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Twitter reminds me of North Korea and Kim Jong Il -- WTF! Enough Of This Crap About "Here's How You Can Use The Word Tweet"

Twitter Bird

I used to be cool, but now I'm run by lawyers.

Twitter has issued new rules about how the rest of us can use the words "Twitter" and "Tweet," MG Siegler of TechCrunch tells us.

And the rules are right out of a handbook on how to take yourself way too seriously.

For example:

  • Make sure that if mentioning “Tweet,” you include a direct reference to Twitter (for instance, “Tweet with Twitter”) or display the Twitter marks with the mention of “Tweet.”

And: 

Naming your Application or Product, Applying for a Domain

Do: Use Tweet in the name of your application only if it is designed to be used exclusively with the Twitter platform.

Don’t: Use Tweet in the name of your application if used with any other platform.

In other words, if you're TweetDeck, a company that was created shortly after the company called Twitter and helped to make Twitter the powerhouse that it is today, you have to change your name to, say, StatusUpdateDeck, because Twitter's lawyers now say they own the word "Tweet."

Now, Twitter's lawyers will no doubt say that what they're doing here is just laying claim to company property, the same way "Xerox" or "Kleenex" or "Google" might do.

But that's crap.

law school

Good news, Biz! I've found another five words we can say we own!

Image: flickr

Companies like "Xerox" and "Kleenex" and "Google" invented the names that later became generic nouns and verbs. In other words, the terms started as company trademarks and then entered the general lexicon.

Twitter, meanwhile, just co-opted words that had existed happily for hundreds of years before its founders were even born, and it's now trying to convert these words into company property.

Yes, Twitter's lawyers will say here that they're only trying to control the CAPITALIZED forms of these words, but that's still weenie-like.  As MG Siegler notes: "This would seem to be all about Twitter gaining the trademark to the word “tweet”, which they’ve been trying unsuccessfully to do. They also later note, “Please remember to capitalize the T in Twitter and Tweet!” As a commenter notes, it’s funny that they don’t even capitalize it in their own logo!" 

(And are Twitter's lawyers really going to be cool if "TweetDeck" changes its name to "tweetdeck"? Somehow we doubt it.)

More importantly, this whole "we own and can dictate how English words are used" thing just runs so counter to the grass-roots power-to-the-people "open" ethos that made Twitter what it is today. 

Yes, by imposing ever-greater rules on how application providers can interact with the service, and by co-opting some of the most popular third-party applications, Twitter has already screwed over some of the folks who initially supported it and begun its transformation into a "CORPORATION." But those moves were foreshadowed and expected, and they were arguably necessary to the company's long-term financial success.

Trademarking the word "Tweet," meanwhile, has nothing to do with the company's long-term financial success (unless part of the financial model is expected to be suing people for trademark infringement.)  It's just annoying.

So, we urge you to rethink this one, Twitter. 

If you want to trademark the company-name "Twitter," fine.  But lay off "Tweet."  And stop trying to dictate how people can and can't use words that have been communal property for centuries.  It's way too early--and your company is still way too cool--to let lawyers take over.

See Also: Here's Who Just Got Screwed By Twitter

twitter reminds me of kim jong il and north korea. i've never seen a company work so hard to screw up an ecosystem/country.

#Tesla opens up the former Nummi plant -- it is officially the tesla plant now :)

Tesla Motors staged a grand opening of its new factory in Northern California, a largely symbolic but nevertheless key milestone in the history of the company and the electric car that will determine its future.

There was a sense of limitless possibility as company CEO Elon Musk, joined by Sen. Dianne Feinstein and a slew of local officials, unveiled a huge “Tesla” sign at what used to be the New United Motor Manufacturing Inc. factory in Fremont. Toyota shuttered the place in April and sold it to Tesla Motors one month later for $42 million. Its resurrection as the factory that will build the Model S sedan brought the usual talk of green jobs and a brighter future.

“It says that we can have a blue-collar manufacturing base, but it says if we’re smart, that manufacturing base is green. It’s green energy. That’s the future,” Feinstein said Wednesday afternoon. She called Musk “a real hero” for “creating jobs in California.”

Musk took it all in with his characteristic grin and called the opening “a hugely historic moment in Tesla’s life.”

It is indeed.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk

Musk has made a huge bet with the Model S, the sexy seven-passenger electric sedan that will make or break the company. The car promises all the luxury of a BMW 7-Series or an Audi A8, and the company claims a range of up to 300 miles. The U.S. Department of Energy was impressed enough by the car, and the company, that it loaned Tesla $465 million to get it built.

And Tesla has managed to attract the attention of Daimler and Toyota, both of which have made huge investments in the company. Daimler’s investment reportedly was $50 million and includes Tesla’s help developing the Smart Electric Drive and electric Mercedes-Benz A-Class. Toyota invested $50 million and reportedly will spend another $60 million working with Tesla to develop an updated Toyota RAV4 EV.

For all the backslapping and bonhomie of Wednesday’s grand opening, Tesla has a lot of work to do and the clock is ticking. Development of the Model S sedan is progressing at a steady clip, but the factory that will begin building the car in 2012 is little more than four walls with a roof.

The factory, which General Motors built in 1962 and operated with Toyota as a joint venture beginning in 1984, is immense. It covers 5.5 million square feet and cranked out an average of 6,000 cars per week. Tesla plans to build 20,000 Model S sedans annually to start. It expects to use no more than 20 percent of the floorspace and says it will have plenty of room as the company grows and its product lineup expands.

But that’s in the future. Right now Tesla needs to build the Model S, which Tesla says will sell for $57,400, and Musk says it’s on track.

“We’re very confident of starting production of the Model S in 2012,” he said. “There are no outstanding engineering challenges left.”

Work continues at a feverish pace at Tesla’s 370,000-square-foot headquarters (and R&D center) in Palo Alto, where some 200 or so people are developing the car’s powertrain. The bodywork, designed by former Mazda designer Franz von Holzhausen, has been tweaked by a pair of aerodynamicists with Formula 1 experience and tested in Chrysler’s wind tunnel. Tesla has designed and engineered the suspension and steering components — the car will not, as some predicted, use a Daimler or Toyota platform. Virtual crash testing is underway.

VP of vehicle engineering Peter Rawlinson, who has engineered cars for the likes of Jaguar and BMW, says the Model S will rival the best from Europe and Japan. That remains to be seen, because so far the only Model S we’ve seen is a maroon prototype, which was silver when Tesla rolled it out at the Model S unveiling last year. Few outside the company have driven one. But Tesla says we’ll see driveable “alpha” testing prototypes — which will be very close to what we’ll see in showrooms — by the end of the year.

There’s still a lot of work to be done on the car, but for now it appears the bigger challenge is preparing the factory to build it.

Gilbert Passin, VP of manufacturing, outside the Tesla factory in Fremont, California.

Toyota’s sale of the factory included some key infrastructure, not the least of which is the paint shop. Setting up an automotive paint shop is expensive and time-consuming, and Tesla saved itself a lot of time and trouble. Tesla also picked up six giant mechanical blanking machines and presses that will cut up long sheets of aluminum and stamp them into body panels.

“The big benefit of this factory is it’s almost ready to go,” said Gilbert Passin, the vice president of manufacturing Tesla poached from Toyota. “We just have to retrofit it to suit our production.”

That is no small feat, and the work started shortly after Tesla bought the factory in May. It has bought dozens of truckloads of tooling and equipment from auto industry suppliers throughout Michigan. A massive hydraulic press — Passin believes it is the largest in North America — sits in pieces in Fremont, awaiting installation.

“We had to spend a lot of money, but it is a fraction of what we would have spent to build new,” Passin said of the equipment descending on the factory.

Tesla still has to build the assembly lines, line up the suppliers and train a workforce. Passin said the company is considering having some suppliers set up shop in the factory to build, say, the seats that will go in the Model S. That will streamline logistics and cut costs, he said.

As for the workforce, Tesla already has hired 70 former NUMMI workers and will hire about that many more factory workers in the coming year. The factory will employ 400 to 500 people when it reaches full production in 2012, Passin said. Tesla currently employs about 700 people worldwide and expects that to reach 2,000 by 2012.

Many of those employees were on-hand Wednesday for a party to celebrate the factory’s grand opening. Tubs of champagne abounded and a line of catering trucks served Korean, Vietnamese and Mexican food. And there was Musk, looking like a kid on Christmas morning, outside “the factory we wanted but never thought we could get.”

Photos: Jim Merithew / Wired.com

See Also:

Tesla Motors CEO Elon Musk with  Sen. Dianne Feinstein  just before unveiling the giant “Tesla” sign on what was the New United Motor Manufacturing Inc. factory in Fremont, California.

another reason to buy the 11in macbook air -- TSA: MacBook Air Can Stay In Bag at Security Check

Going to the airport will be slightly less miserable for MacBook Air owners: Apple’s new ultra-thin notebook need not be removed from a bag at security checkpoints.

The Transportation Security Administration told CNN that the 11-inch Air, like the iPad, can stay inside bags when passing through the checkpoint. However, the TSA hasn’t yet determined whether the 13-inch Air can stay inside a bag or must be removed.

The 11-incher gains special clearance because it’s “smaller than a standard-sized laptop,” says TSA. (Netbooks and e-book readers fall under this category as well, according to a TSA blog post on smaller gadgets.)

The 13-inch Air, however, is the same size as most notebooks, so it can’t fly through the checkpoint just yet. Still, it’s puzzling why the 13-incher would get treated differently, considering it’s got the same insides: built-in flash memory, a battery and a fan — no optical drive to cram anything shady inside.

See Also:

Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com

awesome!

Falling In Love Takes Less Than A Second - TIME NewsFeed. i sometimes feel like this with startups :)

New research says people can fall in love virtually in an instant.

New research says people can fall in love virtually in an instant.

Getty Images

NewsFeed would now like to let its significant other know that it wants its money back on all those expensive meals.

According to a study in the recent issue of The Journal of Sexual Medicine, people who “fall in love at first sight” do so in a fifth of a second. The researchers found that the feeling we get when we begin to fall for someone causes the brain to produce dopamine, adrenaline, oxytocin and vasopressin, which are all a bunch of chemicals we didn't know we had floating around inside our heads but are the ones that give us those dopey, gooey feelings. And all of those chemicals can be released together virtually at first sight of a new partner. (See 5 little-known truths about American sex lives.)

Even though our partners over at Healthland are skeptical about people truly falling in love that quickly, the researchers say the feeling is the same sort of sensation that one gets from using cocaine, which is, obviously, very different from the feelings we get for a parent or a sibling and cause different parts of the brain to light up. But it is similar to the feeling NewsFeed gets when it stumbles upon another tantalizing sex study online.

What a Rotten World It Can Be: Report Says Three-Fourths of World Is Corrupt - TIME NewsFeed

Reuters

Reuters

Protesters throw stones and firecrackers during violent overnight protests against the opening of a new waste dump in Terzigno, outside Naples

There's good news if you are fortunate enough to live in places like Denmark, Finland, Canada and the Netherlands: they rank among the least corrupt nations in the world, according to Transparency International's Corruption Perceptions Index 2010.

But the bad news is that if you live in three-quarters of the nations on the annual list, you probably make your home in some seedy places, meaning much of the world is pretty darn corrupt.

The data for the list comes from a variety of assessments and business opinion surveys that are compiled and measured by several institutions. The CPI defines corruption as "the abuse of entrusted power for private gain" in both the public and private sectors. On the list's scale, a 10 is considered very clean, while 0 is considered highly corrupt.

The organization, which calls itself a "global civil society organization" crusades against corruption throughout the world and believes that around the world it traps people in poverty, fosters unrest throughout nations, and ultimately undermines democracy and rule of law. The group insists in the report that transparency and accountability is key to ending global corruption.

Denmark, New Zealand and Singapore all tied for first place, scoring 9.3 with Sweden and Finland coming behind them at 9.2 with Canada, the Netherlands and Australia all in the high 8's. However, Iraq, Afghanistan, Myanmar and Somalia have some serious mopping to do, at the very least, with each of them scoring 1.5 or below.

As for the United States, well, it seems the pesky ghost of Watergate just won't go away because the Land of the Free scored 22 at 7.1, tying with Belgium and falling in behind Japan, Qatar, the United Kingdom and Chile. At least we're doing better than Uruguay and France.

fuck me

I love @peeltv -- New TV App Mimics Netflix Suggestions [First Look] | Cult of Mac

New TV App Mimics Netflix Suggestions [First Look]

1 comment »

By Eli Milchman (1:46 pm, Oct. 25, 2010)

Couch potatoes take note: Peel, a free app that’s a sort of mix between Netflix’s movie suggestions and TV Guide, made its debut last week.

And it’s got a star-studded development team backing it up. Core members of the original iTunes team helped create Peel’s interface, and a team that beat Netfilx’s movie-suggestion algorithm in a competition worked on Peels innards.

We played around with the app a little, and here’s a quick run-through:

The app starts off with a simple setup process by asking the user to input TV source details, rough personal info and then rank viewing preferences. Suggestions are then fine-tuned by ranking favorite shows with star. Pretty simple.

The interface is bright and glossy, easy to navigate, and somewhat Apple-ish, with its row of menu icons lining the bottom of the screen. Of course, as with anything these days, it’s also connected to Facebook and Twitter.

And it works as advertised, for the most part; although trying to navigate to a different day seems hiccupy. The biggest issue comes from a side-effect of the app’s slick, focused interface though — will the app make the user miss shows here and there because it somehow fails to present them as options?

We’re not done yet, though — tomorrow, we’ll have excerpts from a conversation with Peel’s VP of marketing, Alec Marshall, and a clue about the direction Peel may be headed.

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super great app for finding fun stuff to watch on tv. also, some super cool stuff coming in the next couple of months...

This is the easiest way to make your own iphone app -- AppMakr Raises $1 Million To Help You Build Custom iPhone Apps


AppMakr, a service that makes it easy to generate your own custom, native iPhone application, has closed a $1 million seed round. The round includes angel investors and VCs: Mitch Kapor (founder of Lotus), Bill Lee, Rich Chen, Charles River Ventures (George Zachary & Bill Tai), Brian McClendon (angel, VP of Engineering at Google), Kima Ventures (Jeremie Berrebi & Xavier Niel), Warren Hellman (previously at Lehman Bros), Ben Narasin (TriplePoint Ventures), Pietro Dova, Sean Glass (Top Floor), Transmedia Capital (Chris Redlitz & Peter Boboff, of Kicklabs incubator).

We’ve written about AppMakr a few times in the past — the startup launched in early 2010, allowing users to put together an iPhone application with a surprisingly small amount of work involved. COO Daniel Odio says that applications built using AppMakr now represent around 1% of the apps on the App Store — or around 3,000 applications.

Earlier this year, AppMakr and the rest of the services in this space faced a new obstacle: Apple itself. As the huge number of submissions to the App Store continued to grow, Steve Jobs and company decided to start cracking down on so-called ‘Cookie Cutter’ applications that were excessively generic and didn’t offer much more than a glorified RSS reader.

AppMakr dealt with this by establishing an “App Quality Index”. When you build your application, AppMakr will analyze the likelihood that it will be rejected by the App Store review team based on the thousands of AppMakr apps that have been submitted in the past (it analyzes things like the number of tab options your app has and how much content they include). If the likelihood of being accepted is too low, AppMakr will tell you to improve the app before you can submit it to Apple. Odio says this has been a collaborative process with Apple, and that it’s worked well so far.

One reason why AppMakr has gained such a following is its price tag: it’s free. When it launched in January it had a flat fee-based model, but the company has now gone fremium, where you can build basic applications free of charge with a variety of premium upgrades available. These premium upgrades include push notifications and the ability to convert your Ning Community into an iPhone app, and there are more features in the pipeline.

AppMakr is actually part of PointAbout, a consulting firm that builds custom iPhone apps for major brands like Disney. PointAbout has around 28 employees in total, but the majority of them work in the consulting arm — the AppMakr team is around eight people.

Another popular startup in this space is Mobile Roadie.

One other thing to note: Odio says that the VentureHacks AngelList played a very helpful role in AppMakr’s fund-raising process. He conducted the interview below with AngelList founder Naval Ravikant:

AppMakr image

Website: AppMakr.com
Location:San Francisco, California, United States
Information provided by CrunchBase

Congrats to the appmakr team!