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Funding Daily: Dough rises — err raises

Funding Daily: Dough rises — err raises
Image Credit: Flickr user youngthousands


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Funding round-up! Here are today’s deals:

Dough, an investment training startup, takes a fresh $25M to the bank

Dough, a startup that provides educational content on personal investing, just got some new money of its own to play around with. Of course, Dough already knows what it wants to do with the money. The new $25 million round will go toward hiring more people who can narrate videos on-air and bringing the Chicago-based startup's materials into foreign countries, according to a statement Dough released today.

Read more on VentureBeat: Dough, an investment training startup, takes a fresh $25M to the bank

Biometric wearables lab Sensoria scores $5M from Italian investors

Redmond, Wash.-based Sensoria has signed a term sheet for a $5 million first investment round with Italy's Reply SpA. The investment put 20 percent of Sensoria into Reply's portfolio and earned Reply a board seat. Sensoria, formerly named Heapsylon, is a biometric wearables development firm, producing several smart mobile-capable products (smart socks, sports bras, and T-shirts) and an SDK platform that enables any company to develop and manufacture products for the $5 billion smart wearables market.

Read more on VentureBeat: Biometric wearables lab Sensoria scores $5M from Italian investors

Unbabel scores $1.5M to add a human touch to machine-powered translation

Computers may have solved number-crunching and turning data into digestible information, but what about the translation of human languages? A company called Unbabel is tackling that with its combination of artificial intelligence and human crowdsourced translation, and it has just announced a raise of $1.5 million in seed funding.

Read more on VentureBeat: Unbabel scores $1.5M to add a human touch to machine-powered translation








What Apple has in common with Britain’s top spy agency

What Apple has in common with Britain's top spy agency

Above: Apple's new HQ will look something like this

Image Credit: Foster and Partners

Apple’s new futuristic $5 billion headquarters, now under construction in Cupertino, California, bears a serious resemblance to the headquarters of Britain’s top spy agency, GCHQ.

Both headquarters look like doughnuts – or, if you’re being generous, giant flying saucers.

The GCHQ is Britain’s equivalent of the U.S. NSA, and reportedly worked with the U.S. agency to siphon data from the pipes and servers of Apple, Google and Twitter, according to documents leaked by Edward Snowden.

NSA and GCHQ are best friends – ever since NSA was created by President Harry Truman in 1948.

GCHQ

Above: GCHQ headquarters in England

Image Credit: GCHQ

Is there a meaning behind the similarity of these designs? Who knows. Apple did not return emails for comment. GCHQ was closed when I wrote this brief dispatch.

British architect Sir Norman Foster designed Apple’s new building.

British architect Chris Johnson designed the GCHQ building, which locals refer to as “The Doughnut.”

Maybe British architects just like doughnuts?

Apple has taken some mild heat from residents near the build site, like this individual who lamented on a Cupertino City website recently:

“If Apple wants to create a gigantic campus, it needs to provide the parking space as well. Sunnyvale residents living around the campus should not have to deal with the parking, traffic, congestion and noise that come with all this. It’s like having a neighbor who throws loud, crowded parties every day.”

But Apple has also launched a public relations outreach program to keep neighbors up to speed on the construction and apologizing for any inconvenience. A computer engineer who lives near Apple Campus 2 told VentureBeat that Apple’s sensitivity has been appreciated.

The Apple’s “flying spaceship,” known officially as Apple Campus 2, is an engineering marvel. By the time’s it completed, it will encompass 2.8 million square feet of circular beauty, big enough for the over 14,000 employees who will work there. It will be surrounded by trees, lots of them.

The resemblance between the two designs is striking. Sir Norman Foster, architect extraordinaire, himself a British national, designed Apple Campus 2 in close conjunction with Steve Jobs, who died after losing a tough fight with pancreatic cancer in 2011.

Those interested in keeping tabs on Apple Campus 2 can do so here. Construction is due to be completed in 2016.

 

 



Apple designs and markets consumer electronics, computer software, and personal computers. The company's best-known hardware products include the Macintosh line of computers, the iPod, the iPhone and the iPad. Apple software includes t... read more »








Coming soon to Facebook: Video ads that follow you from device to device

Coming soon to Facebook: Video ads that follow you from device to device

Advertisers on Facebook see the emerging method of sequential mobile advertising as a way to better control their branding message with consumers on social media.

Sequential video advertising allows marketers to place targeted video ads in front of a user when they click an ad on their mobile device. Based on what the person clicks, and what the product or message is, marketers are then able to follow up with similar video ads as they hop from one device to another.

By creating a sequence of targeted ads, marketers can build up a pitch from one video to the next — starting with a “pitch” video and ending with a “sell” video intended to close the sale.

VentureBeat spoke to two sources who requested their names not be used because the information they were describing was based in conversations with Facebook executives.

“Video is where its going,” an advertising executive who works with Facebook told VentureBeat. “With unique profile IDs, you have the ability to better sequentially target content for users as they embark on their journey through the social media funnel.”

The same executive added: “Sequential video advertisers gives marketers the ability to place different messages that can build upon each other. This gives you greater control over the delivery of your message.”

Another mobile executive who works with Facebook told VentureBeat that advertisers want to better control, and deploy, product messages. But they are content, for now, in permitting Facebook and others obtain user data to target their ads.

For its part, Facebook uses a combination of its own in-house analytics and partners for the task of ad targeting.

Facebook is able to amass tremendous amounts of user data based on information contained in in its users’ profiles as well as their activity. That includes information on who you interact with and where you like to shop, for example. That data is gold to advertisers, keen to take advantage of Facebook’s 1.2 billion users.

“The writing is on the wall. Sequentially targeted ads are hugely efficient and ultimately cost effective. They have greater relevance for advertisers and better targeting,” said the second source, who has knowledge of Facebook’s mobile ad strategy.

“Anecdotally, it’s very promising. Facebook is putting a lot of effort into it,” the same source added.

Indeed, Facebook bought the video advertising outfit Liverail for an undisclosed sum earlier this month. Liverail’s technology optimizes video ad deliveries for mobile devices utilizing bidding and proprietary data. Liverail was considering an IPO this year but threw in its lot with Facebook instead, media reports said.

A Facebook spokesperson declined to comment on the Liverail deal because it hasn’t closed yet. The spokesperson told VentureBeat that the social media giant began incorporating video ads into user feeds years ago but that in March, the company unveiled Premium Video for advertisers.

Video ads are an important component of Facebook’s market strategy. You can see a blog post on the subject here.

The two mobile executives said Premium Video Ads was a definite upgrade to earlier iterations of mobile video ads and that the company was focused on evolving their mobile ad technology with better tools for advertisers. And they both pointed to discussions with Facebook executives that the company is tweaking and testing new forms of mobile ad deployments likely to be unveiled by years end.

A blog post announcing Premium Video Ads put it this way:

“Premium Video Ads are designed for advertisers who want to reach a large audience with high-quality sight, sound and motion. Each 15-second video ad will start playing without sound as it appears on screen and stop if people scroll past. If people tap the video, it will expand into a full-screen view and sound will start. People can expect to begin seeing these new ads over the next few months.”

Facebook’s analytics and targeting capabilities are second to none, the sources both said. The sources told VentureBeat that the exceptionally detailed information on Facebook’s 1.2 billion users is ripe for the unveiling of upgraded targeted and video ads that possess many factors of consumers, including where they live, shop, and eat.

“It’s all in the context. Facebook knows more about you than Google does. They know who you’re friends and family are, and what kind of hair gel you use. They’re saying ‘we have more information on you and we know everything,” the second source said.

Facebook VP of ad product marketing Brian Boland hinted at the future of video ads in a blog post July 2 heralding the Liverail purchase:

“We believe that LiveRail, Facebook and the premium publishers it serves have an opportunity to make video ads better and more relevant for the hundreds of millions of people who watch digital video every month. More relevant ads will be more interesting and engaging to people watching online video, and more effective for marketers too. Publishers will benefit as well because more relevant ads will help them make the most out of every opportunity they have to show an ad.”

“Sequential content delivery in ads sends a top-level message to consumers that brands know who they are. The reach and frequency of video ads allows Facebook the ability to reach out to users more effectively. Video is very powerful, and Facebook is committed to that pipeline of direct response,” the first source told VentureBeat.

At Facebook’s F8 conference in April, the company unveiled Audience Network, its enhanced advertising platform, furthering cementing the social media kingpin’s belief that mobile video ads are another important way to increase their share of the mobile ad pie.

Facebook has made solid strides into its mobile ad strategy over the last year alone. A study by TGB Digital showed Facebook’s ad click-through rate is four times higher than arch-rival Twitter’s, with 1.1 percent compared to Twitter’s 0.266 mobile CTR.

And at the F8 conference, Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg declared that his company had become a mobile-first player.

 

 

 


Screen Shot 2014-07-15 at 10.53.56 AMOur upcoming GrowthBeat event — August 5-6 in San Francisco — is exploring the data, apps, and science of successful marketing. Get the scoop here, and grab your tickets before they're gone!  


Facebook is the world's largest social network, with over 1.15 billion monthly active users. Facebook was founded by Mark Zuckerberg in February 2004, initially as an exclusive network for Harvard students. It was a huge hit: in 2 w... read more »








Kik gets location sharing thanks to Glympse partnership

Kik gets location sharing thanks to Glympse partnership
Image Credit: Glympse

Like chatting on Kik? As of today, you can let your friends know where you’re at thanks to a new partnership with Glympse. The temp location sharing technology now makes it so Kik’s 150 million subscribers can easily share their whereabouts with their buddies from within the messaging app.

The new feature is aptly named Glympse for Kik and works within the familiar messenger app to share your location with your friends and contacts. There’s no need to leave Kik to share your locale if you have Glympse installed — it’s fully integrated.

The hope here is to make a more interactive experience for Kik lovers. “Location and messaging are tailor-made for each other,” says Darren Austin, vice president of product for Glympse. He reasons that since texting is so popular and since a common question sent via that channel is “Where are you?” adding the location sharing tech is just plain common sense. Austin also calls this a “continuing” step toward “push[ing] forward with a new wave of messaging that does more than just static text.”

Glympse for Kik allows you to share your location with individuals, or you can request or reply with a Glympse in the middle of a conversation. There’s also the option to view a friend’s location on a live map within an already established conversation.

Integrating a variety of features into Kik isn’t new for the company. Back in February, it launched a built-in web browser to discourage people from closing the app.

In December 2013, Kik reached 100 million users. The company was founded in 2009 and is currently headquartered in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.


Screen Shot 2014-07-15 at 10.53.56 AMOur upcoming GrowthBeat event — August 5-6 in San Francisco — is exploring the data, apps, and science of successful marketing. Get the scoop here, and grab your tickets before they're gone!  


Glympse is the pioneer of person-to-person location sharing in real-time, for a set amount of time. With an intuitive design and enhanced features, such as Glympse Groups, the company easily integrates location sharing into every day a... read more »

Kik was founded in 2009, when a small but incredibly passionate group of University of Waterloo students decided to build a company that would shift the center of computing from the PC to the phone. Based in Waterloo, Ontario the comp... read more »








GrowthBeat will show you why smarter CRMs enable businesses to get ahead and grow

GrowthBeat will show you why smarter CRMs enable businesses to get ahead and grow

GrowthBeat, our new event exploring the data, apps, and science of successful marketing, is coming up on Aug. 5 and Aug. 6 in San Francisco.

Today, we're excited to announce a new session with 6Sense CEO and founder Amanda Kahlow and Pure Storage head of global campaigns and demand generation Mike Kim.

Session Speakers:

Amanda Kahlow

Amanda Kahlow, CEO, 6Sense

Mike Kim

Mike Kim, Global Campaigns & Demand Generation, Pure Storage

Because B2B deals are inherently larger and slower to close, marketing and sales teams rely heavily on marketing automation systems and customer relationship management (CRM) software to guide and document the sales process and log customer information.

Though they do create efficiencies, these systems provide only a glimpse of the prospects' overall behaviors and inherently rely on human effort (and therefore human bias) to deliver insights. So these systems are not only limited, but they're quite dumb, too.

The fastest-growing B2B companies succeed by optimizing their marketing automation and CRM tools. Behavioral big data and predictive analytics are the key to this optimization, a fact CRM giants are quickly realizing; as Salesforce’s purchase of RelateIQ last week can attest. B2B companies integrate their legacy CRMs with increasingly sophisticated solutions. You can think of it as adding layers of intelligence on top of the classic CRM. One benefit consists of augmenting the static customer information that was manually inputted with up-to-date information gathered from other systems in the company or even third-party sources. Another key benefit derives from algorithms ranking and highlighting the accounts with the best chances of closing deals, making the sales people more efficient. While these types of tools are still early, they are already showing compelling results. Competition among these additional solutions is fierce, on factors like ease of integration and of use, demonstrated ROI, and compatibility with existing enterprise platforms.

Kahlow and Kim will talk about how predictive intelligence technologies are being integrated with (but could supersede) these enterprise-wide legacy systems to deliver unparalleled actionable insights to sales and marketing. By transforming "dumb" software into intelligent predictive ones, companies can focus their marketing on the right buyers, increase MQL to SQL conversion, and ultimately drive substantial revenue growth.

This is just one of many great sessions at GrowthBeat. We'll be announcing a bunch of speaker and program updates in the coming days, so stay tuned. For more on the vision of the event, including event themes and takeaways, you can head over to our event site.

Special thanks to the following industry leaders for supporting GrowthBeat: Demandbase as Gold Partner; Ion Interactive as Silver Partner; AT&T, Swrve, Act-On, Bizo, WP Engine and Looker as Event Partners; and CommandIQ & Marketing.AI as Nest Partners.


Screen Shot 2014-07-15 at 10.53.56 AMOur upcoming GrowthBeat event — August 5-6 in San Francisco — is exploring the data, apps, and science of successful marketing. Get the scoop here, and grab your tickets before they're gone!  







Quick and Dirty RFID Door Locks Clean up Nice

homemade RFID Door Locks

[Shawn] recently overhauled his access control by fitting the doors with some RFID readers. Though the building already had electronic switches in place, unlocking the doors required mashing an aging keypad or pestering someone in an adjacent office to press a button to unlock them for you. [Shawn] tapped into that system by running some wires up into the attic and connecting them to one of two control boxes, each with an ATMega328 inside. Everything functions as you would expect: presenting the right RFID card to the wall-mounted reader sends a signal to the microcontroller, which clicks an accompanying relay that drives the locks.

You may recall [Shawn's] RFID phone tag hack from last month; the addition of the readers is the second act of the project. If you’re looking to recreate this build, you shouldn’t have any trouble sourcing the same Parallax readers or building out your own Arduino on a stick, either. Check out a quick walkthrough video after the jump.


Filed under: Arduino Hacks, Microcontrollers