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In B.E.D. with TechCrunch - literally...

Written by Alex Iskold / November 17, 2006 1:08 AM / 5 Comments

Written by Alex Iskold and edited by Richard MacManus.

A pure TechCrunch goodness has descended on New York on this rainy evening. Ignoring the rain, hundreds of web 2.0 fans, venture capitalists and sponsors rushed to the sought after New York venue called B.E.D.

The venue is famous for serving out-of-this-world food to lavish and spoiled New Yorkers, but this is not why the crowds piled in this evening. The crowds sought to be in B.E.D. with TechCrunch, and this is exactly what they got as the 8th TechCrunch party took place.

The party occupied the entire 6th floor - which featured bar, music and slide shows on the walls. 15 presenting companies got a chance to showcase their products to a lively crowd that made a point to show up despite the rain. I got lucky and had a chance to attend, because AdaptiveBlue was one of the sponsors. The party turned out to be pretty good, I made a round through the presenters and here is what stood out for me.

Compete.com

The alleged Alexa killer Compete.com, one of the sponsors of the party, was showing off their latest traffic tracking tool. Although at present there is little data for some smaller sites, the tool looks promising. First of, the interface is cleaner, simpler and faster than the one offered by Alexa. But what gets me excited is the ability to create and track competitive portfolios, which is going to be opened to the public in about a month.

Multiply.com

Multiply.com, the social networking site that we have covered here before, has re-launched a brand new site. With this re-launch Multiply is focusing on the unique value that they deliver - a user centric site oriented towards aggregating and prioritizing information for the end user. The new site is definitely simpler and easier to use. Multiply's focus on the individual seems right on. We are not aware of any other site that would aggregate and prioritize an individual's information in quite the same way.

Snap.com

The makers of the Snap search engine showcased a new product called SnapPreview anywhere. This is a simple idea of previewing the page via a link that has been done many times before, but there is a nice implementation here that is noteworthy. Snap's claim to fame is the preview. If you search for a term on Snap.com you get results in two frames - one lists the matches, the other one shows a preview of a selected match.

The makers of Snap have taken the idea of a preview one step further. They create the infrastructure for bloggers and companies to embed a small snippet of code into their pages, in exchange for some preview magic. Once the code is installed, all the users of the blog can hover over any link to get a preview of the page. This service is completely free, but here is where it gets clever. The preview also shows the Snap.com search box, which allows the user to perform an instant search. This is a nice touch and should get Snap a lot of traffic, if they manage to sign people up to use their preview technology.

Me.dium

Last, but certainly not least, we want to profile a new social browsing startup called Medium. This company has created a browser add-on that allows users to collaborate and chat about the sites they are browsing. There are a few companies that do this already, but this one seems to implement it in a very nice way that might become viral.

The service is implemented as a browser sidebar. As you browse, you see a visualization (a graph to be precise) of people who are also visiting this site. The people are presented based on their proximity score relative to you. For example, someone who is in your network will get a high score, but also someone who has been visiting similar sites as you have, will get a high promity score as well. So basically, you see the relevant people who are also browsing this page. You can also chat with these people, which is quite handy. The use case that I was given was shopping. As you are looking at a product, you can shout to the crowd for tips. If someone has found a better deal, they have the chance to send you the link. Overall, I felt that if the UI is simplified a bit (like having an option to show relevant people as a list), this has potential - because having the opportunity to exchange ideas and tips with people while browsing specific sites, is valuable.

Wrap up

Whew, so there you have it - four Blue Moon beers later. It was nice to meet some people I knew virtually in person. And I got to shake the hand of the man himself. I guess I can now say, I was in B.E.D. with Mike Arrington. Not that there is anything wrong with that... [Editor's note: did I mention that Alex wrote this ;-)]


Comments

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  1. No photo? If not so intimate ;)

    Posted by: Emre Sokullu | November 17, 2006 5:23 AM




  2. Juxtaviews was there as well.

    Wish we could have met you guys. If you're up for an interview to talk about Read/Write Web we'd love to speak with you.

    I noticed you guys are designed by Particle Tree. We're currently featuring an interview with Kevin Hale of Particle Tree, about his Wufoo product.

    Keep up the great work.

    Regards, Kevin

    Posted by: kevin | November 17, 2006 7:01 AM



  3. We are proud to say that we were the very first service to use Snap's Preview technology. See Snap Preview Anywhere on Dexly.com, which also feature on Snap.com's page.

    It was a pleasure working with Jason Fields from Snap.

    John

    Posted by: John | November 17, 2006 9:27 AM



  4. Great review! Wish I was there..

    Photos in here:
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/tags/techcrunch/

    Posted by: Orli Yakuel | November 18, 2006 2:45 AM



  5. Do you know what the link between compete.com and GeoTrust is? I ask the question because GeoTrust is the only listed 'trusted' partner. GeoTrust also own www.trustwatch.com - I met the CTO to discuss them moving to a more scalable model using Content Labelling but they were unable to see the light :)

    When I spoke to senior folk @ VeriSign (who now own GeoTrust), they were confident in saying that trustwatch is likely to be canned due to the lack of scalability. NB one of the 'trusted' parties on GeoTrust is Alexa... not sure how a site which is 'noticed' by alexa can be deemed 'labelled'. It's a small world out there.

    Posted by: Paul Walsh | November 22, 2006 4:46 PM



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