Category: Websites (Page 14 of 23)

The CrunchPad is dead

The CrunchPad is no more.Less than a month after claiming the CrunchPad was “steamrolling” toward production, Michael Arrington has pronounced his web tablet dead. Apparently there was a serious fallout with the manufacturer. Serious as in the manufacturer is going to try to sell the device itself. Without Arrington. Potentially under the CrunchPad moniker.

This is about as spectacular as device wars get. You can imagine Arrington is pissed, and bound to be throwing around any lawsuit he can think up. He writes this about the email he received from Fusion Garage, the company set to manufacture the web tablet.

Bizarrely, we were being notified that we were no longer involved with the project. Our project. Chandra said that based on pressure from his shareholders he had decided to move forward and sell the device directly through Fusion Garage, without our involvement.

Err, what? This is the equivalent of Foxconn, who build the iPhone, notifiying Apple a couple of days before launch that they’d be moving ahead and selling the iPhone directly without any involvement from Apple.

The rest of Arrington’s post on the subject is appropriately distressed. I’m still amazed Fusion Garage would try to pull this off, particularly two days before the product was set for a public launch. For more detail on the drama, head over to to TechCrunch and offer Arrington your condolences.

Source: TechCrunch

YouTube launches citizen journalism site

YouTube logo.This morning YouTube announced a new site aimed at connecting citizen journalists with one another and with larger news networks. Called YouTube Direct, the site also allows news editors to make requests for footage of events, like natural disasters and political rallies. I’ve not been a huge fan of citizen journalism in the past, mostly because of the unedited trash people tend to gobble up as truth. This, though, puts that news back into the hands of the editors, which admittedly is its own problem, but I’ll take it over the alternative.

The site allows editors to post call-out videos requesting footage from your average Joe, a service that’s being tested by large news sources like the Huffington Post and NPR. The new site isn’t about revenue, though, according to YouTube’s head of news and politics, Steve Grove. “It’s an incentive to upload great video, because of the recognition you’ll get from legitimate news organizations.” The blog post announcing the site linked to videos you’ve probably seen of a teacher slapping an autistic child and a Chinese earthquake.

You can check out more about the service at the official blog.

Amazon nabs Zappos for $1.2 billion

Zappos boxes.This morning Amazon announced that it had closed the Zappos deal that had been rumored since July. Originally the online shoe retailer was valued at $928 million, but the final sale price was a whopping $1.2 billion. Yeah. With a B.

Zappos was happy to announce the news as well, stating that investors were compensated for Zappos shares with Amazon shares totaling the sale price. Zappos CEO Tony Hsieh also pointed out that things will pretty much stay the same with regard to management, albeit with a few new faces around.

We’ve been spending the past few months obtaining all the proper government approvals, and I’m happy to say that we officially closed the deal at the split second between Halloween (10/31/09) and All Saints’ Day (11/1/09). From a practical point of view, we’ve switched out our previous board of directors with a new management committee that is composed of people from Zappos as well as Amazon.

All in all, a pretty good weekend to be in either camp here. For Zappos, you just got $272 million richer. For Amazon, you just picked up a company that sells a billion shoes a year. Yeah. With a B.

Mr. Schwarzenegger, tear down that website

The Governator.The British minister for women and equality, Harriet Harman, has asked The Governator to shut down Punternet.com, a website that allows men to discuss and rate prostitutes, many of whom are located in the UK. The best part is that her request openly mocks Schwarzenegger.

“Surely it can’t be too difficult for ‘The Terminator’ to terminate Punternet and that’s what I am demanding that he does.” Now if that’s not diplomacy, I don’t know what is. Harman made the request of Schwarzenegger because the site is apparently based in California.

It’s also interesting to note that prostitution is legal in Britain. There are a whole lot of things associated with sex work that is illegal, like soliciting and “curb crawling,” but two consenting adults transacting for sex…no problem.

One of Punternet’s moderators has put together an open letter to Harman. You can read the letter on their website.

Source: Reuters

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