Vinny Lingham's Blog

MC Hammer Launches DanceJam – Its Hammer Time!

MC Hammer was at TechCrunch40 today, to announce his new company, DanceJam.  Don Dodge broke the DanceJam story on his blog today, after TechCrunch40 closed.  I managed to get a pic of yours truly & MC Hammer today!  In other news, there is a great Korean startup called MusicShake that have a fantastic product worth checking out!  It basically allows you to create your own music very easily – I played with it, using Parallels, and it was great fun.

So today, so far, I’ve seen an 80’s musician & lots of free money in Web 2.0 – does anyone smell a bubble? :-)   Actually, seriously, I think we’re in the start of a long term sustainable boom, with a few bumps along the way – there is a massive paradigm shift underway, and some of the businesses I saw today, don’t have a hope in hell of surviving through to second round funding, but hey – that’s just business in general!

I’m off now to Lucid, for the afterparty!! Long day ahead of me tomorrow though!  If you’re attending the conference, please stop by Booth 44 to see us demo Synthasite!

Facebook announces $10m FB Apps Fund

I’m sitting at TechCrunch40 and Mark Zuckerberg just announced the FaceBook $10m Apps fund to assist developers in building Facebook apps.  There will be no equity taken, and this is basically a grant.   The Web 2.0 market is going crazy… it’s certainly boom time! Free money…what next?

TechCrunch Coverage

TechCrunch is doing such a good job of coverage, I’m going to stop covering the event sessions :-)   (yes it’s a cop out, as my head is throbbing!).  I’ll be in the Demo Pit tomorrow with Synthasite, so I won’t have much time to do any blogging – so might as well quit while I’m ahead!

Keynote Panel: Humble Beginnings

The inaugural TechCrunch40 Keynote panel gets underway with a great panel of industry veterans:

Michael Moritz interviews Marc Andreesen (founder of Netscape & Opsware, co-founder of Ning), David Filo (co-founder Yahoo) and Chad Hurley (co-founder YouTube).

Michael asks Chad to give some background on his first business – which was a flywood poster business! David came out to California to go to Stanford grad school – didn’t hear what his first business was. Marc’s first business was a lemonade stand in kindergarten! By contrast, mine was selling Thundercat stickers at age 7! :-)

Marc graduated out of the mid-west, and headed out to west coast of the USA for his first job. These questions are really more background questions – nothing too insightful yet. It appears that Marc helped out David in the early days with Yahoo.

Marc says that startups need to have crazy ideas, because big companies don’t chase crazy ideas! The problem is that out of every 1000 crazy ideas, 999 are exactly that and they don’t work!

Chad gives some early backgound on YouTube – Chad did the front end and UI, while the other two co-founders did the backend. Marc describes the CEO role in any company as a constant stream of bad news :-) and having to deal with it! Now that’s pretty insightful! He also goes on to say that every company is different, so try not to base new decisions based on old information. Direction of causality is often misunderstood, vis a vis, why things go right or wrong. He also says that serial entrepreneurs need to try and build new cultures, instead of just drawing on people who previously joined other companies.

Chad said that one of YouTube’s biggest challenges was scaling the architecture, and building out their own data centers. This is very painful to blog as Marc speaks at the speed of light – just a little slower than myself :-) , so I’m going to just post this as is… keep reading for the next session after lunch.

Here are some Startup Tips from the panel:

Marc Andreesen :

Try to ensure that one of the founders is capable of being a CEO

Don’t hire too many people too soon.

Chad Hurley :

Small teams move faster, keep it tight!

David Filo:

Find people who are passionate about what they do, not about the money.

Techcrunch40 Session 2: Mobile and Communications

Cubic Telecom

The guys take to the stage, with a couple of good jobs. They are announcing the launch of their product today, called MaxRoam. It’s basically a sim card that allows you to pay local call charges, no matter where in the world you are, by having multiple numbers on your sim card. The Demo Demons got a hold of these guys, so their demo doesn’t work. If it does, I’m going to save a lot of money!

Yap

Yap is a J2ME mobile client that allows you to send text messages, while driving – for example, by speaking into your phone. It’s basically speech to text for the mobile phone and with the new laws in California around teenagers using their cellphones while driving, it’s probably going to take off pretty well! There is a low of vapourware here, as they have promised a lot more than what I know can be delivered, effectively & within user irritability limits, but all the power to them if it can save lives or make it easier to send txt messages. They also got hit by the Demo Demons and the demo’s weren’t effective.

Ceedo

Ceedo is a mobile phone embedded web portal (or something like that). It allows you to store mobile applications onto the flash memory of your phone, and make it operable on a PC. They are focusing on creating custom virtualization sevices, uses the mobile as a store for personalization. The portal it creates, allows you to create a portfolio of applications that you can take with you and use on multiple computers, without changing the settings. It’s like Parallels for Mobile – very cool, very interesting – definitely one of the better products I’ve seen so far.

LoudTalks

Basically, their main value proposition is push to talk:

  • Instant talk, no need to call
  • Simple single button access
  • Asynchronous talk at your pace
  • Loud talk to all your friends at once

Nothing amazing, some interesting features though. I can’t see this becoming the next big thing.

Trutap

“Brings together the social life of young people into one, free, universal, mobile service”

They’re basically trying to build out MXit onto Europe, China, India & South America. They didn’t mention that MXit exists despite that it is already boasting 4m users. The nice thing is that they do aggregrate messaging from multiple networks and platforms.

Vinny Lingham is an International Award winning Entrepreneur & Search Engine Marketer. He is currently CEO of Free Website maker, Yola.

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General February 2010
Yola September 2009
Web 2.0 August 2009
Yahoo July 2009
Media Coverage June 2009
Synthasite May 2009
Venture Capital April 2009
Affiliate Marketing March 2009
Conferences February 2009
Startups January 2009