Pleo is back, thanks to electronics and entertainment leader Senario, and we want to give you one. The $349 artificial dinosaur hit the news this April when Ugobe, its creator, filed for bankruptcy. However, it is thankfully still available from web outlets such as Amazon, Target, Best Buy and BotaBingBotaBoom. In July, it will also be sold on QVC Live, followed by the Sharper Image's Online Store. Full story...
For the past couple of years now, when talking about the Apple TV product, Apple likes to throw out the word "hobby.
70% of users on the web do not speak English. Considering how many web sites and services are done entirely in English, obviously, this is a problem.
Silicon Valley has long been heralded as the Mecca for startups, but it isn't the only city in California to give rise to promising tech companies.
SXSW Interactive is now over. While a clear winner in the "Location War" has yet to be determined, the truth is that many of the location-based services won, as all of them got a huge amount of exposure over the past week.
Every few weeks (and sometimes even more often than that), dozens of techies gather together for regional Startup Weekends — fast-paced code writing frenzies where entrepreneurs and developers conceive of and build a new application in less than 60 hours (and lose quite a bit of sleep in the process).
Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers partner John Doerr, perhaps the most celebrated venture capitalist and certainly one of the most successful, will leave the Amazon board of directors this year.
Google is reaching out to mobile companies for help in getting their proposed Admob acquisition cleared by the FTC.
Real estate listings and search site Zillow,</a is launching an Android app to allows users to search its 95 million listings on the go.
We're happy to announce the rollout of a mobile version of TechCrunch. We know how spotty wireless coverage can be, and how frustrating it can get to wait for a ton of extras to load while you're staring at 2.
Fwix, a startup that offers a stream of local news that’s updated in real-time, has landed a deal with The New York Times Company to use Fwix's hyper-local news wire across The New York Times Company’s Regional Media Group's 15 newspapers, as well as other business units such as Boston.