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January 17, 2008 3:06 PM PST

SoCal geeks ready for the spotlight

by Michelle Thatcher
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With free DVDs handed out at the door, numerous camera crews shooting interviews, and--oh yes--"special guest" celebrity blogger Perez Hilton, last night's Twiistup party seemed proof that the Los Angeles tech community is pulling out of the shadow of Silicon Valley and putting its own spin on geek culture.

Like its predecessor, Twiistup 3 packed a sold-out crowd of Web folks and other geeks (including Doug Campbell from Tuxedo Travels and CNET alumnus Rich DeMuro) into the Air Conditioned Supper Club in Venice, where attendees talked tech, networked, and vetted business plans over drinks. And while Hilton may have been granted "special guest" status, the real stars of the evening were the event's "showoffs"--nine Web companies that set up shop in the venue to give demos and recruit employees.

Several of the companies have been covered on Webware and CNET before. DocStoc, the document-sharing site, gave Rafe Needleman a glimpse of the business climate last fall. Rubicon Project helps Web sites make more money off ads by managing multiple ad networks (see CNET News.com's take here). SpeedDate.com gives you 3 minutes to find a potential mate. PeopleJam, currently in "preview," connects people looking for advice on health, relationships, spirituality, and finances. And AskMeNow is a downloadable search application for your phone service that lets you ask any question via SMS (see our early review here; since that review was written Ask Me Now has dropped its per-message fee).

YellowBot, currently in beta, combines the structured directory of online yellow pages with social networking, tagging, and sharing features. The combination lets users find local businesses using both traditional keywords, such as "hotel," and tags, such as "dog friendly," as well as write reviews of places they frequent. The company is run by a former Citysearch exec who wanted to create a Web tool that capitalized on existing real-world relationships; ideally YellowBot users will be able to easily see what their friends and neighbors, rather than anonymous reviewers, have to say about local businesses.

A company rep described Thembid to me as "eBay for services." Say you need some plumbing work in your home. Traditionally you would assemble a list of plumbers and call each of them up individually to describe the job and ask for a price quote. ThemBid lets you enter the job description once, assign it a category, and wait for the bids to roll in. Registered businesses receive a notice when a request for a bid has been posted in their categories; a link takes them to a page where they can view your request, ask follow-up questions, and bid for the job. Both you and the business can register for free, but ThemBid makes money by charging businesses for premium profiles that will guarantee their bid is at the top of your list.

OfficeZilla is a free online collaboration space that lets you share a calendar, contact manager, files, and links with your selected work group. There's also a chat room, task manager, and message forums, all designed to take your workflow out of your e-mail client and into a shared virtual environment. Despite the word "office" in the product name, OfficeZilla is also pitching its space for churches, families, and other groups that need to share information.

Currently in beta, Magento is a open-source e-commerce software that lets businesses create a custom Web storefront, complete with product tagging, user review, and wishlist capabilities. Magento also creates search-engine friendly URLs and supports multiple languages and currencies. Because it's open source, enterprising developers can build customized versions of the software for individual businesses.

August 9, 2007 7:08 PM PDT

Southern Cal gets its due at Twiistup 2

by Michelle Thatcher
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Last night, members of the Los Angeles tech community (and one Bono impersonator) gathered at the Air Conditioned Supper Club in Venice for Twiistup 2, the second of a series of Valley-style blowouts for Southern California Web companies and geeks. In front of a backlit, Mondrian-style bar, attendees of the sold-out event talked tech, networked, and vetted business plans over music spun by DJ Quickie Mart. I had a chance to talk with most of the event's "showoffs," two of which--community site Faqqly and the social shopping site ThisNext--we've already covered. Here's a brief rundown of the others:

Head sponsor JibJab was demonstrating their new "Starring You!" feature, which lets you add your own caricature cutouts to JibJab-style videos. Read Caroline McCarthy's take on it here.

Fafarazzi is like fantasy sports, but with celebrities. You create or join a league, draft celebrities to your team, then score points when members of your team show up in gossip blogs and entertainment rags. Today, the company launched a second league, Dirtlocker, which focuses on the off-the-field antics of sports personalities. The snob in me wanted to look down on these gossip-oriented game sites, but even I have to admit they are a fun and addictive way for consumers of celebrity "news," who are following and discussing these events anyway, to incorporate a social element into their pastime. I fear for some of my colleagues' productivity (you know who you are).

CampusBug is a "social learning network"--think MySpace meets Blackboard--where students can connect with each other, access learning materials and practice tests, and even earn money by answering peer questions. Paycheck or no, the site's main challenge will be convincing learners to join when they can already get a lot of these features elsewhere.

CrowdRules is a market-testing platform where members can upload video, images, text, or audio, and submit questions to "the crowd" (that is, other members) for voting. Though variations on this theme exist elsewhere on the Web--FunnyOrDie comes immediately to mind--CrowdRules seems intent on offering flexibility for content beyond videos as well as working with media and entertainment companies for paid market research.

And finally, online backup company ElephantDrive was on site to talk up a new feature, launching next week, that will allow for secure data sharing and group collaboration over the network.
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