This is our third guest post written by a London-based VC. To allow them to speak plainly without jeopardising their fund or their career in the small village that is the London VC scene, I'm allowing them to post anonymously. FYI, LondonVC is a genuine VC and TechCrunch Europe has met them face to face. One of the biggest challenges for any investor (regardless of the stage/type of investment they target) and founders alike is hiring great talent. In early stage investing the team may be the single criteria upon which an investment decision is based (considering how many times when that's all there is to go by) and even in later/growth stages, while the founding team has been historically crucial, bringing someone new in to help "get the company to the next level" can be the difference between investing or not. Full story...
[France] Nomao defines itself as a personnalized search engine. It helps you to find places, based on what you like or what you Facebook friends like and where you are.
At CES, Steve Ballmer presented a tablet built by Hewlett Packard and powered by the Windows 7 O.S.
Absolicon Solar Concentrator Ab from Sweden is a company which was born out of research conducted by the Royal Institute of Technology and various other universities and grew into a well funded business.
Going through my RSS reader today, I discovered that Facebook surpassed the 100 million visitors milestone in the US.
Finnish startup Rightware acquires Futuremark’s mobile and embedded business unit.
Rightware is really a spin-off from Futuremark that was just founded at the end of 2009.
By Keir WhitakerEditors note: Interested in web apps? Join us in Florida for Future of Web Apps Miami 2010.
Well, who knew. It turns out trying to hire a baby sitter is actually a pretty competitive space online.
OpenFund, an Athens-based seed level Venture Firm, has announced the first bunch of startups selected for funding.
Jamendo, a community of free, legal music published with Creative Commons licenses, is actively looking to sell to or merge with another company, TechCrunch Europe has learned.
[UK] The UK government today announced that its Next Generation Fund will invest £1 billion to help bring "super-fast broadband" to 90% of the country by 2017, particularly rural households and businesses who might otherwise be left out of so-called Digital Britain.