Tag Archive | "elevator"

TC Cribs: Inside Box’s Bigger And Better New HQ – Slides, Scooters And All

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Screen Shot 2012-05-06 at 11.07.13 AM

After a long vacation, TechCrunch Cribs is back! But as TechCrunch alum Jason Kincaid left us with some pretty big shoes to fill, for our first installment we decided to start with a company that knows the Cribs drill already — enterprise cloud storage company Box.

It was just eight months ago that Box last got the Cribs treatment, but lots has changed since then: Its employee count has doubled in size to a staff of 400, they dropped the “.net” from their name, and they moved into a bigger and better new headquarters in Los Altos, California.

Watch the video above to see Box CEO Aaron Levie and enterprise general manager Whitney Tidmarsh Bouck give us a tour of all three floors of Box’s new office: We took the elevator and steps up, the slide back down, and a scooter all the way back home.



Article courtesy of TechCrunch

TechGrinch Was Not Impressed By Google’s “Jingle Bells” Doodle

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Google Jingle Bells Fail

Warning, I’m about to get real critical of something pretty minor. It’s midnight on Christmas and the world is largely at a standstill, so pardon my rant.

When I visited Google.com this morning, I was as excited as the kids sprinting from bed to tree. But all I found was a lump of sonic coal. Oh joy, after months of Christmas music, I get to hear a crummy elevator music version of “Jingle Bells” one more time? *sigh*

But wait, is it a game where I guess how to play the song on the colored keys? No. Can I remix it and make my own song using the tones? Nope. Can I at least share something to the legion of strangers who’ve added me to their Circles on Google+? Well there was no readily available permalink, and the metadata wasn’t changed so sharing Google.com into G+ didn’t produce a doodle preview.

Why the high expectations? I was impressed with the Thanksgiving doodle, mostly because a special button encouraged people to share their custom turkey to Google+. Considering the fledgling social network needs users and content, I thought that was a wise move.

The Polish doodle the day before offered a sci-fi comic puzzle game. The Father’s Day doodle was a useful PSA to call your Dad. And the 65th birthday tribute to Queen’s Freddie Mercury was the pinacle of awesome, featuring mustachioed bears riding bicycles. Today we got a crummy elevator music “Jingle Bells”. I would have settled

I would have settled for some 8-bit tones, a more expansive light show, or something actually interactive and not just triggered. In previous years, the Christmas doodles have been basic but classy. This one built me up with its shiny buttons but didn’t follow through. Maybe children were more elated.

Oh sorry, am I being an overly entitled TechGrinch? Normally I’m a rather loving person, this is just some constructive criticism. I know the doodle is a delightful little service Google does out of the goodness of its 30,000 hearts. I’m sure it has plenty else to worry about and should be permitted an occasional flop.

Still, Google needs loyalty and good will right now. It should be looking to make fanboys and fangirls out of all of us, because it’s launched some ambitious products in verticals with powerful incumbents. If services like Google+ and Google Currents are going to challenge the Facebooks and Flipboards, Google needs people to love it.

Ask any parent — on Christmas Day the stakes are high. Google just got the 6 year old a big shiny box with a pair of socks in it. When it comes to holiday doodles, Google should either keep it simple, or really make it shine. TechGrinch signing off.

Image Credit: Shipment Of Fail



Article courtesy of TechCrunch

A New Deal Flow: Startup Raps For Angel Funding, Venture Firm Responds In Kind

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Screen shot 2011-11-28 at 2.58.41 AM

Last week, Erick posted a video in which the founders of a stealth, San Francisco-based startup called Undrip spit some rhymes in an effort to raise seed funding for their new venture. Undrip, which is building a service to better filter your social networking streams (like Twitter) and let people consume media content without the noise, hoped to use their creative plea as a way to attract attention from top investors. They even created custom videos that they sent to individual investors, like Ron Conway. (See the video here.)

Of course, as Erick pointed out, in an overfunded environment, startups are looking for ways to set themselves apart from the pack. I would say that their video, which includes a sexy red car (and also happens to be Getaround’s Tesla) and a catchy chorus to the tune of, “We need a angel, We need a ride”, is pretty spectacular. You have to hand it to the guys for being willing to stick their necks out. Not only that, but in a world of boring pitches (trust me, we’ve seen a few), this is music to the ears of the media and VCs.

How do we know? Well, we’ve been pointed to a video response created by Detroit-based venture capital firm, Ludlow Ventures, which seems to prove that some investors are not only listening, they may just want in. You may (or may not) know the Detroit firm as an investor in startups like Hipster, Graphic.ly, Fundly, and FLUD, to name a few. (Here’s their portfolio for reference.)

Jonathon Triest, who is the Co-founder of Ludlow Ventures and the moonwalking, rhyme-dropping emcee in the video above, said that he loves seeing entrepreneurs take creative approaches to pitching investors, and Undrip’s video spurred he and his team to respond in kind.

Knowing that Mick Hagen, the co-founder of Undrip, also happened to be a founder of Zinch, a college admissions matching service which blew up and sold to Chegg, Triest told me that he knew the team had chops — but it was, of course, the video prompted them to make a call. The entrepreneur-VC and friendly version of playing the dozens, clearly.

Triest said that his firm is looking to invest in startups with great founding teams; Ludlow is trying to focus on picking and choosing entrepreneurs who, as he says, “they know they could have a beer with.” He said that he expects early-stage startups to pivot several times early on, but if the founders seem like good people, who are passionate, have chops, and are willing to stick it out, then that startup may just have what it takes to get the stamp of approval.

“The money-side plays an important role in seeding startups with the kind of capital that can enable early growth”, he said, “but that’s only half of it. We have to start treating entrepreneurs with respect, because they’re the ones out there going for it”. To that end, Ludlow Ventures wants to work closely with entrepreneurs and be a part of their development all the way along the line (in other words, founder friendly); and sharing office space with Quicken Loans Founder and Cleveland Cavaliers Owner Dan Gilbert’s Detroit Venture Partners, with a roof-top view overlooking Comerica Park, being part of Ludlow’s brood has some perks.

Triest said that he has been in talks with Undrip, which he hopes will lead to some future investment. Nothing has been signed at this point, but Undrip’s video certainly seems to have captured some attention. Of course, every early-stage VC firm claims they want to be “founder friendly”, but not every VC is willing to respond with the same kind of creative energy their startups try to exhibit on a daily basis. So props to this VC for getting into the studio and laying down some flow.

A full list of the lyrics as well as Undrip’s original video follow below:

Verse 1:
Yo undrip is bumpin’
Pumpin the volume like a tech Christian Slater
And we hear ya loud and clear
Ya need an angel we got them wings
Like our skulls full of red bull on private planes
Lets fly hands up to the sky like we scored the goal
With a Hockey stick projection of Gretzky proportions
And we’ve done our due diligence we’re ready to close
There’s just one thing we need to know
Is undrip bout to go to the top
So preferred with the stock
If ya ain’t heard ludlow we ready to rock
So it’s ready or not here we come
And the mission is gettin’ that acquisition son
From the elevator pitchin to the elevator hittin’ the top floor
And openin’ to penthouse parties with horres devourers
And scores of angel investors, prepared for bidding wars
Unlockin’ that flow and so much more

Chorus:
We need a angel, We need a ride
We need a bump, a bump so we fly
We’re gonna make that money off of social steam
But we need your help to reach the dream
We need a angel, We need a ride
We need a bump a bump so we fly
Undrip is about to go
We just need an angel to unlock the flow

Verse 2:
Comin’ straight out of detroit, so our wings are red
But they’ll fly just the same, and your dreams in bed
Will be reality instead because we livin’ it up
Droppin that cold hard currency on companies
They bout to start callin’ us green gravity
You write code, we write checks that let your grand story unfold
And when it’s all said and told from the premoney valuation
To the exit strategy the numbers look amazin
Only thing missin is chapter 11 but trust that’s all by design
As long as you can design and program well put grands in yo hands
Plant seeds in this round and we’ll watch them grow
Oh to big money trees so check the equity now
And you’ll see how ludlow gets down
Ludlow, Ludlow
Baddest angels around





Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Former Virgin Digital Execs Raise $20M For Los Angeles-based “Innovation Factory”

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elevator labs

Two ex-Virgin Digital executives, namely its former CTO Brendon Cassidy and former president Zack Zalon, have teamed up to start a Los Angeles-based digital business incubator called Elevator Labs.

The venture, which is both labeled an ‘invention company’ and an ‘innovation factory’, this morning announced that it has secured $20 million in initial funding from KGC Capital.

Zalon and Cassidy have worked together for more than a decade, having built and operated a number of digital initiatives at Virgin and creating several standalone businesses since. The idea behind Elevator Labs is to finance and provide technical and strategic guidance to LA-based startups and teams in order to go from idea to a sustainable business.

Here’s the main pitch (from the press release):

A key focus of the Elevator Labs mission is to continue to found, foster and grow new ideas and companies in the Los Angeles region while also building a community of innovation with existing Los Angeles technology, media and government organizations.

Currently, the Elevator Labs portfolio includes Hello Music, an online marketplace for independent artists and bands, interactive product agency Wilshire Media Group and stealth startup Fat Cloud.

Additional Elevator Labs ventures are said to be currently in development and will be announced in the coming months.




Company:
ELEVATOR LABS
Website:
Funding:
$20M

Elevator Labs is a Los Angeles, CA-based invention company that brings ideas from vision to value. Beginning with new business concepts, the Elevator Labs leadership team funds and builds…

Learn more



Article courtesy of TechCrunch

It’s A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad App World

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Editor’s note: Contributor Jon Evans is an author and software engineer. He hails from the Great White North, but we let him write here anyway.

Report from the app-development trenches: it’s gettin’ kinda crazy out there. I’ve lost track of how many NDAs I’ve signed this year from people with app ideas. Old coworkers and previous clients have deluged me with so many offers of new work I can’t possibly take it all. Friends of friends want my opinion on whether their app notion might fly, and if I might want to partner with them.

The VP at my client Xtreme Labs has as his Gmail status, “I’m hiring 50 Agile Engineers.”  That doesn’t include their startup incubator Xtreme University. And this isn’t frenetic Silicon Valley, this is once-sleepy Toronto. My clients HappyFunCorp, an incubator/development consultancy in Brooklyn, proclaim on their web site, “We can only take on so much work, and because of that, there’s no contact information on our page.” None of my developer friends are underemployed. Supply is low, demand is insane. I realize the plural of anecdote is not data, but I can’t help thinking: this feels a lot like 1999.

Everyone is asking, “Are we in a bubble?” except for the people shouting, “Yes!” Bubble satirists have already arisen:

The Tech Bubble@the_tech_bubble
The Tech Bubble

Just walked by a homeless man with a sign that read: “Looking for technical co-founder”

December 1, 2010 8:22 pm via webRetweetReply

Headlines proclaim: “Startup Accelerator Founder Says We’re In A Startup Accelerator Bubble.” But as Paul Kedrosky notes:

Paul Kedrosky@pkedrosky
Paul Kedrosky

The “bubble” cries in late 90s, including mine, started two years before the crash — two years of incredible exits. /cc @Jason

November 19, 2010 7:23 am via EchofonRetweetReply

True, people are throwing a lot of money at a lot of dubious ideas, but it has ever been thus, and we haven’t yet sunk to the nadir of Pets.com. Remember them? Remember the dot-com bubble? Sure, it burst spectacularly, but as Alan Greenspan once pointed out, it was not a market failure, it was a resounding success. Technology created a whole new economic sector, the market drenched in ridiculous amounts of money, and in the end the great companies—Amazon, eBay, Google, Yahoo (for a while there)—thrived. Remember when Yahoo was a great company? Those were the days.

During the dot-com boom I worked for clients who spent a million dollars to sell chickens online. (They subsequently expanded into eggs, too, thus answering the ancient question.) That sounds ridiculous, but it actually wasn’t. I think Instagram is dumb, but maybe I’m wrong. As William Goldman once said of Hollywood, “Nobody knows anything.” The app space is so new that only trial and error tells us what works. I mean, Angry Birds?  I Am T-Pain? Are you kidding?

But let’s face it: we’re in a bit of a bubble. Henry Ford famously said, “If the elevator operator recommends buying, you should have sold long ago.” Today the elevator operators have begun to seed lean app startups. And yet I remain resolutely unconcerned, and relentlessly optimistic.

Why? Because I look beyond the rich world and I see five and a half billion people only a few years away from their first smartphone, which in most cases will also be their first computer, and their first Internet device. Those three revolutions will hit the developing world all at once—and the repercussions will be epic. Today’s bubble is nothing compared to tomorrow’s boom.

Meanwhile, some undeserving people will make zillions, and a lot of deserving folks will sweat 80 hours a week to break even. So it goes. But you know what? I apologize in advance for getting earnest and histrionic, but what the hell, it’s Christmas, and I genuinely mean this: the tech industry is about more than money. I’m new around here, so I’m loath to try to speak for my fellow writers, but I suspect they’d all agree.

Don’t get me wrong, money’s great, and fun to talk about. But the tech business is really ultimately about building the future and changing the world. That’s what everyone in it does, each in his or her own small way, and more power to you all for it. Merry Christmas, and don’t forget to short Yahoo before the tax year ends.

Photo credit: Flickr/Jeff Kubina



Article courtesy of TechCrunch

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