17
May 12

Pinterest Raising $120 Million to Fund International Expansion [REPORT]

pinterest-pinboard-600Pinterest is raising $120 million in a funding round expected to be announced Thursday or Friday morning, according to multiple sources. The investment, Pinterest’s third, places the two-year-old social bookmarking site’s valuation in the range of $1 billion to $1.5 billion.

AllThingsD reports that Japanese commerce giant Raukten is leading the round with a $50 million investment. Ben Silvermann, Pinterest’s CEO and cofounder, is reportedly still deciding what other financing offers to accept.

Partnering with Raukten could open doors for Pinterest in Asia. The startup, which is still in invite-only beta, has enjoyed increasing mainstream recognition in the U.S., but has made little headway abroad. Meanwhile, clones are popping up like weeds.

One sign that Pinterest’s focus is growing increasingly international: a recent post to Pinterest’s corporate blog calling for translators for local-language editions of the site. French, German, Japanese, Portuguese and Spanish are the company’s first priorities, it said; Dutch, Greek, Italian, Korean, Malay, Polish, Russian, Simplified Chinese, Swedish and Turkish are next.

Pinterest has left its business model undefined — at least publicly. For a time, the startup was quietly earning money through an affiliate revenue scheme, but quickly shut it down after media caught wind of it. Still, Pinterest seems to have great revenue-earning potential, given that the network is already driving sales for some retailers.

Pinterest has raised $37.5 million in venture capital to date. Current investors include FirstMark Capital, Bessemer Venture Partners, Andreessen Horowitz and Ron Conway.

Rumors that Pinterest was raising a round in the range of $1 billion were first reported by The Next Web Wednesday.

Pinterest could not be reached for comment.


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Pinterest via Gemma Ganni.


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Pinterest via Krystyna Salvetta.


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Pinterest via Joy Cho/OhJoy!.


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Pinterest via Carolyn Van Lang.


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Pinterest via Kulson F. Dorego.


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Pinterest via Christine Martinez.


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Pinterest via Geninne D Zlatkis.


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Pinterest via Jennifer Lindsay.


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Pinterest via Alex BS.


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Pinterest via Leah Dent.

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Pinterest via Gemma Ganni.


Pinterest via Krystyna Salvetta.


Pinterest via Brianna Bauen.


Pinterest via cynk.


Pinterest via Joy Cho/OhJoy!.


Pinterest via FeeFee, RN.


Pinterest via Ashe.


Pinterest via Carolyn Van Lang.


Pinterest via Kulson F. Dorego.


Pinterest via Christine Martinez.


Pinterest via Geninne D Zlatkis.


Pinterest via Jennifer Lindsay.


Pinterest via Alex BS.


Pinterest via Leah Dent.


Article source: http://feeds.mashable.com/~r/Mashable/~3/03Sa5FsPd40/


17
May 12

Nearly All Rumors Agree: New iPhone Will Have a 4-Inch Screen

iPhone blueprint 600After yesterday’s report that Apple has been ordering 4-inch screens (or larger) for its next generation iPhone, Reuters chips in today Saying the same thing.

Citing sources familiar with the situation, Reuters claim the new iPhone’s screen will be exactly 4-inches from corner to corner. It’s still unknown whether the aspect ratio will stay the same (Apple could possibly fit a 4-inch screen into an iPhone 4/4S’ case), and any other details about the device are absent.

“Early production” of these new screens has begun at Korea’s LG Display Co Ltd, Sharp Corp and Japan Display Inc, sources claim, with full production starting as soon as June, which is traditionally the time when Apple unveils new iPhone versions.

We’ve heard all this back in January, when a Foxconn worker allegedly said that Apple is testing several iPhone screens, all 4-inch or larger.

All of this is, as always, unconfirmed by Apple, and the Cupertino giant has been known to surprise us now and then. Still, when the rumors are this aligned (we don’t remember anyone claiming the new iPhone will not have a larger screen), one has to think that there’s some truth beneath it all.

Article source: http://feeds.mashable.com/~r/Mashable/~3/rBytHkNeUM4/


17
May 12

Google’s Knowledge Graph and Two Other Stories You Need to Know

Social Media NewsWelcome to this morning’s edition of “First To Know,” a series in which we keep you in the know on what’s happening in the digital world. Today, we’re looking at three particularly interesting stories.

Google Revamps Search With Knowledge Graph

Google has made perhaps the most significant set of changes to its search engine yet with the rollout of the Knowledge Graph — a set of semantic tools which aim to make your search results more relevant and informative.

Google Search now asks you to point it into the right direction when offered ambiguous terms, and offers informative summaries for terms, with descriptions, photos and related items. The feature is live for users in the US, while other countries will get it in a matter of weeks.

Pinterest Raises $120 Million at a $1.5 Billion Valuation

Pinterest is raising $120 million at a $1 to $1.5 billion valuation, in order to fuel international expansion. Japanese commerce giant Raukten is leading the round with a $50 million investment.

US Smartphone Owners Use 28% More Apps Than Last Year [REPORT]

A new report from Nielsen sheds some light on app usage among US smartphone owners, and things are looking cheery for app developers. On average, a US smartphone owner uses 41 apps, a 28% year-over-year increase.

Furthermore, smartphone owners are spending more time using apps than using the mobile web, about 10% more than last year. As far as individual apps go, the top five are Facebook, YouTube, Android Market, Google Search, and Gmail.

Image courtesy of iStockphoto, mattjeacock

Article source: http://feeds.mashable.com/~r/Mashable/~3/3vc11Xrrr0w/


17
May 12

Dropbox Shortcuts, Long URLs, and Unwanted Calls [From The Tips Box]

Readers offer their best tips for “blocking” calls you don’t want to receive, sending files straight to your favorite cloud service, and getting rid of junk at the end of a long URL.

Don’t like the gallery layout? Click here to view everything on one page.

Every day we receive boatloads of great reader tips in our inbox, but for various reasons—maybe they’re a bit too niche, maybe we couldn’t find a good way to present it, or maybe we just couldn’t fit it in—the tip didn’t make the front page. From the Tips Box is where we round up some of our favorites for your buffet-style consumption. Got a tip of your own to share? Add it in the comments, email it to tips at lifehacker.com, or share it on our tips and expert pages.

Article source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/XALqEx27rFQ/


17
May 12

A New Way Of Looking at Your To-Do List [Productivity]

A New Way Of Looking at Your To-Do List How do you decide which tasks you tackle first on your to-do list? If you’re choosing based solely on priority, your system is probably breaking down on a regular basis, according to father of GTD David Allen. Here’s how to set up your list so “priority” isn’t just something else on your list to ignore.

A New Way Of Looking at Your To-Do List

Why Hard-Coding Priority Doesn’t Work

Priorities change too often to be set in stone when you add a new item to your to-do list, and inflexible priorities don’t take the human element into account. But you have to arrange your to-dos in some kind of order, right?

In an interview with GTD Times, productivity guru David Allen explains that we should all stop organizing our to-do lists strictly by priority. He doesn’t say you should throw the concept of priority out the window entirely, just that the way we think about it breaks down entirely too easily. Here’s why:

  • Organizing your to-dos by priority “codes” like “A, B, C” or “High, Medium, Low” creates an inflexible system that can’t adapt.
  • A “red” priority item at 8am can easily become a “green” priority item at noon—setting the priority as soon as you add an item ignores the fact that priorities change, sometimes within hours.
  • Assigning priorities or flags to to-dos strictly by deadline or when you get the work completely ignores the times of day when you’re most productive.
  • Setting priority based entirely on deadline ignores the time required to do the work.

The crux of Allen’s argument is that your priorities at 4pm are bound to be different than they were at 8am, so why should your to-do list be set in stone at 8am? If at the end of the day you’re tired and want to go home, no red flag will make you ready to tackle your next big project, so why can’t your to-do list reflect the times of day when you do your best work? Sure, you can move your priorities around over the course of the day, but that forces you to spend time managing your to-do list—one of the cardinal sins of productivity. You don’t want to waste time organizing work rather than doing work. Photo remixed from doglikehorse.

A New Way Of Looking at Your To-Do List

Redefine “Priority” to Include More Variables

So what’s the solution? Change the way you think about “priority.” Make sure that when you organize your list, you don’t just do it in terms of what you were assigned first and when it needs to be done. Instead, arrange your to-dos based on your daily schedule and your peak productivity times, in addition to when they need to be completed. Allen puts it this way:

The four criteria that you will use to decide what to do are (in order of precedence):

  • Context (what can I do where I am?)
  • Time (when do I have to do something else?)
  • Energy (how wasted/fresh am I?)
  • Priority (what has the highest payoff for me if I do it?)

So for example, you get an email from your boss at 10am to look into a server problem. The server is across the country, and poking around now will disrupt the people using it. Your boss says it’s important, but you know that the server is only in use every week. So now you have to decide when you’re going to look at the issue. Photo by FuzzBones.

You can’t do the work now, but if you’re most productive in the evenings, you might want to tackle it later in the day, after everyone’s logged off. The highest payoff for you would be to get the work done quickly, but if the server is only in use every week, so you can probably schedule the work for tomorrow, or in the evening, when you can work freely and you’re energized. Had you just added the item to your to-do list with an “A” priority because it’s urgent, it would sit next to all of the other “A” items and force you to re-prioritize every time you look at your to-dos. Allen’s method takes more thought, but it results in a more concrete plan.

How do you prioritize your to-dos? What things do you take into account? Share your tips in the comments below.

Title photo by R/DV/RS.

Article source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/P0PlwzR-QwQ/a-new-way-of-looking-at-your-to+do-list


17
May 12

The Avengers Desktop [Featured Desktop]

The Avengers Desktop Flickr user l1nfr4nk7 loved The Avengers as much as we did, so he decided to transform his Ubuntu desktop into a reminder of how awesome the movie was. A great wallpaper, some Conky action, an icon theme that fits right in…you could say he assembled quite the functional and good-looking desktop.

Bad jokes aside, if you want the same look for your Ubuntu machine, here’s what you’ll need to get the job done:

We’re thrilled to see more linux desktops appear over at the Lifehacker Desktop Show and Tell Pool. If you’re not sure how to get everything set up just right, head over to l1nfr4nk7′s Flickr page to ask him how he configured his desktop, and let him know how much you like his work while you’re there!

Windows users looking for a similar setup can get the same effect with Rainmeter and a little Rocketdock or ObjectDock action. Not familiar with how to use Rainmeter? We have a guide that can help. Mac users can approximate much of this with GeekTool, the Mac OS dock, and our guide to setting up GeekTool.

Do you have a gorgeous, productive, informative desktop you’d like to see featured at Lifehacker? Post it to the Lifehacker Desktop Show and Tell Flickr Group, and please include a description of how you made it. You never know, it may be the next featured desktop!

The Avengers Desktop | Flickr

Article source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/GRoQJjGikdE/the-avengers-desktop


17
May 12

Google Music users granted de-authentication reprieve as company retools activation system

Google Music users granted de-authentication reprieve as company retools activation system

Google Music users learned of a frightful new policy this morning that dictates a user may de-authorize only four devices in a year, out of ten total activations. While the policy is likely to go unnoticed by the majority of consumers, it instantly created a great pain for those who regularly flash ROMs to their phones and tablets. It seems the road to de-authorization hell is paved with good intentions, however, as Google has since responded to critics with the revelation that it’ll introduce an activation system that accounts for such nuances.

We’ve determined through our own experimentation that Google has temporarily suspended the de-authorization limit of four devices, and while it’s difficult to know how long this reprieve will last, we’re hopeful that it’ll remain in effect until Google implements this new system to recognize duplicate authorizations. Additionally, we’ve learned through our conversations with the company that users may, in fact, sign in to their Google Music account from any number of devices, and it’s only when a tune is deliberately streamed that your smartphone or tablet will be added to the list of ten.

What’s more, while the company was rather insistent that songs couldn’t be streamed to multiple devices at the same time, it seems that Google’s system of checks and balances is spotty at best — we were able to simultaneously stream tunes to three devices without so much as a hiccup. Yes, the system eventually shook its finger at us, but it serves as a nice reminder to have fun while the insanity lasts.

Article source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadgetmobile/~3/0RIQMuth0Us/


17
May 12

NTT DoCoMo’s Galaxy S III to ship with 2GB RAM?

Image

Ah, Japan. That far east country what begot Mario most always gets to profit from the industry’s more delightful excesses. This time, however, the spoils have less to do with gaming flash and more to do with smartphone specs. In a document recently released by NTT DoCoMo, the carrier’s upcoming dual-core Galaxy S III variant is listed as doubling up on the available RAM, bypassing the standard 1GB announced at its official unveiling. It’s not the first time we’ve seen an OEM shoot for the silicone stars, considering LG’s headline-stealing Optimus LTE2 and monstrous LS970, so the swap could be likely. Nothing’s set in stone quite yet, but given this is Samsung’s flagship wünderphone, we doubt the company wants to be caught playing in its Korean rival’s forward-looking wake.

Article source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadgetmobile/~3/bsJS3fFpyEI/


17
May 12

LG’s Optimus LTE2 ships this week in Korea, nails down a few more specs

LG's Optimus LTE2 ships this week in Korea, nails down a few more specs

Just in case the world forgot which phone was first with 2GB of RAM, LG has pushed out another press release for its Optimus LTE2 which ships this week in Korea, just as promised. The detailed specs reveal this version ships with a 4.7-inch True HD IPS LCD, and while many of its specs (8MP camera, 1.5GHz dual-core CPU) are identical to its predecessor, it weighs in at an extra 10g, likely owing to the larger 2,150mAh battery. As mentioned previously it also has support for wireless charging and, naturally, the Optimus UI 3.0 detailed earlier. There’s still no word on when we’ll see this one outside of Korea but for now a few specs and pictures will have to hold us over.

Article source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadgetmobile/~3/Ok26E5I3xuE/


16
May 12

How Personal Capital Wants To Bring Money Management Into The Internet Age [TCTV]

It’s been amazing how technology-enabled aggregation can make certain things in life so much easier — spaces such such as travel planning, real estate searching, and news reading come to mind. But when it comes to the financial space, that disruption hasn’t quite happened yet. Most of us have a retirement account here, a checking and savings account there, a credit card or two somewhere else, and so on. And we still deal with each one on its own. Getting one picture of your entire financial portfolio is not a very common thing.

That’s where Personal Capital wants to come in. The company, which launched last year, provides a suite of software aimed at helping people manage their investments, banking and personal finances — no matter where they are — through one central suite of web and mobile apps. Personal Capital is supported by some real industry weight: Its CEO and founder is Bill Harris, who was the longtime chief exec at Intuit, and thus far the company has taken on $27 million in venture capital funding. Earlier this month Personal Captial was named “Best In Show” at the FinovateSpring, a conference in San Francisco focused on all things financial and technology related, so it certainly seems to be onto something big.

So when Personal Capital put out its first iPhone app last week, we asked Harris and product VP Jim Del Favero to stop by TechCrunch TV and give us a hands-on look at the service. Watch the video above to hear about why it’s a good thing to show your “entire financial life” in one place, how Personal Capital is different from other financial software providers such as Mint and SigFig, why people about to cash in through the Facebook IPO should manage their money in a modern way, and more.


  • PERSONAL CAPITAL

Personal Capital is a Redwood City, CA-based startup that offers a full suite of customer-centric retail investment management, banking and personal finance services. Bringing wealth management into the internet age, Personal Capital gives individuals with complex financial lives a better way to manage their money.

Learn more

Article source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/DApSDv-kM-8/


16
May 12

Sleepover Time! All-Night Hackathon Precedes Facebook IPO At Headquarters

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Carrying on in the esteemed tradition of Facebook hackathons, there will be an all-nighter on Thursday at the company’s Menlo Park headquarters that culminates with CEO Mark Zuckerberg ringing in the NASDAQ bell ahead of the company’s much, much, much anticipated IPO.

There is an internal event page for the big day that has about a thousand Facebook employees RSVP-ing for the bell ringing early on Friday morning. We can’t tell if there are any other big festivities prepared ahead of time. It’s all up in the air. Some people may dress up though. We don’t know if the gong will be used. Zuck will probably give some remarks as he has ahead of other hackathons.

“We want to get everyone together and remind ourselves that this company is about building things,” a source says.

Facebook has long emphasized the “Hacker Way,” which is about building things fast and constantly iterating on the status quo. Zuckerberg argued in Facebook’s original IPO filing that the word ‘hacker’ has long been misconstrued.

“The word “hacker” has an unfairly negative connotation from being portrayed in the media as people who break into computers,” he wrote. “In reality, hacking just means building something quickly or testing the boundaries of what can be done. Like most things, it can be used for good or bad, but the vast majority of hackers I’ve met tend to be idealistic people who want to have a positive impact on the world.”

In the tradition of other hackathons, expect some interesting product ideas to get fleshed out. Facebook Hackathons are a chance for employees to work on half-baked ideas and turn them into real products that eventually get shipped. Everything from Facebook’s chat system to an early version of Timeline called ‘Memories’ have come out of Hackathons. Even the famous ‘Fax’ button that Facebook once pranked Jason Kincaid with also came out of a hackathon.

In the meantime, while you’re in between reading all of mainstream media and blogosphere’s senseless blathering about what Facebook is really worth, enjoy these photos of Facebook employees sleeping at headquarters.

Update: Facebook engineering manager Pedram Keyani complains in the comments that we are not showing enough people hacking and perhaps giving a misguided impression that people sleep at Facebook hackathons. So correction: They do not sleep. They rage.

Article source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/o5g6256m7l8/


16
May 12

Palantir Technologies Nabs $56M In New Funding, SEC Filing Shows

palantir-technologies-picture

Palantir Technologies, the big data analysis company founded in 2004 by a team of ex-PayPal employees including Peter Thiel, has raised $56 million in new funding, according to a document filed today with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

This is by no means Palantir’s first go-round with venture capital investors. This is the company’s 7th round of funding, according to our records — back in October 2011, Palantir closed on a $70 million round of funding that served as its Series F. That raise was held at a $2.5 billion valuation, according to TechCrunch sources.

What Palantir does is not at all easy — or cheap. The company provides high-powered software platforms that let users integrate, visualize, and analyze large quantities of data. Perhaps most importantly, Palantir specifically has targeted its products to two sectors that need to parse large amounts of classified information, and require super solid security: Government and finance. The company counts governmental organizations such as the FBI and financial institutions such as JP Morgan as customers. Palantir has doubled in size each year since it was founded, according to its website.

We’ve reached out for more information from Palantir, and will update this post when we hear back.


  • PALANTIR TECHNOLOGIES

Palantir’s mission is to solve the most important problems for the world’s most important institutions.

Palantir was founded in 2004 by a handful of PayPal alumni and Stanford computer scientists. Since then Palantir has doubled in size every year while retaining early-stage values: a startup culture, strong work ethic, and rigorous hiring standards.

Palantir works in a variety of problem areas for various customers in both private and public sector, helping them answer questions like:

How do you prevent the next…

Learn more

Article source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/PK_hcyEDkC4/


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