Tools on Managing Technology

Focus Network Launches Live Event Platform

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If you haven’t yet discovered it, Focus.com is a great (and free) place to find business experts. It’s similar to Q&A sites such as Formspring and Quora, but focuses on providing advice for business professionals from qualified and reviewed industry experts through roundtables and online Q&As. I use it all the time and am consistently impressed with the quality of responses I get when posting a question. This week the site is getting even better by launching its enhanced Live Event Platform. While Focus has already offered 1,000 live events to its 1 million members, in the past you could only dial in and listen to speakers. With the new platform, you can now interact with speakers and experts, give your opinions and ask questions in real-time. You can also rate how interesting or uninteresting a discussion is, and give up-to-the-second comments on how you feel speakers are doing. The social aspect is also different, since all your comments and feedback can be streamlined to your social networks—meaning your contacts from LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter can hear about an event as it’s happening. Learn more at Focus.com or check out its Events Schedule.

Magisto Automatically Edits Your Video Footage

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If you’ve ever wanted to edit video that you’ve shot but either haven’t had the time or the ability to do it, there’s a fun new automated service that just launched. Magisto is an Israel-based start-up that will take your unedited footage, run it through its sophisticated computer vision technology to pick out the best scenes, stabilize your images, remove excess “noise” and add smart effects and transitions that interact with the content in the video. READ MORE »

Google Launches Its Mobile Payment Platform With Little Fanfare

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Google launched its mobile payment service today, Google Wallet. If you haven’t heard about it, that’s because Google wanted it like that. READ MORE »

Learning From TechCrunch’s Disrupt Battlefield

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When you spend a large chunk of your day, for three straight days, watching enthusiastic tech entrepreneurs distill their products and services into a six-minute quick pitch in front of a rotating cast of industry heavyweights, you start to recognize some basic do’s and don’ts. Here’s are five simple take-aways from TechCrunch Disrupt SF’s Start-up Battlefield: READ MORE »

TechCrunch Disrupt’s Battlefield: And the Winner is …

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In the end, after three days and 31 start-up pitches, judge’s panels and interviews, there could be but one winner of TechCrunch Disrupt SF’s Start-up Battlefield. That title, plus a prize of $50,000 and the Disrupt Cup presented by Disrupt Battlefield NY winners Getaround, goes to … Shaker. READ MORE »

TechCrunch’s Disrupt Battlefield: Increasing Understanding

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From Monday to Wednesday in San Francisco, TechCrunch’s latest Disrupt Start-up Battlefield competition is showcasing entrepreneurs from 30 start-ups, all vying for a $50,000 prize by making six-minute-long pitches to a rotating panel of venture capitalists, tech influencers, angel investors and Silicon Valley players. Tuesday featured three more sessions of Start-up Battlefield, titled Customer-Friendly Enterprise, Local Networks and Increasing Understanding; here are the start-ups presented in session six: Increasing Understanding. READ MORE »

TechCrunch’s Disrupt Battlefield: Local Networks

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From Monday to Wednesday in San Francisco, TechCrunch’s latest Disrupt Start-up Battlefield competition is showcasing entrepreneurs from 30 start-ups, all vying for a $50,000 prize by making six-minute-long pitches to a rotating panel of venture capitalists, tech influencers, angel investors and Silicon Valley players. Tuesday featured three more sessions of Start-up Battlefield, titled Customer-Friendly Enterprise, Local Networks and Increasing Understanding; here are the start-ups presented in session five: Local Networks. READ MORE »

TechCrunch’s Disrupt Battlefield: Customer-Friendly Enterprise

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From Monday to Wednesday in San Francisco, TechCrunch’s latest Disrupt Start-up Battlefield competition is showcasing entrepreneurs from 30 start-ups, all vying for a $50,000 prize by making six-minute-long pitches to a rotating panel of venture capitalists, tech influencers, angel investors and Silicon Valley players. Tuesday featured three more sessions of Start-up Battlefield, titled Customer-Friendly Enterprise, Local Networks and Increasing Understanding; here are the start-ups presented in session four: Customer-Friendly Enterprise. READ MORE »

TechCrunch’s Disrupt Battlefield: Products, Services for Untapped Markets

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From Monday to Wednesday in San Francisco, TechCrunch’s latest Disrupt Start-up Battlefield competition will showcase entrepreneurs from 30 start-ups vying for a $50,000 prize by making six-minute-long quick pitches to a rotating panel of venture capitalists, tech influencers, angel investors and Silicon Valley players. Monday featured three sessions of Start-up Battlefield, titled Disrupting Traditional Markets, Moving the Web Forward and Entertain Us; here are the start-ups presented in session one, Disrupting Traditional Markets. READ MORE »

Offline Gmail, Calendar, and Docs Arrive

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Gmail users have several reasons to cheer: Offline Gmail has finally arrived, and Google Docs and Calendar are coming soon. There’s one small catch, though: it’s available as a Google Web Store app only for the Chrome browser. READ MORE »