, musical guests and an Emmy Award-winning writer hosting the show. That’s not all; the after party will be a blast as well.

This is one of your last chances to win tickets to this year’s show. The Crunchies are being held at the gorgeous Davies Symphony Hall in San Francisco next Thursday, January 31st, starting at 7:00pm, with the after party following directly after. The after party will have drinks, hors d’oeuvres, special guests, and more.

Also, it’s a fancy show, so be sure to dress your best.

Just because we love you all and want to give everyone a shot at coming to the show, we are going to pick three winners for this giveaway. Each winner will receive 2 tickets to the show, plus we’ll throw in a free Nike+ Fuel Band where you can track your day, set goals for yourself and more. Oh, and we’ll even let you pick which color you want. Darrell Etherington and I each bought one in Vegas after CES, and we have been competing with each other every day since. They are each valued at around $150. You can check out more about the Fuel Bands here.

So, who wants a chance to come with us and win a Fuel Band? If so, all you have to do is follow the steps below:

1) Become a fan of our TechCrunch Facebook Page:

2) Then do one of the following:

- Retweet this post (making sure to include the #Crunchies hashtag)
- Or leave us a comment below telling us why we should PICK YOU

Please only tweet the message once or you will be disqualified. We will make sure you follow the steps above and choose our winner on Sunday, January 27th at 7:00pm PT. Please note this giveaway is for two free tickets and one free Nike+ Fuel Band only and does not include airfare or hotel. Good luck everyone.

Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Kickstarter: This Rubber Band Shotgun Is The Mother Of All Rubber Band Shotgun

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Imagine it’s Thanksgiving morning and your with the family. You creep down the stairs, Sheriff in hand, and creep in on dear old dad as he makes bacon pancakes. You set your weapon on “shotgun” and pull the trigger. A volley of hot rubber whangs him in the legs, his old frame buckling as he takes the shot. Another kill. All this can be yours with the Bandit, an automatic rubber band gun built for speed and (mild) pain infliction. The project, created by Bob Coulston, is a DIY, easy-to-assemble rubber band gun that can fire single bands, multiple bands in rapid succession, or all the bands at once, creating a hellstorm of flying bands.

The Outlaw model supports only single shots at a time while the Sheriff can be put into shotgun mode. The kit comes with all the laser-cut parts you need to assemble the gun and it’s held together with a few bolts.

Coulston describes the genesis of the gun thusly:

The idea of Bandit Guns was created when my three children Kelsey, Macy, and Bobby (now 14, 11, and 9 years old) came down in the wood shop while I was building a set of cabinets for a client. Excited, they asked me if I could help them make a rubber band gun. Remembering all the fun I had with my rubber band gun that my father made for me, I cut out three blocks of wood that somewhat looked like a gun and nailed a clothespin to the top with a notch on the front of the barrel for the rubber band to hook into. I showed them how to load it and fire at a piece of wood sitting at the end of the workbench. Bobby said,”Single shot, Dad? Boring, I want to make my own rubber band gun!” He knows he can’t use the power tools so that got me to thinking about how I could create a kit that he could assemble and would make him feel as if he made it himself but, still cool enough that his friends would want one too. That was the beginning, after the first model having over 50 parts and not even working. Approximately 100 versions later the Bandit Gun was created with what you see today. Being a kid at heart, I probably use the Bandit Gun more than they do.

He is way over his goal of $5,000 and there are only 16 more days to pledge. I’d personally recommend buying the $300 package that gets you 10 Sheriff guns so you and your extended family can spend the next year giving each other (mild) welts as you go about your daily business.



Article courtesy of TechCrunch

BAMM.tv Launches An Immersive iPad App For Fans Of Live Indie Music

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BAMM.tv has spent the last year or so shooting and producing live concert videos, both in its own studio and on-location at events like SXSW. The result is an impressive library of live music videos — it’s got more than 70 hours of material from 175 artists. In addition to live performances, it’s also produced a few series of episodic content, as well as some documentaries.

That content has lived on the company’s website, which provides a rundown of all the artists and different genres of music that are represented. But at the end of the day, while there’s a ton of content there, it’s not exactly the most immersive or easy way to get at its content.

All of that is why BAMM.tv built its new iPad app, which is launching today.

The app is designed to look like a virtual music venue, allowing users to watch videos, learn more about different bands, engage with musicians via social media, check out tour schedules, and even purchase tickets to upcoming shows. The app allows users to navigate through various playlists that are curated by the BAMM.tv staff, and there’s a gamification aspect that lets users unlock content like exclusive audio tracks or videos by engaging more with the content. They can also create their own playlists — or playmixes, as the app calls them — of their favorite songs or videos.

According to co-founder and CEO Chris Hansen, the app has elements that are meant to inspire nostalgia for analog music formats — for instance, and old-time TV or cassette-tape icons for viewing or listening to content in the app, and liner notes to learn more about the bands. That said, all the music and videos are formatted in HD to take advantage of the iPad’s display.

While most video sites today pay upfront for licensing rights to video content, BAMM.tv is trying to establish a new model for partnering with and paying artists. It works like this: BAMM.tv has negotiated global rights to the performances and other content from performers. In exchange, BAMM.tv will share all profits that it makes, dividing those proceeds based upon the number of views that various performers get on the app and on its website.

In addition to advertising, BAMM.tv has also struck deals with global distribution partners, such as Samsung, Mozilla, Chunghwa Telecom, and others, in which they licensing, co-brand, or white-label the content in overseas markets. It makes videos to viewers available for free, but runs ads on the site and the app. There are opportunities for other monetization plans, such as in-app purchase of exclusive content or merch and other real-world goods, but with the initial release, BAMM.tv is just scratching the surface.

The BAMM.tv iPad app has a lot of cool music and videos to listen to and unlock, but to be honest, the whole thing makes it a little too hard to actually get and and interact with that content. The controls are non-intuitive and I spent a lot of time just clicking around to various spots on the app trying to figure it out. There are cool aspects to it — I actually do like the idea of navigating a virtual venue and unlocking new content — but the user experience around songs and video can be difficult to grasp.

Frankly, since this is an app built around content, it should be a lot easier to consume. While I understand the idea behind harkening back to a simpler time, the great thing about an iPad is that it can provide instant access to amazing content. The BAMM.tv app shouldn’t make users work so hard to get at it.



Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Texting Doesn’t Make Your Kids Dumb, Text Bands Do

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I’m not one of those people who thinks that texting and tweeting is ruining children’s ability to communicate. Texting and tweeting are the future of communication, so if kids are learning to keep it concise or feel more comfortable sending a text to their crush than making a call, I’m all for it. That’s not to say that this communication should be at the expense of all personal real-life interaction, but it doesn’t mean that the kids themselves are becoming dumb because they can keep a tweet under 140 characters.

The technology companies are providing kids for this communication, on the other hand, is certainly becoming dumb. Take these Text Bands, for example. Hallmark thinks that they can lure kids into typing 10-character messages with the help of three buttons in a situation where messages can only be sent by a fist-bump or high-five.

These are $15 wristbands, meaning that all the specs, including wireless, are severely limited. That means that transmissions only work if the two bands are within a foot of each other. Past that, kids have to scroll through each letter of the alphabet using a three-button menu until they’ve filled out their message, with 10 characters max.

The issue is that most kids have evolved far beyond this type of gimmicky product. I’m sure a few of them will realize that Text Bands may be good for telling a friend a secret in a crowd, but so is a cell phone text. Two-year olds sit down with an iPad and understand it almost immediately. Small children can usually figure out how to make a phone call or open up an app if you hand them your phone, even if they can’t read.

So to think that a kid, even a small one, would be satisfied with this is a joke. Text Bands are a toy and nothing more, and in a world where kids are getting cell phones and smartphones at relatively young ages, there is really no place for something so cheap and useless.

In any case, the Text Bands are available at Hallmark stores today starting at $14.99.





Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Party Rockin’ On Facebook: Disrupt Winner Shaker Hits North America With Club 53 Launch

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Sometimes you want to be out partying on a Friday night and simply can’t muster the energy. It happens. But last year at TechCrunch Disrupt San Francisco, a service launched that aimed to solve that problem, and the company ultimately won and took home the Disrupt Cup. That company is Shaker, and it’s just making its way Stateside from Israel with the forthcoming launch of Club 53 tomorrow at 7:53pm PST.

If you don’t already know how Shaker works, it’s essentially a virtual world inside a Facebook app. That may mean a beach, a sports arena, a park, or the aforementioned Club 53. But, that’s not a real club. It’s about as real as your strawberry patch in FarmVille, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t fun right?

You have an avatar (or Shaker) that performs different actions in real-time, with other avatars that are hanging out in the venue. You can buy drinks, dance, enjoy the music and socialize just like you would in a real club, except for the fact that you’ll be on your couch in front of your computer (and your chances of getting laid go way down).

The launch of Club 53 marks the first public venue created by Shaker for North America, and as long as you’re 18, all you have to do is head over to Shaker’s website and sign up. Far East Movement, the same group that’s Fly Like A G6, will be “there” at launch time to celebrate, as will other bands such as Mayday Parade, Escape The Fate, and Daniel Bedingfield. BandPage is helping out with the music side of things, offering musicians a way to easily host events and share content within Club 53.

But perhaps club-hopping isn’t your thing. In that case, Shaker is preparing a sports environment in collaboration with the NBA. Starting on June 12, in line with the playoffs, Shaker will launch an NBA Playoff Finals space two hours prior to tip-off for each game, where fans can hang out and enjoy the game together, sports-bar style. There will also be trivia competitions and prizes.

I still can’t quite wrap my head around a service that wants you to have real-world experiences alone in your home, face aglow from the light from the computer screen. How am I supposed to enjoy a virtual tequila shot?

But now that the service is going live here in the U.S., maybe Shaker will prove me wrong.




Editor’s Note: None of these photos are of Club 53. It will be unveiled tomorrow night.



Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Keen On… David Lowery: How The Internet Is Shafting Musicians (TCTV)

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Not everyone agrees with BitTorrent founder Bram Cohen that the Internet has been good for the musician. Indeed, some musicians think the exact reverse. Take, for example, David Lowery, the lead singer for the bands Camper Van Beethoven and Cracker – a Platinum artist who now also teaches “rock economics” at the University of Georgia. According to Lowery, who claims that he has “data” to back up his argument, things are actually worse for the musician now than they were in the good/bad old days of big labels and even bigger limousines.

“It looks like the artist is getting shafted,” Lowery told me when we spoke earlier this week at SFMusicTech. “We were waiting for the extra revenue,” he said, “but it never came.” Lowery, who once believed in the magical economics of the Internet, blames “flle sharing” (ie: piracy) and the poor business model of streaming services like Spotify. Most of all, though, he blames Amazon and Apple who, he says, are taking 30% of gross revenue on Internet music sales, and investing nothing back in artists.

So is there any middle ground between Cohen and Lowery? Can the Internet really support musicians and enable them to earn a viable income? Tomorrow, I’ll run an interview with Jack Conte and Nataly Dawn from the Californian band Pomplamoose who, believe it or not, are actually making a living by putting their music up on YouTube.



Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Google Music Opens For Everyone In The US, Features Full-Song Sharing To Google+

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Today at its ‘These Go To 11‘ special event, Google just announced that Google Music — which launched over the summer in a private, invite-only beta —  is open to everyone.

The service allows you to upload your music library and stream it to all of your other devices. And while Google had initially stated this would be a premium service after the Beta ended, it has some good news: it’s going to continue free of charge. You can upload and store up to 20,000 of your songs without having to pay anything.

Google is also fixing Music’s biggest issue: you’ll now be able to purchase music via Android Market, which will let you purchase ‘millions’ of songs. Users can listen to 90 second previews before they buy.

There’s also some deep (and siginficant) Google+ integration: buy a song, and you’ll have the option to share that song to Google+ — and your friends will be able to listen to the entire song without having to leave their Google+ stream. They won’t have to buy anything and they won’t need to sign into a different account. This is big.

Update: I just shared my first song to Google+ using this feature, and there’s one catch Google didn’t mention: only people who are in your Circles can listen to the full track — if someone has Circled you (i.e., they’re following you), but you haven’t Circled them back, then they’ll only get a sample of the song.

Google Music’s new features are available immediately via music.google.com, and updated Android apps will be released in the next few days.

The labels who are on board: Universal, EMI, Sony Music (the holdout from the ‘big 4′ is Warner). Also includes numerous indy labels, ioda, The Orchard, and others.

To help get people to check out Google Music, Google has secured exclusive music from major artists, including some free tracks. Among the bands offering exclusives: The Rolling Stones, Coldplay, Busta Rhymes, Shakira, Pearl Jam, Dave Matthews Band.

The Stones will be releasing 6 live concert albums, which haven’t been released before.They’re launching one concert album initially, and will release the five others over 2012. Busta Rhymes will be debuting his new album exclusively on Google Music.

Updating



Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Formspring Launching A “Favorites” Directory, Starts Looking Like A Real Social Network

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Formspring is launching its first user Directory later today in an effort to better highlight the more popular and famous users of its online social Q&A service. The directory will organize users into categories like Music, Comedy, Sports & Fitness, Fashion & Beauty, Movies & TV, Tech & Start-ups and more.

Current Formspring users will be able to locate the new feature through the “find more friends” section on Formspring when it goes live today, but you can see some of the celebrity users’ pages now, assuming you know their Formspring username. For example, there’s actor Taylor Lautner, producer Jerry Bruckheimer, the bands Incubus, We The Kings, and SOH!3, Marvel Creative Director Tom Brevoort, and pop star Camryn.

At launch, the directory will feature over 100 popular users and more will be added in the weeks ahead. It will also be accessible directly via the URL formspring.me/favorites.

The new feature is meant to compliment the previously launched “Formspring Interests” initiative, which allows users to add up to six interests to their profiles like Music, Sports, Fashion & Beauty, etc. Those “interests” are now mirrored by the categories found within the new Formspring Favorites directory.

The bigger picture here is that Formspring isn’t just launching a directory, it’s taking yet another step on its way to becoming a full-fledged social network. You can see the way the company is carefully and thoughtfully building out links between its users, not only between these new interests and categories, but also through the profile page features “who made you smile” and “who you responded to.”

Formspring’s potential for disruption is that it’s not trying to build another Facebook (cough, Google+, cough), it’s trying to build a network around users’ interests. Of course, do to so, it still has to go up against Facebook’s own interest graph, based on the cumulation of millions of “likes. However, it has one slight advantage: when a Facebook brand page inserts its messaging into your social news feed, it can feel intrusive and annoying. Yet when you venture out to a destination site meant to connect you to brands, celebs, and media personalities, you both expect and desire the same sorts of interactions that may have felt “icky” or bothersome on Facebook. That could be a potential win for Formspring.

Formspring now has 27 million users and sees more than 30 million unique visitors per month. With this new direct access to celeb accounts, it wouldn’t be surprising to see that traffic increase quite a bit in the near future.



Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Keen On… Justin Dillon: Is The Internet to Blame for Contemporary Slavery? (TCTV)

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Of course not. And yet, as a key cause and effect of globalization, the Internet does play an important role in enabling the conditions that produce today’s 27 million slaves around the world. But it’s also the vehicle with which we can fight this slavery. That’s the opinion, at least, of Justin Dillon, the CEO of Slavery Footprint, a State Department funded organization launched at the 2011 Clinton Global Initiative, which is focused on exposing and fighting contemporary slavery.

The Internet, indeed, is now becoming an essential tool for not only fighting slavery but also raising our awareness about how prevalent it is in many of the products that we consume. As Dillon explained when he came into our TechCrunchTV studio, Slavery Footprint has released an Android and iPhone mobile app which will enable us to find out how much slavery is contained in products that we buy.

Dillon reminded me, for example, that it takes an average of 3.2 forced laborers to produce the average smartphone. Doesn’t that seem like an awfully high price to pay for being connected?



Person:
Justin Dillon
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Justin Dillon has been a musician all his life. Justin’s band, Tremolo, was featured on television shows, “The Mountain” and “North Shore,” as well as a variety of MTV shows including Pimp My Ride, Newlyweds, Bands Reunited, and Dismissed. With the release of their first album, Love Is the Greatest Revenge (2005, Flagship/Universal Records), Tremolo did something unique: they committed to donating fifty percent of the royalties to charities selected by their fans.

Dillon came across the issue of Human…

Learn more



Article courtesy of TechCrunch

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