Последние новости / techcrunch /

Google's Chrome browser is quickly gaining market share, with one estimate putting it at about 5 percent of total usage, while Microsoft's Internet Explorer is seeing a drop in overall share. But among TechCrunch readers Chrome is already beating every browser except for Firefox. A look at our Google Analytics numbers for the past 30 days shows that 20 percent of TechCrunch visitors are using the Chrome browser. Just on TechCrunch, we've seen Chrome's share almost double since October. Firefox is still the most popular browser among readers, with 38.6 percent share, and Safari is a close third with 19.5 percent. Internet Explorer comes in fourth with 17.3 percent.
16 февраля 2010 Бизнес
One thing we love around here at TechCrunch is data. And since we're busy looking up our own traffic stats for 2009, we thought we might as well share those stats with everyone. Total unique visitors across all TechCrunch sites in 2009, according to Google Analytics, were 69,482,978, up 55% from 2008's 45 million unique visitors. Those vistors racked up 228,202,753 page views in 2009, up 90% from 2008's 120 million page views. TechCrunch is the largest site in our network, followed by CrunchGear, CrunchBase, MobileCrunch and TechCrunchIT, in that order. Google search is the single biggest source of traffic, although it decreased from 37.3% in 2008 to 29.6% in 2009. Direct traffic is second, at 24% in 2009 (v. 25.3% in 2008). Then there's a big drop to Digg (5.1% in 2009, 5.3% in 2008), Google sites (Reader, etc. (3.18% in 2009, 4.2% in 2008) and Twitter (2.9% in 2009, 1.2% in 2008). Feedburner, TechMeme, Facebook and Hacker News rounded out the list of top referrers in 2009.
14 февраля 2010 Бизнес
Just like the rest of you, we're still getting the hang of Google Buzz, the new FriendFeed-like service that Google integrated with Gmail two days ago. There are still plenty of kinks to work out, but Buzz has a lot of potential, and we're doing our best to embrace it as quickly as possible — our crack developer Andy Brett even put together a Share to Buzz button before Google did. Now we're establishing an official TechCrunch presence on Buzz, which you should follow if you'd like to receive the latest tech news from the convenience of your Gmail inbox, Buzz style. To try it out, head to this page and hit "Follow TechCrunch". You'll be able to see a stream of our latest stories, and you'll get the benefits of Buzz, including real-time commenting, Likes, and all the rest. We'll also be getting a bit more creative with our Buzz feed once we've kicked the tires a bit.
11 февраля 2010 Бизнес
Павел Рогожин: http://techcrunch.com/2010/02/10/yahoo-2010-search-event/ We're here at Yahoo's Sunnyvale, CA headquarters for an event the.
11 февраля 2010 Бизнес
Over the past 48 hours, and perhaps longer, it appears that TechCrunch is being blocked inside China. We've confirmed this with contacts and tipsters inside China who can no longer access our site, as well as through Web tools such as WebsitePulse and Just Ping which pings sites from inside China's Great Firewall. Both of those services indicate that, at least in Shanghai, readers cannot connect to TechCrunch. Chinese readers have reported problems accessing the site in the past as well. If you are located in China and you can read this, please let us know in comments. We are not really sure why we are being blocked. Recently, we've covered Google's decision to to perhaps stop doing business in China following a cyberattack on its servers in the country, but we don't think that is it. Another possibility, which borders on the absurd, is that on Friday Michael put up a humorous post comparing a Google employee who stopped his SUV because he was talking on his cell phone to the Tank Man who famously blocked Chinese tanks at Tiananmen Square. The title of the post: "A Googler Has His Tiananmen Square Moment."
9 февраля 2010 Бизнес
Late last week, tech biz bloggers were shocked — and a few were cruelly happy — to read that TechCrunch founder Mike Arrington had fired 17-year-old intern, entrepreneur and Internet fameball Daniel Brusilovsky. Arrington said the teenage overachiever had accepted a computer from a company in exchange for coverage on TechCrunch. Brusilovsky also admitted, Arrington said, to asking a different startup for a MacBook Air, which led that company to complain to Arrington.
Not only did Big Mike cut Brusilovsky from staff, he removed all of Daniel’s posts — I counted 70 of them in Google’s cache — and posted a candid and legally-vetted description of the events, titled “An Apology to Our Readers.”
So of course the hot topic of discussion among local journalists over the weekend was, is TechCrunch’s reputation shot now?
TechCrunch isn’t a newspaper, so its staff aren’t bound by the well-established and very strict boundaries given to print news writers. Things are different at the papers. I challenge you to try to buy dinner for a New York Times reporter.
Bloggers, by contrast, have no industry standards. A few years ago, Microsoft and AMD sent a bunch of them free high-end laptops with “no strings attached.” Of course, there were strings attached: The bloggers would show up at meetups, conferences and coffeehouses toting bright red Ferrari-branded laptops running Vista. Great advertising.
Brusilovsky hasn’t said it, but I have to wonder if the people who kept their laptops set the stage for Daniel to think it was cool to ask for one.
All that said, anyone in public relations knows that what matters isn’t whether Brusilovsky was conflicted between writing what he felt was right, and wanting a MacBook. What matters is the perceived conflict of interest, as perceived by TechCrunch readers and the small but rabid tech-startup community that follows Arrington’s every move.
To them, Brusilovsky’s bargaining wasn’t just dishonest, it was sleazy. The guy didn’t ask for a $275 netbook, he asked for a $1,500-plus MacBook Air. Did he ask for the solid state drive, too?
(You can watch Brusilovsky tell his version of the story in this video interview and summary post. He says he received “products” from Intel as part of their Intel Insider marketing program, and a friend at a startup sent him an iMac as a thank-you for a professional introduction, not for a TechCrunch post.)
In some ways, Arrington did himself a disservice by taking an issue that could have been dealt with quietly and publishing it as news on his own site, with a cross-post to the Washington Post. But overall the move proves Mike’s Internet instincts. Had he tried to hush up the problem, it would have been blown up into an even bigger scandal by gossipy reporters who would have figured it out a lot quicker than Woodward and Bernstein outed Nixon. Breaking the news himself was the right way to go.
The online reaction to the incident is a dual-core pile-on: “Arrington is ultimately to blame” runs side-by-side with “Arrington should have paid his interns more.” Having written for much bigger publications than TechCrunch for nearly fifteen years, I have an opposing view: TechCrunch is totally safe, for reasons that have nothing to do with how Mike handled things.
I’ve been a regular contributor to several publications that have been bitten by dishonest writers. At Wired News, prolific reporter Michelle Delio was investigated for fabricating quotes from sources, and possibly making up the sources. At Slate, the publication ran an unforgettable story on the sport of monkeyfishing that turned out to be, in Slate’s words, “a complete lie.” I also wrote for The New Republic, infamous for Stephen Glass‘ hilarious, shocking, and totally made-up stories.
By contrast, TechCrunch’s problem is a lot smaller. One post about an unnamed tech company may have been written in exchange for a computer. There might be a couple more written under similar terms. Those posts themselves didn’t do any great harm to anyone, not compared to Stephen Glass’ portraits of hackers and young Republicans who didn’t even exist, stereotype-cementing stories that made the rounds in Washington, D.C., back when President Clinton read The New Republic aboard Air Force One.
What effect did these scandals have? The New Republic is the only publication that still suffers from Glass’ dishonesty. As for Wired and Slate, I’ve found over the years that self-styled avid readers of both sites are completely unaware of either scandal. Wired appended 24 of Delio’s stories to note that there were doubts about them. How many people have ever read those old, stale stories? Try finding them in Google without knowing what you’re looking for.
I’m sure most TechCrunch readers didn’t read “An Apology to Our Readers.” I didn’t. I skipped past what I presumed was an apology for problems with the site rather than with its reporting. Comments must have broken, I thought. Far more people would have clicked and read the post had the title been “TechCrunch Fires Intern for Accepting Bribes.”
But the bigger reason TechCrunch is safe is that it takes a lot more than one intern to discredit a publication. The Delio incident didn’t ding Wired’s credibility at all, except among a few bitter bloggers who already hated Wired anyway. Likewise, studies have found that blatant “advertorial” content, where a sponsor pays for specific coverage, actually works on most readers. Brusilovsky’s behavior is inexcusable, but his actual effect on TechCrunch readers will be near nil in a week or two. Readers don’t know, and more important, they don’t care.
8 февраля 2010 Бизнес
Teen entrepreneur Daniel Brusilovsky has been fired from his internship at TechCrunch following allegations that he traded startup coverage for compensation.
TechCrunch Editor Michael Arrington broke the news in a post last night titled, “An Apology to Our Readers.” He said that “someone I trust” had accused an intern of asking for a Macbook Air in exchange for writing a TechCrunch post about the startup. The allegation was supported by a subsequent investigation, and Arrington also uncovered “at least one other occasion” when Brusilovsky “almost certainly” received a computer in exchange for a post. In response, TechCrunch fired him and removed all of his posts from the site.
Initially, Arrington didn’t disclose the name of the intern in question, but his identity has since been revealed as 17-year-old Brusilovsky, who is also founder of the teen publishing startup Teens in Tech. Brusilovsky wrote about the incident on his own site:
In some way or another, a line was crossed that should have never been. At this time, I do not want to go into details, but I will publicly say that I am truly sorry to my family, friends, TechCrunch, and especially the tech community. Since 2006 when I first got into the internet, I have felt comfortable, and working at TechCrunch has made this experience even better. TechCrunch is not to blame for any of this — TechCrunch has given me the opportunity of a life time. I can never say thank you enough for TechCrunch for the amazing last nine months I’ve had.
This is the first day of the next learning stage for me. Yes, I am young, but from here, I can only learn more. To my family, friends, colleagues and especially, TechCrunch, I am sorry. I am taking this entire experience, learning and moving on.
5 февраля 2010 Бизнес
Last summer, at the inaugural Europas Awards, we launched the TechCrunch Europe Top 100 Index of the most innovative and highest-potential European tech companies. This has been the first time anyone has tried to actually track, in a pre-defined way, early stage tech companies in Europe. We've now updated the Index, which is focused on mobile and web companies in the EMEA region, once more. As you can see, there are companies that are staying in the Index, some arriving and some, alas, leaving. The companies that have made great progress in the last few months are ones that have being doing important things like generating revenue. It's quite clear from the refreshed Index that European startups know how to make money (in particular through e-commerce, private shopping, lead-generation and games). The Silicon Valley business model of scale and user acquisition, while still a hugely important arrow in the European startups quiver, is still just part of the equation, especially in a wide European market so divided by language and regulation. Although I'd like to see more European startups thinking globally from the start, and going for growth, no-one is saying one shouldn't have at least half an eye trained on where the business model is going to come from.
3 февраля 2010 Бизнес
We're hitting the 2010 GSM World Mobile Congress again. And TechCrunch Europe will be returning to Barcelona on Feb 17 for yet another interactive and live-video-streamed session. We'll be featuring some of the most innovative and interesting mobile startups and investors in Europe. You can get your tickets to the event here. Here's the programme for the day so far.
29 января 2010 Бизнес
As some people noticed, at approximately 10:30 pm PST on Monday evening the main site in the TechCrunch Network – techcrunch.com – was hacked and redirected. The site was back up briefly at 11:30 pm but shortly went down again. As of 2:00 am, the site is back up and appears to be stable. At this [...]
26 января 2010 Бизнес
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