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TechCrunch50 Archive
Loic LeMeur Discusses Techcrunch50
I had the opportunity to sit down with Seesmic/Twhirl CEO Loic LeMeur at their office in San Francisco. We discussed the Techcrunch50 conference including which startups Loic liked, which startups he didn’t like, the expert judging process and how the winner was selected. We also talk about dead people. Loic also reviewed the first anniversary party for Seesmic.
Here’s Loic:
Kidos – Education and Entertainment Platform for Kids
One of the most interesting products I’ve seen in a long time is Kidos. Kidos is a multi-platform education and entertainment package that basically protects kids from harming a parent’s computer but it’s really a lot more than that. Once you setup accounts for your kids, you can browse the gallery of “safe” software and media to load into your Kidos.
Out of the gate, Kidos has a business model. Within the gallery, you can buy entertainment and educational software to load into their Kidos. What a smart idea as it works just like iTunes. Here’s Kidos founder David Van Osdol explaining how the software works:
FiveSprockets Helps You Make Better Media – Video Demo
I had the opportunity to speak with FiveSprockets founder and CEO Randy Ullrich. They offer the resources of Hollywood to the masses so you can create better media. There’s a collaboration suite of tools along with a community and a job board. They also offer training and how-to videos around video creation and the script process.
Iterasi Launches Bookmark Importer
Iterasi launched at DEMO earlier this year and are back with a brand new feature this week. From my initial review of the Iterasi service: The idea of the service is simple: save pages in their exact state for later use. The example is easy: you do a search on a site with an embedded Google map. You want to save the state of the Google map but currently if you favorite the page, you lose the actual map locations in the results. Iterasi saves the exact state of the page making it easy to come back to. It’s not saving the live page, rather the current page at the time of the save.
The new feature is called Import Bookmarks and is an easy way to take your Internet Explorer Favorites, Firefox Bookmarks or links saved in Delicious and save them as Iterasi pages. Here’s CEO Pete Grillo to explain how it works:
Techcrunch50 Schwag Bag Video
Earlier this week I showed you what was inside the DEMO schwag bag. Tonight we take a look at what’s inside the Techcrunch50 schwag bag. I am totally loving this color changing ball. Here’s the bag contents – as always, if you want something (not the ball!) you know what to do.
An In-Person DEMO and Techcrunch50 Comparison
I think I am the only person to attend both DEMO and TC50 this year. I’d like to share my thoughts on both events. This is only a logistics comparison — not a startup comparison. My thoughts on all of the startups will come later this week. Overall both conferences were full of attendees which is awesome. Hats off to both events as I know these type of massive events take an amazing level of preparation and staffing.
Venue
DEMO is held at a traditional conference center, TC50 is held at an art house. I preferred the DEMO location as it was much larger and felt more spacious. People are basically sitting on top of each other at TC50. Last year there were many complaints of having to stand at TC50 and I’ve seen several people standing this year as well. TC50 has a number of round tables outside of the presentation room which is great for having casual conversations, something I didn’t see at DEMO.
Chairs
When you sit in a chair for over 10 hours, that chair better be comfortable. I found the DEMO chairs to be more comfortable and frankly the TC50 chairs hurt my ass (I’m not alone with this comment).
Entertainment
After speaking with many attendees, TC50 gets the nod here. Most feel like the experts bring some entertainment value to the event and break up the individual presentations. DEMO seemed like the presentations were never going to end.
Internet Access
Both conferences have excellent wired Internet access.
Stage Setup
TC50 has a one computer setup so each presenter has to swap out while the previous presenter speaks with the experts. The "mood" on the TC50 stage feels a bit warmer than the DEMO stage. DEMO had a two-level stadium style setup where each presenter had their own setup which was quite impressive. They also used a handheld camera which provided some interesting angles on the presenters and their products (especially the mobile products).
Schedule
Both schedules are way too packed. There needs to be more time for breaks and networking. The startup presentations at DEMO were in nearly four hour clips – I would have split them in half and provided a bio break in the middle. It’s also critical to follow the schedule when the day goes so long – DEMO was within one minute of the schedule while TC50 was quite a bit behind.
Food
Food seemed to be about the same at both, with DEMO winning by a small margin. I’d suggest to both conferences considering adding snacks, especially in the afternoon. Other attendees agreed. Actually, both conferences really need to kick up their overall food offering big time. For $3k a ticket, there better be food all day, this is non-negotiable.
Demopit/Pavillion
DEMO created an outdoor (covered), non-airconditioned pavillion where each of the 72 startups had a stand with a large uniform sign. The demopit has small tables with small personalized signs. The DEMO setup looked better although I like the setup at TC50 as you are forced to walk past the demopit companies to get to the presentation center. The DEMO pavillion had more energy – perhaps it was the very high ceiling of the tent.
Apparently there were no chairs provided to the demopit companies – this was an issue last year as well. Although this year the startups just took chairs from the sitting area.
Badges
DEMO has a huge badge but very small type for the name and company. This is one of my big frustrations with conferences in general. Make the name and company large enough so anyone can read it as they walk by. Also, DEMO had a small colored strip to note the type of attendee (press, exhibitor, sponsor, etc.) – this strip could have been larger as well. TC50 has color coded badges and the type is larger. Overall I like the TC50 badge.
Live Coverage: Techcrunch50 – People’s Choice – iamnews
The winner of the Techcrunch50 people’s choice is iamnews. Below is our live coverage of their presentation. And check our main DEMO and TechCrunch50 conference section for our video event coverage as well.
iamnews
– open newsroom platform
– allow publishers to collaborate with news posts
– creating an alternative to news agencies
– creating the future news agency
– allowing companies to create custom made newsrooms


