Posts Tagged ‘farmville’

09 Jan 2010
15

Congratulations Crunchies Winners! Facebook Takes Best Overall For The Hat Trick By admin in Internet Development

This year’s third annual Crunchies Awards have just concluded, and we’re happy to say that it was an overwhelming success. For those that weren’t watching, we’ve included the list of nominees and winners below. Our most sincere congratulations to the winners and to all of the nominees as well. It was an incredibly tight race for many of the categories, and it’s safe to say that everyone on this list is at the top of their field.

We’d like to take a moment to point out Facebook’s win for “Best Overall Startup Or Product”, which marks the third year in a row that the company has taken home the top prize. Facebook continues to innovate and deploy features at an impressive rate while still showing incredible growth. Ours hats go off to you.

If you’d like to watch the event for yourself, you can watch an archived version of the live stream here.

Best Technology Achievement:

Backblaze

Bing (Microsoft)

Chrome OS (Google) (Winner)

Google Wave

PuSH

Silverlight (Microsoft)

Best Internet Application:

Animoto

Dropbox (Winner)

Groupon

MOG All Access

Posterous

Yelp

Best Social App:

Aardvark

Brizzly

DailyBooth

Farmville(Winner)

SocialVibe

StockTwits

Best Bootstrapped StartUp:

atebits (Tweetie)

Shoes of Prey

Tinychat (Winner)

Wildfire Interactive

wizehive

Wufoo

Best Mobile Application:

foursquare (Winner)

Google Voice

Gowalla

Kindle for iPhone

Skies of Glory

Tonchidot

Best International:

Amiando

Jolicloud

Playfish

Spotify (Winner)

TweetDeck

vente-privee.com

Best Time Sink Application:

Canabalt

Civilization Revolution (iPhone)

DailyBooth (Winner)

I Am T-Pain

Pandora

Zoosk

Best Design:

Animoto (Winner)

Brizzly

Chrome (Google)

Clicker

Facebook Mobile

Threadsy

Best Enterprise:

Amazon Web Services

Atlassian

Azure (Microsoft)

Chatter (Salesforce)

Google Docs/Office (Winner)

Yext

Best CleanTech:

CalStar Products

Locust Storage

Picarro

Sappphire Energy

Sun Run (Winner)

Tendril

Best New Gadget:

Apple Magic Mouse

Barnes & Noble nook (Winner)

litl webbookMotorola Droid

Sonos S5

Zune HD

Best Tech PR:

Brew Media Relations

LaunchSquad

OutCast Communications

PerkettPR

Spark (Winner)

SutherlandGold Group

Best Angel:

Betaworks

Chris Sacca (Lowercase Capital)

Jeff Clavier (SoftTechVC)

Ron Conway (SV Angel) (Winner)

Y-Combinator

Yossi Vardi

Best VC Firm:

Accel Partners (Winner)

Charles River Ventures

Benchmark Capital

Greylock Partners

Sequoia Capital

True Ventures

Union Square Ventures

Founder Of The Year:

Aaron Patzer (Mint) (Winner)

Elon Musk (Tesla)

Jack Dorsey (Square)

Jeremy Stoppelman & Russ Simmons (Yelp)

John Borthwick (Betaworks)

Omar Hamoui (AdMob)

CEO Of The Year:

Josh Silverman (Skype)

Marc Benioff (Salesforce)

Mark Pincus (Zynga) (Winner)

Neil Young (ngmoco)

Richard Rosenblatt (Demand Media)

Tony Hsieh (Zappos)

Best New Startup Or Product Of 2009:

Aardvark

Bing (Microsoft) (Winner)

Foursquare

Hunch

Milo

Spotify

Best Overall Startup Or Product Of 2009:

Android (Google)

Facebook (Winner)

LinkedIn

ngmoco

Twitter

Zynga

Crunch Network: CrunchBase the free database of technology companies, people, and investors

View full post on TechCrunch

Bookmark and Share
04 Dec 2009
1

Weekly Roundup for Nov. 23rd – Nov 30th, 2009 By External in Weekly Roundups

Instant Weekly Roundup - Free Wordpress Plugin
Bookmark and Share
22 Nov 2009
11

Five Reasons the Google Chrome OS Will Flop By External in Misc.

Five Reasons the Google Chrome OS Will Flop – CIO.com – Business Technology Leadership

By Tony Bradley

Yesterday Google hosted a press event at its Mountain View campus to reveal a first glimpse at the Chrome OS. The excitement around the operating system has led to rampant rumors and speculation, but I question whether the Chrome OS is really worth any of this hype.

Google is Google. It has a Midas touch when it comes to web-based applications and services so its easy to get wrapped up in anticipation about a web-centric operating system from Google. Here are five reasons Chrome won’t live up to the hype.

Editor’s note: PC World contributor Jared Newman takes an alternate point of view in his Today@ blog “Five Reasons the Google OS will Succeed“. Think they are both wrong? We’d love to hear your thoughts in the comments)

1. Not everything runs in the cloud. I know Google has a web-centric, cloud-computing perspective on the world, but not everything runs from the cloud. Sure, Picassa and Flickr have some photo editing capabilities, but they’re not Adobe Photoshop.

That is just one example, but the point is that there are applications that pretty much have to be run locally. An operating system that is essentially just a web browser on steroids designed to run on low-end netbook hardware will not be able to fill that need.

2. The cloud isn’t always available. In order to run all of your applications from the cloud, you have to be connected to the cloud. Wi-Fi connections are becoming more ubiquitous, but there are still plenty of places I go where there is no Wi-Fi available.

An airplane is a good example. Airlines are beginning to implement wireless network availability in-flight, but usually for a fee. That basically renders a Chrome OS netbook useless while flying unless you cave and pay the exorbitant airline access fees.

3. Games. One of the driving forces behind PC hardware development and PC sales is gaming. Nobody needs a $750 graphics card to use Microsoft Office, and a 5.1 surround sound speaker system is a little overkill for checking email.

Sure, there are games on the web. Thousands of them. Facebook users waste spend weeks of time playing Mafia Wars and Farmville. But, Farmville is no Spore. Hardcore gamers want the raw horsepower that a PC provides.

4. Chrome web browser. Google’s Chrome web browser has been around for awhile. It has received some good reviews and has experience a relative degree of success in a crowded browser market.

That is admirable, but the Chrome web browser hasn’t exactly caught fire. It isn’t steamrolling Internet Explorer, or even Firefox, to capture browser market share. If the world isn’t tripping over itself to get the web browser, it seems safe to assume we also won’t flock to drop our Windows or Mac based hardware for a netbook running a glorified version of the browser we weren’t using in the first place.

5. We can do most of that now for free. Google doesn’t intend to offer the Chrome OS as a free application like most things Google. The plan is to make the Chrome OS available pre-installed on netbook hardware by the 2010 holiday season.

We can already do most, if not all, of what Chrome OS promises to deliver. Using a Windows 7 or Linux-based netbook, users can simply not install anything but a web browser and connect to the vast array of Google products and other web-based services and applications.

Netbooks have been successful at capturing the low-end PC market, and they provide a web-centric computing experience today. I am not sure why we should get excited that a year from now we’ll be able to do the same thing, but locked into doing it from the fourth-place web browser.

The Chrome OS is half Linux and half Chrome web browser. Netbooks built on the Chrome OS will basically be web appliances running an operating system that is really just a web browser on steroids.

Google is virtually synonymous with the web, so its hard not to get excited. The Chrome OS may have something to offer the netbook audience, but it is not a threat to existing desktop operating systems at all.

My PC World counterpart Jared Newman seems to agree that the Chrome OS will essentially be a niche operating system. Jared feels, though, that Google is not trying to take over the operating system market and that, relative to what the OS is intended to be, Chrome will be a success. Perhaps.

If it didn’t have the word ‘Google’ at the front, nobody would care and most people would simply dismiss the effort. Chrome OS will be little more than a niche product and it begs the question ‘why bother?’

View Trend Microsoft Internet Explorer 64.64%
View Trend Firefox 24.07%
View Trend Safari 4.42%
View Trend Chrome 3.58%
View Trend Opera 2.17%
View Trend Opera Mini 0.35%
View Trend Netscape 0.33%
View Trend Mozilla 0.11%
View Trend Konqueror 0.05%
View Trend ACCESS NetFront 0.04%
View Trend Playstation 0.03%
View Trend Danger Web Browser 0.01%
View Trend Obigo 0.01%
View Trend Microsoft Pocket Internet Explorer 0.01%
View Trend Blazer 0.00%
Unknown 0.00%
View Trend MaxThon 0.00%
View Trend WebTV 0.00%
View Trend Lotus Notes 0.00%
View Trend BlackBerry 0.00%
View Trend iCab 0.00%
View Trend ANT Galio 0.00%

Tony Bradley tweets as @PCSecurityNews, and can be contacted at his Facebook page .

© 2007 PC World Communications

Posted using ShareThis

Bookmark and Share