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Congrats fo Foxytunes

Logomusictoolssmall(Update: It's official)

So confirmation and official announcement is still due for later today, but I thought I could rely on Paidcontent post, which confirms that Yahoo has (*most likely*) acquired Foxytunes.

Hard to tell how this item will cross over amidst the Microsoft-Yahoo mambo jumbo, but for everyone who is interested in digital/online music and in music 2.0 in general - this is a significant move.

I wrote in the past how their "post to facebook" feature is the best way to show videos on your facebook profile, and I would even guess that their mail signatures might evolve into a disrupting music promotions and discovery tool.

Congrats to the foxy lads - hard workers and modest people - being a great example on how to build a focused web product, making it 100% viral (no advertising or promotion used) while keeping it unobtrusive and need-oriented.

Their Foxytunes Planet site is also a good example for building a smart UI, utilising all the small nuances of attention design and the "less is more" rule.

Well, this kinda brings me to the next post, which I wanted to write for a long time, about how media players can be very effective for widgets seeding.

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Congrats to Yedda.com - Sold to AOL (undisclosed price)

Yaron has just reported about it - and it's great news, since Yedda (Questions & Answers service with a strong differentiating natural language technology) was one of the veteran Israeli web stratups of the web2.0 era.
Over the last year they have extended their original Q&A service into a platform that can be plugged to partner websites. This was an essential part of their latest growth.

Besides that, good people + strong tech skills + deep understanding of the anatomy of a web service + belief = success.Yedda

I've been using Yedda myself over the last year - starting as a replacement to my previous "Experts Exchange" account and later on as a daily tool for finding answers about software and tech tips.

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Wrapping TWS 2007

(I'm late after everyone with this follow up, so it's kinda old news. Anyway, thought it's still worth to shell some notes about the concept and the participating companies).

Great venue, cool surprise with Shimon Peres
The event itself was very well organised, with nice atmosphere and cool reception area.Yaronperes A nice addition to the agenda was obviously the keynote from Shimon Peres, which resonated most of his Leweb 3.0 speech (See full video of Leweb speech in English). I recommend watching it, as it includes many notions that weren't presented on TWS, especially the last parts where he addresses the potential of Cleantech and Africa - a subject I find myself interested in more and more lately (practically since this is really the next tech leap for Israel, which also bears a significant chance for Israel to take active part in advancing Africa).

I think it's the first time Peres is presenting his "Internet, Memory and the shifting Economics" vision in Hebrew, so big kudos to Yaron and Yami for arranging this opportunity. A video should be avail as well, soon.

The companies presentations

The main part of the event was a long run of about 2.5 hours, where each company had around 20 mins to present the product and talk about the big ideas they are delivering (or maybe 'Midwifing', see Peres video when he talks about La sage-femme).  There was no fixed format, so we saw different approaches: some focusing solely on a "product tour" and some presenting the market potential with a beefy orientation to investors pitch.

Here are some quick notes on some of the presentations (not necessarily making them the best candidates, just that I'm lazy to write on all):

  • MatchMyPet - described a vertical which I didn't even know had a real traction as they showed, which is pets matching and breeding. I only knew about the bulls competitions in the Kibbutz :) But their portal solution should integrate community, trading and matching capabilities, and should provide the first real online solution (as they claim), to this growing sector. I usually like strong vertical concepts, since they have good chance to hit a sweetspot and gain fast growth - but I'm quite clueless in assessing this opportunity. Let's see how it goes...
  • G.ho.st - the Israeli player in the sleeky Virtual OS/Startpages sandbox (YouOS, Goowy etc.). The presentation was definitely one of the best, and got a nice 'wow' effect. You can go and play with it online - it's working very nice. The one thing I'm not sure about this kind of services is where does their promise goes beyond a "great flashy UI" and can really become a useful daily environment. Using parallel desktops, in my view, creates a redundancy that will eventually be cumbersome for the user. Because eventually you might want "One Desktop to rule them all" - and if you look at the coming dev tools like Apollo, Vista and MacOS, they are very much focused on allowing a quick dev of offline/online apps, placed on the single root desktop. Personally, I feel that it's easier to stay with one desktop, offline/online functionality and smart app grouping. Seems to me that tools like Desktopize, which is a contrast approach to YouOs and G.ho.st, could gain a higher adoption from users and developers. But I'd still be very happy if G.ho.st will succeed - as I learned from the Giza VC blog that this project is a joint Palestinian-Israeli venture, based in Ramallah and Jerusalem. We need these kind of projects to be successful - and I'm full of respect for the founders who decided to set up the company as such.
  • iGiza - I'd rather look at them as a mix between vertical and SMB 2.0 - they offer a well designed business management suite for the MLM people. Now, I actually quite dislike (to say the least) MLM - I think it falls in the "sneaky/phishy" pot of trades, no matter what amazing stories are told about it. The whole growth model is based on a subtle deception, and hence I can't hold my restraint when I hear about traditional MLM business. However, it's a big market today, and more importantly, a very big community of traders that are zealous to increase their network and revenues. Here, iGiza's platform has a good potential, as it looks like a smart and useful organizer that addresses all the managerial gaps that MLM traders are facing. It's essentially a compact suite for freelance marketing, and I was impressed from the UI and design. So, good potential, real solution to a problem, but kinda in the bad guys yard :)
  • Urbanseeder - some vivid screens of a typical garden have been shown, but the interesting thing was a subtle note at the end of the presentation about the features for relationship visualization. That it - how to represent graphically the current communication status between you and your contacts, so you can instantly get an indication where the communication is flourishing and where it's neglected. In this case, it was demonstrated using the plants graphics, which looked very nice and I saw it has drawn the attention of some people. This is however not the core functionality of the service, and I guess the seeders aren't planning to expand this concept at the mo, but nevertheless it's a fascinating avenue, which still hasn't been implemented properly in today's "social communicators" - whether social networks, IM, emails etc. As for the business model, it wasn't presented ,which I think was a good decision. I've been wondering recently about possible intersections between Urbanseeder and vFlyer - maybe there's a way to come up with a business model based on the two services..dunno.

The VC's take
Well, reps from almost all the active VC's in Israel attended the event, headed of course by Giza, who helped organising the event and was main sponsor. Shai from Giza shares his thoughts on the event, highlighting that probably only 1 or 2 of the companies could qualify as a viable VC investment. I tend to agree, but we are also seeing that many VC's are taking the lab/miniestadi approach and creating a side operation to handle typical web startups investments. See also Ouriel's summary.

As TechCrunch 20 is now open for submissions - I assume that maybe 2 projects could be relevant, though I'm not sure about the terms of being first exposed on T20.

The rants...
Ok, we can't finish without some "oi nu" blurb. I think that the real miss of the event was the networking. I know Yaron and Yami have given a lot of thought to this and designed the name tags so people could see who's investor, but in the end it didn't work. After the presentations have ended, nobody really stayed for more than 30 mins, so basically there wasn't an effective entrepreneur/investor networking. For me and many others, this was the main target of the event, so it was a bit disappointing.

The no-english page in the website and no-english blog is also something I find a bit embarrassing. Again, I know that it's mainly due to lack of time. But I was surprised to hear from people in the event that they don't really care about this. Sometimes it's easy to sink into the "Israeli hood" and think that for a local event Hebrew only coverage is ok. It's not ok from many reasons, the main one is that we're just part of a global web business scene, and unlike the 90's web 1.0 era, when activity was very much in national silos, today the boundaries are almost transparent.

The Ego Corner

AtozSo here's the best part. The Co.ils honchos made a nice Web 2.0 A-Z poster, which was handed for free. I had a chance to contribute 2 terms there (many others were rejected :), and since I know Yaron is planning to sell those posters - I'm ready with the royalties calculator...

Ah last thing - the music in the breaks - man this was awful...why those Tiesto trance beats @#!%#$

Maybe next time consider something smoother, like:

 

SeƱor Coconut - Smooth Operator
"Smooth Operator" 12''
Stylish latin sleaziness fused into a classic lounge tune

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TWS2007 is probably also

a good time to see what's going on with the setup of OpenCoffee Tel Aviv...

Not being a TA citizen (yet), I could guess that bi-monthly or monthly meetings might be a nice format to start with, giving chance to people from other cities to catch a meetup.

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TWS 2007 - Israeli Web Startups Roundup - this week

Stuffed from Passover cakes and foods, many of us will go this Tuesday (10.4) to the TWS 2007 event in Tel Aviv, which will headline a contest round of 10 selected web startups and a typical networking cocktail.
Tws2007
It's organised by the nice lads at The Co.ils (the Israeli equivalent of Techcrunch and Vecosys), and according to the email invitation, almost 100 investors supposed to be there. The Co.ils honchos Yaron and Yami worked hard on this event in the last 3 months, interviewing dozens of projects and focusing the show on practical tech/biz talk, with the broadest lineup of relevant attendees. That's basically the first real comprehensive Web 2.0 Startups conference in Israel (as much as i know:).

The 10 finalists include some quite known names in the scene alongside new projects, and were chosen off 60 candidates.
They are:

  • iGiza - web 2.0 solutions for MLM. I don't really like MLM, but will be interesting to see their product.
  • The Weebz Family - stealth...no site, no idea what is it, but sounds like some avatar/IM/second life thing.
  • G.ho.st - Virtual computer, Online OS (like YouOS). The site has a working demo, so go check out.
  • Hingi - audio recognition engine to drive impulse purchase of music from TV/Radio broadcasts . Like Shazam, supposed to have a better engine.
  • MatchMyPet - social network for pet lovers. Well...Dogster was a success, so this vertical has a potential. The site design has to be upgraded though..
  • Double Trump - stealth...sounds like something with finance/investments.
  • Telecut - no site. Yet another voip service?
  • Urbanseeder - Offline/online flirting experience, see my past overview . Actually I had an idea recently how it can become even useful for indecent proposals...might write on this later on.
  • ClickTale - web metrics with deep user behaviour analysis.  I just wrote about them some days ago. Good product concept.
  • The Flat Panel Phone Co. - Web based IP telephony solution for SMB's. Something like a self managed IP PBX, with added web features and simplicity for SMB's. It's SIP based, using Asterix.

Interesting list, but to be honest I was a bit surprised not to find there names like Desktopize (which I find a great concept), Ceedo (portable personal desktop) or Semantinet (semantic frameworks for data) - all are startups with profound horizontality and good potential, in my view. But maybe it was open only to non-funded projects.

(Update - They actually didn't apply for the event, and it was open for everyone. See Yaron's comment below).

Giza VC are prime sponsors, but the coolest are probably the guy(s) from Eurekamp...also Deb Schultz, whom I met in Kinnernet, will head the judges panel.

 

Freeland - Mind Killer
"Now and Them" album
avalanching guitars and breaks

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Kinnernet 2007 #4: Video "Supermarket 2.0"

A brilliant short movie you ought to watch, made by Lior from Wishood and Gil from Urbanseeder.
(could also be added to the everything 2.0 list i guess).

Supermarket 2.0 - The best free videos are right here

(by Lior and Gil)
Online web 2.0 practices fused with the real life. This video should be submitted to some competition for sure...

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Kinnernet 2007 #3: Video "How to become a Kinnernet Cult Master Warrior"

This is an absolutely dope that left everybody open-mouthed.
Watch Pulver, Yossi Vardi, and other kingpins all animated with the Gizmoz 3D technology, in a twisted mysterious plot.
Creativity par excellence.

(Created by Eyal Gever and Gideon Weiler)

Kinnernet 2007 - By Gizmoz - Click here for the most popular videos

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Kinnernet 2007 #2: Kinkiness with Google Code search

So Kinnernet ended last Saturday, with lots of great memories and interesting personal encounters.

It's too huge to summarize the experience, but I'll try in the next posts to throw some highlights from this unique event of creative minds clash.

First is a nice neat hack, presented by Nimrod Lehavi, an ace coder from Israel.

Apparently if you search Google code search for cool funny comments, you get a flood of results of what
Nimrod calls 'a deeper look into a coder mind'...Check out these links:


Who said google can't also be
a tool for psychological analysis..?

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Gorillaz - Feel Good Inc (Stanton Warriors Mix)
12'' white label
The best remix!

Eurekamp 2007

Well it was a real fun. Thanks Roostam and the usual suspects for organising this 1-day creative brains clash.
Too bad the day after I finished completely wasted because of something else, but anyway I had a chance to meet great people and hear some neat ideas and a glimpse of different thinking paradigms. The cortexstorming sessions were the main activity and yielded interesting seeds to carry for further thought.

Back to the routine, we got Midem coming up shortly, and we got to start thinking how we are gonna use our little Crazor robot to make mayhem in the hall...

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Spooky - Belong (Ambient mix)
Belong 12''
Charlie May knows how to hypnotise

IsraelWebTour Highlights Video

The IsraelWebTour was concluded last week, and though it was quite a mini-showcase of local startups, it probably had a very good impact for the companies which attended.

Here's the highlights video of the companies showcase panel, hosted by Mike Arrington. (via Daniel Cohen of Gemini VC)

More comments on the session from Yaniv Golan of Yedda.

On a seperate note, here are my 2 comments for the dedicated blog which was covering this event:
- Without putting the companies logos at the front page, you really miss on visibility. People will first click on the logos to check the sites, then maybe start sifting through the posts and find the list of participating companies.
- I find the "What is your competitive advantage as being an Israeli based company" question quite useless and noisy. People don't care really how our culture plays a role in these applications. They want to know what's behind the app, and why is it good for them. People all over the world are creating the Web 2.0 sphere - it's a global phenomenon, and other countries have also great minds and great developers. We can leave our patriotism for better events, and maybe try to use this promotion opportunity to speak about the user experience and features, and not why we love humus and think we are exceptional in programming.

(I'm not harshly criticizing, just plain honest opinion :)

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Jesse Rose & Rob Mellow - Do You Wanna
More Than One (Front Room Recs.)
Hazy yet cheering minimal house

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