Tag Archive | "kleiner-perkins"

Founder Stories: Parse’s Ilya Sukhar On Founding A Startup With Strangers

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For this week’s episode of Founder Stories, I sat down with Ilya Sukhar, co-founder and CEO of Parse. The interview was taped days before Parse was acquired by Facebook last month. Parse is a cloud app platform that provides a set of SDKs that enable developers to focus on the execution of their application instead of rebuilding backend functionality for every mobile platform. Sukhar shares his experience of leaving Salesforce and going through Y Combinator.

Sukhar, who entered YC as a solo founder, was connected to co-founder Kevin Lacker through Paul Graham. The duo then joined up with another co-founding team about a month into YC to build Parse.

“It was a big risk,” says Sukhar. “The founding relationship is a really deep one and there’s a lot of ups and downs to go through together.” Having only known his co-founders for a short time before deciding to work together, Ilya explains the risks and reality of starting a company with strangers. “It worked out well for me but I would not recommend it to other folks.”

In the later half of our discussion, Sukhar explains how he uses arguing tactics to learn whether an employee is a good fit and why stepping back from coding to focus on under-staffed areas of the company has given him the opportunity to learn more about each role before hiring someone to fill it.

Editor’s Note: Michael Abbott is a general partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, previously Twitter’s VP of Engineering, and a founder himself. Mike also writes a blog called uncapitalized. You can follow him on Twitter @mabb0tt.

Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Facebook roundup: Fortune 500, Waze, Recommendations Bar and more

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revenueFacebook breaks into Fortune 500 – Facebook has made its first appearance on the Fortune 500 list at No. 482 this year. The Fortune 500 is a yearly list of top U.S. companies. Facebook ranks sixth out of the seven companies in the category of Internet services and retailing, joining Amazon (No. 49), Google (55), eBay (196), Liberty Interactive (270), Priceline (473), and Yahoo (494). Last year, Facebook was outside of the list at No. 598. CEO Mark Zuckerberg is the youngest CEO of companies on the list, and he’s one of only two CEOs under 40.

wazeReports: Facebook could be looking to buy Waze – A number of outlets with anonymous sources say Facebook is considering an acquisition of Waze, the crowd-sourced traffic and navigation app. The news was first reported by Israeli business publication Calcalist. TechCrunch and AllThingsD say they have sources corroborating the story. Earlier this year, there were rumors that Apple was looking to acquire the company, but it turned out Waze was simply a partner for its Maps app. Waze has more than 40 million users and has raised $67 million from investors including Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byer.

recommendations-barFacebook speeds up Recommendations Bar – Facebook engineer Stoyan Stefanov this week detailed his efforts to improve the Recommendations Bar plugin. The plugin, which shows personalized recommendations to web visitors, now starts to render in half the time as before and is twice as fast overall. Stefanov also improved the payload 7x and reduced the number of requests by one-third. This follows other recent improvements to the Like button, Send button, Facepile and Likebox. By improving the speed and performance of its plugins, Facebook improves the millions of websites that incorporate them. Details about the improvements, along with before and after comparisons are available on Stefanov’s blog here.

Open Compute Project
Facebook’s Open Compute Project looks to improve network switching – The Open Compute Project group, started by Facebook, announced a new project focused on developing open source networking hardware. Facebook’s network engineering lead Najam Ahmad will head the project and organizations including Big Switch Networks, Broadcom, Cumulus Networks, Facebook, Intel, Netronome, OpenDaylight, the Open Networking Foundation and VMware will participate. Work will begin at the first-ever OCP Engineering Summit, being held at MIT on May 16.

university studentsFacebook continues scholarship for women in computer science – Facebook has begun accepting applications for the Facebook Grace Hopper Scholarship, now in its sixth year of celebrating women in computing, according to the company’s engineering page. Female university students excelling in computer science can apply for one of 25 scholarships to attend the Grace Hopper conference with Facebook in Minneapolis this October. The theme for this year’s conference is “Think Big. Drive Forward.”

After 10M Downloads, BlueStacks Takes On OUYA With Game Console And $6.99 All-You-Can-Play Service

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GamePop Console

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.

Looking to tap into a huge new audience, BlueStacks is today bringing those 750K-plus Android apps not just to PCs and Macs, but to TVs as well with its own gaming console and subscription service. The new package, called “GamePop,” includes a custom console and game controller for free, as part of its $6.99/month service. Well, actually, the console is free through the end of May, at which point BlueStacks will slap on a price tag.

The price of the console has yet to be determined, but the company tells me that GamePop has an “estimated value of approximately $100,” so one can probably expect the pricing to fall in that range — or five times that, depending on how saucy BlueStacks is feeling. Of course, $100 is the “estimated” value, and gamers can get their hands on the whole package for $84 (for a year of the service) now, so take that for what it’s worth. After May, it will probably be more like $184 for 12 months of gameplay.

Right now, gamers can pre-order GamePop from BlueStacks’ homepage (which redirects to gamepop.tv), with consoles expected to ship this winter. Naturally, for this early flight, BlueStacks is selling GamePop exclusively through its own site, but after the first round of shipments, likely beginning next year, expect GamePop to begin showing up in stores.

As to who’s responsible for manufacturing and producing BlueStacks’ new gaming console? The company isn’t revealing the man behind the curtain yet, but considering the startup has already struck distribution agreements with several recognizable names in the PC ecosystem, like Intel, AMD, Asus, MSI and Lenovo, so it’s probably safe to say that at least one of those companies played a hand in the design, production and distribution. Asus, for one, has the most Android experience, but that’s just speculation at this point.

BlueStacks unveiled GamePop at GDC, allowing developers to take an early look at the gaming service, but has yet to put any in the hands of either developers or reporters. Though, from the looks of it, the industrial design appears to bear some resemblance to D-Link’s Boxee Box.

In the big picture, with today’s announcements, GamePop and OUYA seem to be proving that there’s plenty of demand out there for an affordable gaming console. As Jordan said this morning, OUYA very deliberately set its price at $99 and will be offering games on a “free-to-try” basis, which founder Julie Uhrman says is a core tenet of OUYA itself. Unsurprisingly, that’s resonated with people.

OUYA has seen more than 12,000 developers sign up for its platform, 4,000 of which have signed up since March. What’s more, GameStop, Best Buy and Amazon have already agreed to sell its console, with availability expected to begin in late June. That gives the Kickstarter-born open console a head-start on GamePop in terms of availability and distribution partnerships. And, depending on the price of games after trial, a price advantage, too. So, depending on OUYA’s success this summer and fall, it wouldn’t be surprising to see BlueStacks tweak its pricing accordingly.

With some competition afoot, BlueStacks will be trying to incentivize potential customers with its content deals, which include a handful of top game developers, like Glu Mobile, Halfbrick and OutFit7, for example, as well as Intellijoy, Deemedya and Droidhen. More will be announced over the next few months, the company tells us.

The announcement of GamePop follows the startup’s move in February to bring its App Player software to Surface Pro PCs and other devices running Windows 8. BlueStacks’ arrival on Windows 8, combined with its existing deals with AMD, Asus and Lenovo, will see its software preloaded onto over 100 million PCs over the course of the year, which could potentially help BlueStacks find a reach and scale that’s unusual for a startup — in software or gaming.

For more on GamePop, find the intro video below:

http://youtu.be/Oa1slWmNHA0

Article courtesy of TechCrunch

OUYA Closes $15 Million In Funding Led By Kleiner Perkins, Boasts 12,000 Game Developer Sign-Ups

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Today, gaming console and software company OUYA announced that they have closed a $15 million round led by Kleiner Perkins, and with participation from the Mayfield Fund, NVIDIA, Shasta Ventures and Ocean Partners. This marks one of the largest institutional investments to go to a project that had its humble beginnings on Kickstarter.

OUYA is a company that launched back in 2012 on Kickstarter under the guiding hands of Julie Uhrman, a video game industry veteran who believes that gaming should be affordable and enjoyable for everyone. She and the team developed a $99 Android gaming console, which hooks into the TV and comes with automatic access to free-to-try games. It launched on the crowdfunding site to much fanfare, scoring $8.6 million in funding, which ends up being around 9x more than OUYA asked.

Along with the $15 million round, which brings OUYA’s total amount of funding to $23.5 million, the company will also be bringing KPCB General Partner Bing Gordon on to the board of directors. Gordon brings with him years of experience from Electronic Arts.

Here’s what he had to say about the funding:

OUYA’s open source platform creates a new world of opportunity for established and emerging independent game creators and gamers alike. There are some types of games that can only be experienced on a TV, and OUYA is squarely focused on bringing back the living room gaming experience. OUYA will allow game developers to unleash their most creative ideas and satisfy gamers craving a new kind of experience.

The OUYA hardware has proven its spot in the market with the successful Kickstarter project, followed by an institutional investment led by a firm such as KPCB. “The message is clear: people want OUYA,” said Uhrman.

But the same story rings true for software, as the company has seen over 12,000 developers sign up for the platform to build games and monetize them in any way they’d like. This is up from 8,000 developer signups in March.

And if that weren’t enough, OUYA has been picked up by major retailers like GameStop, Best Buy and Amazon, with availability originally intended to begin June 4. OUYA is pushing that back to June 25, however, announcing the delay today as a result of a desire to be able to meet initial demand.

Clearly, the affordable gaming console speaks to people. But is it enough to make OUYA profitable? In an interview with TechCrunch, Uhrman explained that OUYA essentially breaks even on the hardware from the $99 gaming console, and that all games will be free-to-try. Curious if that was sustainable, we asked Uhrman if free-to-try would always be the case with OUYA games.

“Free to try is a core tenet of OUYA,” said Uhrman. “We wanted a gaming experience for the television that’s inexpensive to get into. Developers monetize however they’d like to, which is why we have games with unlockable demos inside a fully paid version, or micro-transactions, and even a donation based game. I’m looking forward to the first episodic, subscription-based game,” she said.

According to Uhrman, the latest round from KPCB and friends will go toward further supporting game developers and development, bringing in exclusive and unique OUYA content, and meeting the demand seen from all parts of the world, including Japan, Brazil, Germany, Spain, and Italy.

Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Founder Stories: Mailbox’s Gentry Underwood on Steering the Ship

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Last week at Disrupt NY, I took the stage with Gentry Underwood, Founder and CEO of Mailbox, to talk about the challenges of being a first time founder. I first met Gentry a month after he started Orchestra which became Mailbox, recently acquired by Dropbox. Mailbox is a mobile inbox where you can easily scan and quickly swipe to organize emails. Available for iPhone and Gmail, Mailbox also has a “snooze” feature that lets you put off less timely messages until later.

For me personally, I really wanted to build a product that got traction. Just to have the experience of building something that took off. And to have that experience of your sail catching wind and the ship being carried. But it wasn’t clear we were going to get there and we were running out of time.”

In our conversation, we discussed transparency in the funding process and how to keep employees in the loop without sharing more info than is necessary. Gentry explained how rallying his company around a shared vision allowed him take charge of the business side while the team focused on building a solid product.

Part of your job as a founder is effectively to be like the front end of a ship and deflect as many of the waves as possible to create as steady a state as you can through something that is inherently turbulent.”

Gentry also shares insight on how Orchestra was version one of Mailbox, why iterative design applies to engineers and investors, and the value in joining Dropbox who also puts their users first.

On the Dropbox acquisition:
“There was that moment that you have the rigging this thing a thousand different ways and you hoist it up and all of a sudden the ship just goes flying and you are holding on for dear life.”

Editor’s Note: Michael Abbott is a general partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, previously Twitter’s VP of Engineering, and a founder himself. Mike also writes a blog called uncapitalized. You can follow him on Twitter @mabb0tt.

Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Readying For An IPO, Peer-To-Peer Lending Marketplace Lending Club Raises $125M From Google And Others At $1.6B Valuation

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Peer-to-peer lending platform Lending Club is announcing a huge new investor today: Google. Google and existing investor Foundation Capital have put $125 million in Lending Club, which was valued at $1.55 billion in the round. As part of this investment Google will take an observer seat on the Lending Club Board alongside existing Board members including Kleiner Perkins’ Mary Meeker, ex-chairman and CEO of Morgan Stanley John Mack and former U.S. Treasury Secretary Larry Summers.

The investment by Google came as part of a secondary transaction whereby new and existing investors acquired shares from existing investors. Last year, Lending Club raised $17.5 million from Kleiner Perkins, bringing its total outside investment to just under $100 million. Because this is a secondary round, there is no new money being raised, as Google and Foundation are buying out existing early investors.

Lending Club, which brings together lenders and borrowers who want to cut out banks in the process of investing among peers, has facilitated a total of $1.65 billion in loans. In the last quarter, Lending Club saw $350 million in loans made through the platform, and has generated 22 consecutive quarters of positive returns. Lending Club expects to issue $2 billion in loans this year alone.

The company’s wholly-owned subsidiary LC Advisors, an SEC Registered Investment Advisor, has launched several funds in the last 2 years and now has more than $450 million in assets under management.

To put Lending Club’s growth in context, when peer-to-peer lending began to establish itself about five years ago, there was a lot of excitement. By taking banks out of the equation altogether to connect investors directly with those in need of a loan, p2p lending almost immediately had tons of appeal (for both consumers and investors). However, thanks to heavy scrutiny from the SEC, companies like Lending Club and its main competitor Prosper faced a few challenges. However, the SEC finally greenlit the model, and Lending Club has been growing ever since.

The company announced last year that it is cash-flow positive for the first time. Last year, the company added 50 employees, including the former Visa head of global development and Morgan Stanley CTO John McIlwaine and E-Trade general counsel Russel Elmer. Lending Club is also reportedly gearing up for a potential IPO in the next year or so.

“Lending Club is using the Internet to reshape the financial system and profoundly transform the way people think of credit and investment” said Google’s VP of corporate development, David Lawee. “We are excited to be a part of it.”

Having Google (not Google Ventures) as an investor is a huge deal. It’s not that often that Google makes a corporate and strategic investment in a company. In fact it’s pretty rare. The investment was made through Google’s new last-stage investment arm, headed by Lawee. Most recently, Google participated in Survey Monkey’s recent funding.

“The Google team is excited that Lending Club could transform the banking space,” says CEO Renaud Laplanche. “The company believes that our technology brings better value for consumers.

“By promoting the transparency and democratization of data, Lending Club is opening up tremendous opportunities for disintermediation, which is disrupting the traditional banking model,” said Charles Moldow, general partner at Foundation Capital, which has invested $more than $50 million in the company. He adds that the investment was the one of the few largest in the firm;s 18-year history, which is “a testament to the magnitude of the opportunity” for the company.

Laplanche explains to us that this year will be spent continuing to raise awareness for company and grow fast, specifically focusing on helping borrowers with good credit pay off credit card balances, and access lower interest rates from borrowers.

As for the rumors of an IPO, Laplanche confirms that Lending Club is preparing for a potential IPO and hopes to be ready sometime in 2014 for a public offering.

Article courtesy of TechCrunch

The 7 Disrupt NY Finalists: Enigma, Floored, Glide, Handle, HealthyOut, SupplyShift And Zenefits

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TechCrunch Disrupt NY 2013 - Day 1

More than 2,000 people have filled up the historic Manhattan Center with our biggest hackathon and Startup Alley yet, and a set of incisive discussions with tech leaders. Now it’s time for the battlefield finals, and we have our seven finalists picked out.

But first, tomorrow will feature Ashton Kutcher, Joe Lonsdale, a big panel on transportation, an interview with hardware startup leader Limor Fried, the Rap Genius guys, and more.

Finals judges include Nancy Peretsman (Allen & Company), Roelof Botha (Sequoia Capital), Chris Dixon (Founder Collective), David Lee (SV Angel), Michael Arrington (CrunchFund), and Chi-Hua Chien (Kleiner Perkins).

Enigma.io makes it easy to analyze data from more than 100,000 data sources, and is already being used by journalists to break stories and financial firms and companies to make smarter business decisions.

Floored scans office spaces, apartments and houses using 3D camera technology and proprietary software to build customizable 3D models for real estate purposes.

Glide lets you enjoy video chat on your own schedule, and has made it into the finals round from our Startup Alley.

Handle helps you manage your email overload via a rich web app as well as a companion native iOS app that integrates with Gmail (and soon Microsoft Exchange and Yahoo).

HealthyOut provides users with personalized menus of food from local restaurants, set up as a subscription delivery service to help them lose weight or just eat better overall.

SupplyShift is an enterprise tool that lets companies and organizations track everything that’s going on with suppliers around world, collecting sustainability data to help them reduce risk exposure.

Zenefits helps small businesses manage payroll, health care and other human-resources services for employees.

Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Mobile Enterprise Startup Workspot Lets Employees Securely Work From Whatever Device They Want

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Workspot vertical

Mobile enterprise startups are like unicorns. Nearly every VC I talk to wants to have a bet in this space, yet there really aren’t that many new candidates each year.

Everyone knows that workers are bringing their own devices to work and want to use their personal tablets or phones instead of clunky, employer-mandated devices. Yet employers want to make sure that corporate data remains secure and trackable.

Enter Workspot, a startup backed by Kleiner Perkins, Norwest Venture Partners and Redpoint, that’s debuting today at TechCrunch Disrupt in New York.

“We’re simplifying bring-your-own-devices for the enterprise,” said co-founder Ty Wang. “The biggest problem that most companies have is that people love these devices. They’re bringing them into work, but they can’t get their work done because the apps the they need like Microsoft’s Sharepoint, are still behind corporate firewalls.”

Wang said older competitors that do mobile device management have solutions that lock the entire device down, that make them unusable in other situations.

Instead, Workspot’s solution is a consumer app that an employee can download through the regular iOS app store. It gives them streamlined access to all of their work apps, requiring just a basic log-in with password. (That’s after a one-time authentication with their work’s network security appliance.)

The company supports four of the leading VPN providers like Cisco and Juniper, which cover about 80 percent of the market and let workers log-in remotely into corporate networks. Employers can easily add in new apps for their employees to use from a control dashboard. Wang said the process takes a few minutes.

“With most of the solutions today, you’d need to set up this system, go through a whole new testing cycle and all kinds of process to add apps,” he said.

The product is actually free for end-users, and Workspot monetizes through offering employers two paid services. One is something called Insights, which gives them analytics into how their workers are using their software and the other is called Events, which gives the employer total visibility into all end-user activity for compliance and auditing.

For those two services, the company charges anywhere from $150 a month for 0 to 25 users to $4 per user per month for companies with more than 250 employees.

The company has raised $1.9 million from Kleiner, Norwest and others and has 11 employees. Their team has a wealth of experience in enterprise. The CEO Amitabh Sinha previously oversaw the integration of acquisitions at Citrix after being a general manager of Enterprise Desktops and Applications. The CTO and co-founder Puneet Chawla spent seven years at VMWare before working as an entrepreneur-in-residence at Redpoint Ventures. Wang, who is also another co-founder, was a vice president of business development for Twilio after being a senior director for platform product marketing at Oracle.

Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Just Because It’s Easier To Raise VC Money, That Doesn’t Mean You Should

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When should an entrepreneur raise money, who should they raise from….and, well, should they even raise? These were some of the questions discussed on a morning panel at TechCrunch Disrupt NY 2013, which included participation from Mike Abbott of Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, Aaref Hilaly of Sequoia Capital, AngelList’s Naval Ravikant, and Box Group’s David Tisch.

Pitching A Partner Vs. A Firm

The VCs debated the various merits of pitching or working with an individual partner at a firm, versus considering what the entire firm could offer, in terms of guidance and experience. Abbott said that at KPCB, each partner has a different set of experiences to offer. Hilaly challenged that, while that’s true, the premise that it’s a single VC partner is most important to a founder, noting that individual partners are not as important as the collective partnership, like at Sequoia. There, everyone has their own specialities, but the entire firm gets behind the company, he says. (And yes, even Color, he admitted, responding to a question from the panel’s moderator, TechCrunch co-editor Alexia Tsotsis.)

Ravikant, however, offered a different, more challenging answer to the question about who and how entrepreneurs should determine who to work with and pitch to: just use AngelList. “As a technology entrepreneur, I wanted to solve the problem with a product,” he explains, adding that he tells founders to use the product, and “call me later if you fail.”

The A Round

When an entrepreneur has moved beyond the seed stage, the next question that typically gets asked is who to raise the A round from? Tisch says that’s an impossible question to answer. The only data point you have is that someone has invested in another company like yours before, or has recently blogged about their interest in similar technology, he explains. When someone asks him about the A round, he replies, “just go meet with them all and see who’s interested.” The problem, he continues, is that VCs can’t really advertise their interests, because it would be limiting.

That being said, he admitted that being New York-based himself, he likes to send founders to area firm USV.

What Do You Want To Fund?

Then, the burning question that entrepreneurs are continually curious about: What areas do you want to invest in? Abbott responds with a fairly pat answer that KPCB is about investing in the technology that can enable the world-changing trends. Tsotsis wanted to know if Google Glass now fits that description, but he said he’s thinking more about sensors on the body, data and machine learning. Hilaly also seemed a little skeptical about Glass as a consumer device, saying that, though he loved that Google took these so-called “moonshots,” he foresees more commercial applications for Glass than the consumer apps people are excited about today.

Ravikant added that the best way to invest – like he does – is to look at companies that are an extension of your life to date, meaning those you have a personal connection and belief in. Tisch seemed to agree, talking about how he likes things that use the Internet to make his life easier.

Easier? asked Tsotsis.

“I can’t press a button had have food come out of the wall yet,” he joked, before offering deeper insight – that technology in the car and home will become more passive in the future, without users having to take some action first.

Entrepreneurs Have  More Choice – But That Doesn’t Mean They Should Raise From VCs

The investors then discussed the biggest threat – or rather, disruption – to their own industry in recent months, and the agreement was that it has become significantly easier to raise early money. Entrepreneurs today even have far more choice in terms of who they choose to take investment from than these VCs did back when they were raising as founders themselves. But while it has gotten easier, there’s a flip side – cautions Hilaly, “don’t start a company because you can.”

The diffusion of talent because of this improved ability to raise may prevent talented folks from working at larger firms like Facebook or Google, where they may actually have a bigger impact, and which are a better use of skills.

Tisch, instead of dismissing these smaller-scale companies, says the larger trend at play here is the rise of a new class of technology businesses. He referred to these as lifestyle businesses, those with maybe a $10 million to $15 million upside, but aren’t venture-scale. There’s not an investor class to fund these companies yet, he says, but thinks crowdfunding will help these kinds of companies scale.

There’s nothing wrong with smaller businesses with smaller exits, but it becomes a problem when these kinds of startups try to force themselves to have a larger vision just to go after the VC money they need to scale.

Article courtesy of TechCrunch

Day Two Of TechCrunch Disrupt NY 2013: Watch The Live Stream Here

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It’s day two here at TechCrunch Disrupt NY 2013, and we’ve got another full day of fireside chats, founders’ stories and startup battlefield pitches for your viewing pleasure. As with yesterday, we’ll be live streaming all the action — expect the live stream to kick off around 8:45am ET and end about 6pm when the last battlefield pitch concludes.

One note: we’re not live streaming the exclusive screening of Downloaded. Only Disrupt attendees get to enjoy that. But for everything else, follow along on the live stream and tweet with us at #TCdisrupt.

Coming up in the morning we’ve got fireside chats with the likes of Mailbox’s Gentry Underwood, now a part of Dropbox so that should be an interesting conversation, and eBay’s John Donahoe, along with panels on digital advertising (with speakers from Google, Facebook and Twitter) and digital money (with Stripe, PayPal and Gumroad).

Moving into the afternoon highlights include Shawn Fanning and Alex Winter talking about their film Downloaded. And of course, the next round of the startup battlefield.

Here’s the full agenda for the day:

9:00am – 9:05am
Opening Remarks by TechCrunch

9:05am – 9:35am
Fireside Chat with Fred Wilson (Union Square Ventures)

9:35am – 10:00am
Founders Stories with Gentry Underwood (Mailbox)

10:00am – 10:25am
Ads: Your Eyeballs Are Money: Neal Mohan (Google), Gokul Rajaram (Facebook), Kevin Weil(Twitter)

10:25am – 10:50am
Fireside Chat with John Donahoe (ebay)

10:50am – 11:00am
Special Product Announcement

11:00am – 11:20am
BREAK

11:20am – 11:45am
Lots of Venture, But What is Gained?: Mike Abbott (Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers), Aaref Hilaly(Sequoia Capital), Naval Ravikant (Angel List), David Tisch (Box Group)

11:45am – 12:05pm
In Conversation with Troy Carter (Atom Factory)

12:05pm – 12:30pm
Show Me the [Digital] Money: John Collison (Stripe), Hill Ferguson (PayPal), Sahil Lavinga(Gumroad)

12:30pm – 2:00pm
LUNCH

2:00pm – 2:25pm
Downloaded with Shawn Fanning (Airtime) and Alex Winter (filmmaker)

Startup Battlefield with Jason Kincaid
2:25pm – 2:30pm
How the Startup Battlefield Works

2:30pm – 3:30pm
Session Four – Layers of Experience

Judges: Heidi Messer (Collective[i]), Peter Pham (Science), Dave Samuel (Freestyle Capital), Scott Stanford (Sherpa Foundry)

3:30pm – 3:45pm
BREAK

3:45pm – 4:45pm
Session Five – New Marketplaces

Judges: Pat Gallagher (CrunchFund), Zach Sims (Codecademy), David Tisch (Box Group),Michelle Zatlyn (CloudFlare)

4:45pm – 5:00pm
BREAK

5:00pm – 6:00pm
Session Six – Mobile First

Judges: Matt Brezina (Sincerely), Nicole Glaros (Techstars), Naval Ravikant (Angel List), Lior Zorea (Perkins Coie)

6:15pm – 8:15pm
Downloaded – Exclusive Screening at TechCrunch Disrupt in advance of the digital and theatrical release later this year.

9:00pm – Midnight
After Party hosted by MailWeGo at Hudson Terrace

Article courtesy of TechCrunch

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