Yesterday I attended TechCrunch London, an event put together by TechCrunch Europe. I couldn’t live blog the event, as there was no working wi-fi. Other than that, I think the event was a success. The venue was very nice, the talks were inspiring and the startups who presented were very interesting. You can find pics of the [...] TechCrunch TechCrunch is a network of technology-oriented blogs and other web properties. Learn more Information provided by CrunchBase Sponsored by: Online Media: Global Search Expertise 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.