Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Info Edge Invests in Nogle Technologies

Info Edge has announced an investment in Nogle Technologies (approved investment of up to Rs. 10 million).

Started by ex-Info Edge employees (Siddharth Goyal earlier started KitneBaje), Nogle is an information sharing portal which will launch its product Blinkk.me in the coming days (the product details aren’t yet announced).

While we don’t want to talk about the product yet (will profile it once its ready), I really wonder if webapp startups really need to look at raising funds before the product launch – especially from large corporates like InfoEdge who won’t really do smaller investments (of 10L-20L range).

Funding at a very early stage brings an unnecessary pressure and importantly, inhibits the experimentation part to nth degree (when will you pivot?) Can you really say ‘scrap this/move on to Plan B’?.

And if you are a webapp raising funds to have big names on your board, it’s a different ball game (certainly needed when you need contacts in an industry).

What’s your take on raising funds at a very early stage? Does that give you enough cushion? Importantly, do you need that cushion?

Please Note: I haven’t reached out to Nogle team yet and will have them share the product details as and when its ready. The discussion primarily is around raising funds before launching the webapp. Webapp business has become extraordinarily cheap with cloud infrastructure and the wide availability of open source tools, so raise fund ONLY when you are certain about the business (and what you are getting into).


Link to full article

Cyndi Lauper To Sing For Japan Earthquake Relief Tonight Online

Cyndi Lauper, a big name American pop singer, who has been touring Japan since March 15th for concerts in Nagoya, Tokyo and Osaka, is giving suffered Japan a big online present – live concert [J].

Backed by a Japanese movie sharing service Nico Nico Douga, tonight’s her final concert in Japan will be aired from NHK Osaka Hall on Nico Nico Namahousou [J] (Namahousou = live stream) from 19:00. It is for free, whilst the concert tickets cost 9,500-11,500 yen(US$117-142).

[Update] You may watch the live on the tour official site without Nico Nico account. The number of watchers already passed 30,000 after the first few songs.

You will be able to enter the live at 18:50 from the event page on Nico Nico Namahousou [J]. From cellphone, you need to visit http://m.nicovideo.jp/ and go to “Nico Nama Mobile” corner. In iPhone case, Nico Nico Namahousou Appli [J] is needed.

And if you do not have Nico Nico Douga’s account, here is our article on registration and usage.

“By Cyndi’s strong will, we decided to broadcast the ‘Cyndy Lauper Memphis Blues Japan Tour 2011 Osaka Final’ for Japanese people whom she loves!”

The message on the tour site

Under the situation many people fled from Tohoku, Tokyo and even from Japan, Cyndi Lauper, who just arrived Japan after the quake on the same day, decided to run the tour including three days in unsettled Tokyo. When even most Japanese artists canceled their concerts around the nation [J]. She called fundraise for the quake victims at venue by herself.

[Update 22:30] The concert was watched by over 120,000 people at peak.

It was good number as the live stream was just announced few hours before that.

See Also:

Cyndi Lauper Hopes To Help Japan Through Her Music | PerezHilton.com


Link to full article

Values, Ownership and Management [The Blurred Line]

“Five years before we took in venture capital in our family owned company, we’d decided that ownership and management had to be kept separate. The chairman of the company was the well known retired Chairman of a very well known publicly listed company. We had independent Board members and the CEO, a family member, was evaluated by the Board regularly and his compensation decided by an independent sub-committee of the Board. There were no other family members employed in the company which was run by competent professionals. This ensured that sticky situations involving reporting relationships, performance appraisals and the like were avoided.

Other family members ran their own companies which had to bid for and secure business from this company as any other company would. All things being equal, we gave preference to our family company. But the operative term is “all things being equal”

These were the words of the scion of a well known family owned company in India. But then how many companies in India can genuinely claim to separate ownership from management? There’s nothing wrong in family members running a company provided they’re competent and there are institutionalized processes (especially in functions like human resources, purchase, finance) that ensure that all decisions are taken in the best interests of the company only however detrimental they may be to individual family members. Decisions that are taken in the best interest of the company are always good for the family as shareholders. However, decisions that are in the interest of the family-owners need not be good for the company – a cursory look at say, lax governance norms for example as they relate to family led decisions in some companies tells the tale.

How does one do an honest performance appraisal of another family member? How does the CEO “manage/direct” a family member who reports to him when the family member happens to be also a board member with a hefty ownership of the company? Who will succeed the CEO – is it automatically going to be a member of the next generation or someone who’s the most qualified (which could well be a member of the next generation!).

It is jocularly said that in countries like India, ownership of a company is sexually transmitted! Are tax free dividends paid out to owner-family members rather than having profits being reinvested for the growth of the company? What about soft loans to family members from the company? What about asset purchases especially of real estate? Is the favourite brother-in-law coincidentally the CEO of a company that is a major supplier?

These and several other questions that relate to issues of governance need to be tackled head-on by entrepreneurs as they begin to scale their companies. To be sure, some of these issues are not unique to family owned enterprises but are rather symptomatic of companies with lax governance. However, companies with blurred ownership and management roles and responsibilities tend to be also innocent of good norms of governance.

As the Indian economy grows and increasingly integrates with the rest of the world, companies that wish to take advantage of the opportunities will need infusion of large amounts of capital. These large amounts of capital will be provided by private equity funds which are almost all international funds, India being a capital starved country. The experience worldwide has been that the presence of professional investment in companies tends to force high governance standards. In addition, international best practices of governance will be forced upon Indian companies as Indian companies start doing business globally and foreign companies start doing more business in India. Companies seeking to list on stock markets or be bought will also have to ensure that their governance practices are in internationally acceptable.

In such a scenario, it is imperative that even startup CEOs focus on building their companies with the highest standards. Creating value for an entrepreneur should mean more than just financial results. It should mean creating “values” as well.

What do you think?


Guest article by Sanjay Anandaram, a passionate advocate of entrepreneurship in India; He brings close to two decades of experience as an entrepreneur, corporate executive, venture investor, faculty member, advisor and mentor. The views expressed here are his own.


Link to full article

Orkut Launches a “Like” Button

We earlier told you about the new look of Orkut that was supposed to be rolled out in few weeks and Google has now started rolling out the new Orkut in phased manner.

While the new look is a cheap copy of Facebook, what surprises us (and hence this blog post) is the usage of “Like”, which is a well known Facebook messaging.

Here is the official blog post

In addition, we are happy to announce a new feature today that we hope you will “like”.

Just as we add different smileys in emails, scraps and chat, we recognize that you likely have different reactions to your friends’ stories. Here are a few you might recognize from Google Chat, and in addition, you can find extra “smileys” if you type in the right code in the comment field.

After seeing this, I am not even sure whether Google is officially involved with Orkut development and product messaging. Embracing your biggest competitor messaging, UI is probably the last thing Google should be doing.

What’s your opinion? If you were the product manager of Orkut, what would you do?

Recommended Read:


Link to full article

GeekMBA – Are MBA Skills Critical for Your Startup’s Success?

Founder of hardware startup Really Solid Technology, Rick Sheridan, reflects on his experience at INSEAD, the world’s top-rated 1-year MBA program.


Event Details

When: Wednesday 30th March 2011 Thursday 24th March 2011
Time: 7pm
Where: Hackerspace.sg, 70A Bussorah Lane


View Larger Map


Link to full article

TEPCO Shows Electricity Demand And Usage Chart

Tokyo Electric Power Company(TEPCO), which is in charge of Fukushima nuclear crisis and Kanto/Tokyo rolling blackout, opened a new page to tell how much electricity are used hourly in total.

After the scheduled power down began, there were many complains from people who got inconvenience by blackout and transportation confuse caused by blackout. It was difficult for people to keep saving power as it was not known if their efforts contributed, and how much. Though it took time for TEPCO to do that, they finally give the almost realtime (about one hour delay) data.

For example, 11:00 a.m. today 22nd, maximum capacity they can generate is 37 million kilo watt, and the real usage after 9 a.m. is approaching it, and the chart shows from 9 a.m. they started partial blackout in the assigned area.

It is already said on Twitter that not only the chart but raw data of demand/supply should be available, so yet TEPCO does not really understand fully how plain, machine-readable data helps third party developers to make more useful mash-ups, but I am optimistic.

After criticized by web users their providing blackout grouping and schedule only on PDF with long list of area names unsorted, TEPCO seems to be working on improvement. Area info now can be browsed by directory, downloadable in Excel format for reuse, schedule is visualized and mirrors are provided on several different major portals.

See Also:

Asiajin » Greater Tokyo Planned Blackout Time Checker By Zipcode

Asiajin » Tokyo Electric Power Co.(TEPCO) Starts Twitter To Provide Updates

Asiajin » Roppongi Hills To Offer In-House Generating Electricity To Suffering Tokyo


Link to full article

Register now for CHINICT Conference 2011: May 26th & 27th

CHINICT is the largest conference on China tech innovation & entrepreneurship. It takes place in Beijing on May 26th & 27th 2011 – for the 7th consecutive time. China is becoming bigger than Silicon Valley, both as a hotbed for innovations of global impact & as a magnet for entrepreneurs from all over the world. CHINICT, will once more showcase this silent yet on-going revolution.

 

This years speakers & attendees include among others:

  • A Mason, Founder & CEO GROUPON
  • Tim Draper, Co-founder, DFJ
  • C Binghao, CEO, KAIXIN001
  • Vincent Tao, CEO, PPLIVE
  • Nick Yang, Founder & CEO, WUKONG
  • G Zhongwen, Vice Mayor, BEIJING
  • Kaifu Lee, CEO, INNOVATION WORKS
  • Hongyi Zhou, Founder & CEO, 360.CN
  • and many more, check out the complete list here: http://www.chinict.org/about/whos-coming/


CHINICT has been sold out - early on - for the past 5 years. Therefore, if you have decided to join this year, we recommend you do not postpone your ticket purchase - as there is a imit of on-site attendees to 700 people. Click here to reserve your ticket.

 

 

 


Link to full article

Sunno S9000 gets a 1Ghz Samsung S5PC110 processor

Sunno-S9000

Sunno definitely is a familiar name on our website. It has brought a series of Windows Mobile phones when this OS was still alive. It ever promised us an Windows Mobile and Android dual-boot phone called S880 back in August, 2009, quite high-level at that time, but this phone fell to come in reality, and broke  many Shanzhai fans’ heart. Sunno also seems to have disappeared.

Now Sunno is back, back with an powerful Android tablet. This new Sunno baby is called S9000, and the gift it’s born with is a 1Ghz Samsung S5pc110 processor, which hasn’t been seem on any other Shenzhen-made tablets.  It’s still a prototype, so not much has been unveiled right now. We’re only told it got a 7 inches 1024×800 capacitive  Screen. No matter what, Hight expectation is set.

[Source: M8cool]


Link to full article

BuzzCity Developer Garage – 25 Mar

buzzcity-headerThe latest installment of Developer Garage will be taking place on the 25th of March. Development Garage seeks to provide a channel for developers to share experience, trends and insights on developing and commercializing sites and applications on mobile Internet. In this series, join other like-minded individuals to explore the potential that mobile Internet unleashes. This session, Developer Garage has partnered with the Singapore Infocomm Technology Federation (SiTF).


About the Speakers and Topics

Bharathi Subramanian, Principal Consultant – Embedded Division of International SQL Star, will give an overview to the architecture and key features of the Android platform. He will discuss current and future trends of Android as the Operating System for tablets and Near Field Communication devices. Bharathi will also share on the evolvement of the Android Market place and how Android is going to be used in devices beyond the mobile space!

Bharathi heads the embedded division in the Asia Pacific region. He bring in more than 10 years of experience in designing and developing custom embedded Linux products based on ARM, MIPS and PPC Architectures. He has worked on the design and development of software ranging from GUI applications, protocol stack, device drivers and embedded system software in various research projects and commercial telecommunication products. He is an executive committee member of Singapore-Google Technology Users Group and blogs at http://bharathi.posterous.com/.

Mohan (Muvee Technologies) and Dibya (ColorZip) will also share about their experience on developing on Android!

You also stand a chance to win a pair of GV movie tickets (Up to 5 pairs to be won, courtesy of StarHub).


Event Details

Date: Friday 25th March 2011
Time: 4 – 6pm
Where: BuzzCity (Yellow Pages Building), 1 Lor 2 Toa Payoh Yellow Pages Building #02-03 Singapore 319637 [Map]
Dress Code: Casual

Light refreshment and networking to follow.

RSVP here (Facebook).


Link to full article

TEDxNTU: Where dreams, ideas and ambitions are powered – 26 Mar

In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TED has created a program called TEDx. TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. This Saturday will see TEDxNTU being, where x = independently organized TED event. Our very own Isaac will also be speaking! Find out more about the speakers and the full agenda.


Event Details

When: Saturday 26th March 2011
Time: 10am-6pm
Where: ADM Auditorium, Nanyang Technological University

Register here.


Link to full article

Indonesia: Exploring Potentials Of Mobile & Tech In The 2nd Largest FB Population

 

 

Editor’s note: This is a guest post penned by Ryo Umezawa, Director of J-Seed Ventures, one of tech-oriented venture incubators in Tokyo.  He visited Indonesia to attend Jakarta Ventures Night 2011 hosted by East Ventures and have met startups and techpreneurs.   He also attended “JIMs on the Plane” (inspired by Dave McClure’s “Geeks on a Plane”) as featured in this story.

 

To start off, have met former colleague of Mobile Monday Indonesia, Andy Zain of VentureX and Calvin Kizana of Elasitas to learn more about the mobile and internet industry of Indonesia. From the statistics:

  • about 2 Million users have PC broadband access at home
  • about 20 Million Internet users (including school, office, internet cafes based on email address)
  • about 209 Million mobile phone users (60 million data users, WAP)
  • 94% of population are prepaid users
  • about 3% has credit cards
  • 10 – 20% of population has bank account

As seen in many news, it was obvious to hear that Facebook is widely used having 35 million users being the no. 2 in the world.  For Indonesian, being trendy is important so many uses Facebook and Twitter sharing their life real time using mobile. In addition, they also have a local SNS called mig33 (Editorsee also this story), having 25 Million users, apparently there are 500 million chat messages are sent through the mig33. The SNS are mainly used on Black Berry, a phone for wealthy people followed by Nexian, local handset maker with android installed. For local handsets such as Nexian, the Facebook is preinstalled with a option of flat rate plan for Facebook, charged 500 RP, about 5 yen everyday.

As for mobile contents, a subscription of celebrity SMS seems to be the top revenue making business. By subscribing to the celebrity, you can receive real time information about them every day for about 2000 RP, about 20 yen everyday. It comes with free contents links such as ring tones. It was amazing to find out that only 10% are successful of collecting money from the user since 94% of Indonesian uses prepaid mobile SIM, only charging about 500 to 1,000 RP every day, once the SMS from celebrity arrives most cases they may not have enough balance to pay for it.

 

Moving on to Jakarta Ventures Night 2011, Disdus.com and GantiBaju.com[ID] shared their experience starting up in Indonesia followed by East Ventures portfolio companies, TeknoUp[ID] and Goorme.com[ID]. Afterwards, there were 9 startup companies pitching to investor in five minutes appealing their services. The 9 companies consisted of groupon clone, foodspotting clone, foursquare/scavenger clone, facebook app games, e-card, market place and an aggregate site for flash marketing. It was surprising to hear that in their presentation, some has appealed that they are a clone customized for Indonesian market. Many of the entrepreneurs were looking at the US market for ideas and starting up the service copying or taking the best part of the services. Most of the entrepreneurs I spoke, used to work for a large company before they started their startup. They have attended the event to find possible investors for their company and were interested to know more about the IPO market in Japan since there has not been any IT company that went public yet. Indonesia is a growing market and hope to see more original services meeting the needs of the mobile users.

From this trip, it was great to know that there are many ambitious Indonesian entrepreneurs trying to be the next big company in Indonesia, will be great to follow up with them again next year.

For more details on the startups, it is accessible from this post of Singapore-based tech blog Penn Olson.

Editor’s Note: East Venture is a private equity specializing in seed investment to SE-Asian tech start-ups, which has been founded by Batara Eto[J], ex-CTO of Japan’s largest social network Mixi, and Taiga Matsuyama[J] who is the founder/owner of Kronos Fund and also known for having made the big wave of founding many IT companies in Shibuya during the late 1990s.

 

See Also:

 


Link to full article

Japanese Media Artist Uses Poo And Fart To Explain Nuclear Crisis

I wrote “Poo is a magic word for primary-school children. It is an universal motif and will work even 100 years later” before. It does not change even at the disaster in Japan.  A Japanese media artist Hachiya Kazuhiko has explained nuclear crisis in a Youtube video, using the poo and fart.

 

English subtitles version

At first, he has explained nuclear crisis on Twitter [J], using the poo and fart. Afterward, he drew an cartoon and uploaded it on YouTube. Nuclear Boy(Fukushima nuclear power plant) said, “My tummy hurts…I can not hold my poo any longer…”  and he broke wind a bit.  On the other hand, Chernobyl leaked poo. Besides, it was diarrheal stool and he ran around. It’s unbelievable tragedy!

If everybody is wise, the difference between Fukushima and Chernobyl will be able to be understood. The fart is certainly stinking. However, it is better than leaking diarrheal stool.

 

Chinese subtitles version

 

Spanish subtitles version

 

French subtitles version

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hWBpMyYq9e0


Link to full article

RIM says time is right for Malaysia, eyes local developers

Malaysia is considered a strategic market in Research in Motion’s (RIM) push into Southeast Asia, said Dany Bolduc, RIM’s regional director for Thailand, Malaysia and Vietnam.

“This fiscal year was the first time a business plan was presented to Canada where Malaysia was part of a select group of markets that was discussed in detail,” he said at a press briefing in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. 

With the Malaysian market’s low average age of 26 years old, and a still-growing internet penetration rate of 35% of the population, Bolduc sees plenty of room for RIM’s growth in the local smartphone market. “We think it’s the right time to be aggressive. This country is at an inflection point where we’re going to see a mass smartphone adoption soon.”

He added that Malaysia has been one of the strongest markets in Southeast Asia for enterprise users, while growth in the younger, consumer segment is rapid, seeing that 90% of BlackBerry owners here use BlackBerry Messenger — an app that’s associated with BlackBerry’s popularity among the younger consumer crowd.

Where developers are concerned, Bolduc said RIM is actively fostering developer relationships in Southeast Asia. “We’re making a concerted effort to work with developers in each market, including Malaysia. We’ve already had developer days in specific countries, where courses on working with the BlackBerry platform and monetisation are being held,” he said, adding that there would be a developer-focus event here soon.

Bolduc also said that while RIM has 3 million apps being downloaded daily, they aren’t playing the numbers game. “We don’t look at these apps on a one-on-one basis, but look at how those applications can interact with each other,” Bolduc said.

“The utility of making a conference call within the calendar are some of the layers of integration we’re looking at, and that’s more important than 1 billion apps that may not be relevant for consumers,” he said.

One app that’s expected to be integrated deeper into the platform is the BlackBerry Messenger 6, which had its API released on March 15 to developers. “About a third of BlackBerry users use BBM to communicate with co-workers, so it’s being increasingly used in the enterprise space. We’re extending the feature and functionality of BBM so that it would integrate with other applications, and be a collaborative tool for short, real-time bursts,” he said.


Link to full article

TechBeat 14: The problem with Microsoft

Tune into TechBeat, the podcast that bands together Malaysian tech pundits and bloggers to discuss the latest news in technology and digital media within an Asian context. Hosted by John Lim, this week’s episode features ZDNet writer Edwin Yapp, Text100′s Social Media lead for AsiaPac David Lian and blogger Paolo Delfino, who discuss:

1) The death of Microsoft Zune’s hardware division.

2) The launch of Internet Explorer 9 on Pi Day (March 14), and garnered over 2.3 million downloads in one day. Despite the positive reviews, IE remains a deadweight brand among many web-savvy users.

3) NFC technology faces a tough road ahead, says Erik Schonfeld of TechCrunch, but our panelists think it’s a matter of time before we have virtual wallets.

4) Piracy is caused by high prices of media products relative to earning power, says a three-year study by a US-based research group on piracy in emerging markets. Can the renting model shown by NetFlix prevent piracy from advancing?

5) There may not be one outstanding startup from the recent SXSW interactive festival, but they did exhibit a common thread in removing the barriers between the virtual world and the real world.

Download this episode (right click and save), subscribe using iTunes or the RSS Feed, or stream below:


Link to full article

How To Hire A Corporate Lawyer [7 Tips]

Confidentiality agreements, SHAs, put, call, tag, drag, liquidation preference, ratchets, collars, owner’s flex. Ok, I made the last one up. But as you no doubt understand, as an entrepreneur doing any business, it is important to get the hang of lawyer jargon and sound intelligent to everyone around you. It can get a bit tough, and finding a good corporate lawyer can definitely ease out your trouble. That raises another problem – how do you find a reliable, trustworthy lawyer who knows his/her stuff, but is not astronomically expensive? There is no step-by-step guide, but if you follow these 7 tips, we think your life will definitely be a lot easier.

Not a corporate lawyer

  1. No, your uncle is not a corporate lawyer: Well, he might be, but it’s likely that he is not. Most lawyers in India are of the traditional variety: they go to courts, wear the black gowns, and argue complex civil or criminal matters. These lawyers are not corporate lawyers i.e. lawyers who specialize in advising companies on structuring of transactions or drafting of contracts (where the legal technicalities matter less than the “market practice”). So make sure that the lawyer you are hiring for your company is a corporate lawyer, otherwise it would be like hiring a Java guy for a PHP job (to use tech lingo!).
  2. You get what you pay for: Once you start finding out about lawyers, asking for references etc., you might end up wishing you were a corporate lawyer yourself, given the fees they charge. Well, the thing is: it is all a matter of demand and supply. There are a limited number of corporate lawyers in India, and the best ones are prohibitively expensive. Self-help of the “it’s English, after all” variety, or cheap medicine is usually not worth the time or the money (albeit little) spent upon it. What is the point of having a document which is not enforceable (i.e. has no real effect in the eyes of law)?
  3. Act as if you don’t know: While it helps to be prepared a bit (do a bit of Google searching to find out stuff), it may be best to pick up the phone and talk to your corporate lawyer, and act dumb. Ask him to explain the basics, listen as much as you can, ask questions, and just try to learn. You’ll learn a lot this way, and quickly. Don’t overdo this too much though, or make a habit of it.
  4. Always fix the fees and scope beforehand: Corporate lawyers usually charge by the hour (rates can vary from Rs.1000 to 20,000 per hour: yeah sorry, but the range is actually that wide). If you are a small business/startup, it might make more sense to negotiate a fixed fee – it gives you a clear visibility of the fees. If you think you will need advice on a regular basis, a retainer may also be a good idea. Also, spend an extra 15 minutes discussing and writing down a clear scope of work. Many corporate lawyers may exclude advice on tax aspects, filing of documents, fees, taxes etc., from their scope of work/fees.
  5. Ask the lawyer for advice: Seems obvious, but some entrepreneurs tend to have preconceived notions of what they want and want the lawyer to just get the documentation done. While a well-drafted contract is definitely required, a good corporate lawyer can add real value by giving you tactical business advice as well, for instance in terms of negotiating positions. A good ratio of value add from your lawyer would be 75% advice and 25% documentation.
  6. Build a long term relationship: A growing business needs frequent advice from a corporate lawyer. The cost of establishing a new relationship and building trust is usually high – therefore make sure that your actions, and the actions of the lawyer, are geared towards building a long term relationship. For example, don’t set insane deadlines (if your lawyer is any good, he should have plenty of other work too); don’t keep changing lawyers for every assignment based on fees quoted etc.
  7. Ask for references: Twitter, Facebook, mailing lists like Headstart, Open Coffee Club etc. are great if you want to ask fellow entrepreneurs for recommendations. If you are approaching the corporate lawyer directly (i.e. without any personal references/recommendations) it is okay to ask the corporate lawyer for contacts of existing clients (though lawyers may not share their complete list of clients, they are usually happy to name one or two clients you could speak with). It is always helpful to talk to an existing client about the competence and skills of the lawyers to get a good picture of what the lawyer can do for you.

Happy hunting!

Photo credit – http://www.flickr.com/photos/dbraaten/185896106/

[Guest article by Ankur Singla - ex-corporate lawyer, now founder, Akosha, a consumer complaints startup. The article has been reproduced from Akosha’s blog.]

» More Legal Resources For Startups.


Link to full article