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June 16, 2009 2:09 PM PDT

Inventive online resources for inventors

by Don Reisinger
  • 3 comments

Last week, I received an e-mail asking if I had ever taken a look at sites and services for inventors. I hadn't. And judging by the size of those sites' communities, I'm guessing that most other folks haven't, either. Below are some of the neatest resources, both on the Web and on your iPhone, designed specifically for inventors.

Web sites

Incuby Incuby is an online community designed for inventors who want to get the word out about their inventions. Once you sign up, the site asks you to input information about yourself. After that, it asks for pertinent information about your invention. You can give it a title, describe it, choose a category, and let the community know if your invention is patented yet.

You can then start searching for other inventions. The site's listings include some good information on the creations, including product photos, videos, and prices. Soon, Incuby will enable users to buy those products on the site. Incuby is designed well, and its community, while small, is quite active. It's worth joining.

Incuby

Start adding inventions to your Incuby profile in no time.

(Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)

InventBay InventBay enables inventors to list their products to target investors who might want to bring those products to store shelves. InventBay itself even does some investing.

When you sign up for InventBay and list your product, the company requires a seven-day period to review your invention before it's placed on the site. In that time, InventBay decides if it wants to invest in your creation. If it does, you'll receive notice and work out an investment plan with the company. If not, it's listed on the site for other investors to check out. It's a neat idea. And since it's free to list a product, it's worth trying out.

InventBay

InventBay knows everyone needs a Rooltopper, right?

(Credit: Screenshot by Don Reisinger/CNET)
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April 9, 2008 2:45 PM PDT

BigCarrot: On-demand innovation

by Rafe Needleman
  • 2 comments

One way to build a product is to take the idea for it, and go out and try to get someone to fund its development. That's the philosophy the venture capital economy is based on. But ideas and money can flow in different directions. Prizes, for example, can fuel amazing innovation. In this development model, a bucket of money is set aside to fund a goal, and the first team to achieve the goal gets the money. The X Prize suborbital flight--funded by an insurance bond--is the currently-famous example of this. Also, Charles Lindbergh flew across the Atlantic and won a prize.

Now there's BigCarrot, a social site designed to help individuals create their own challenges, contribute to other challenges, and evaluate the contestants before the prize money is awarded.

Prizes range from social to technological.

Anyone can set up a challenge on BigCarrot and get other people to contribute to it. The site's premier test case is the creation of a free, open-source .Mac competitor. A guy in Wisconsin, Ben Spink, won the challenge and collected the pool of money, $8,622, that 172 individual funders had put up for it. The average contribution to the "NotMac" fund was $25.

Prizes are awarded based on the votes of the funders. Every person who contributes gets one vote (the amount of money people put in is not a factor). Once the community decides they have a winner, the escrowed funds are transferred.

Here's what prize funders directly get out of contributing to a challenge: Nothing. Yes, they can exercise their passion or beliefs by contributing money to causes that they like. And yes, if the challenge results in social change or the delivery of a product they like, they can benefit from it. But there's no direct payback. Contributors don't get shares in the inventions (at least not yet).

It's important to note that contributors' funds for a challenge are not pledged or earmarked. They're actually paid up front. If you want to fund a project, you transfer your money to BigCarrot. Some other similar systems, such as ThePoint, use pledges, but BigCarrot CEO J. Kent Pepper said it would be too hard to guarantee pledge deliveries, especially for challenges that take a long time to win. The interest on the escrowed money is BigCarrot's revenue stream, so if this concept takes off, the company will become filthy rich. Pepper said he'd like it to become philanthropic.

So contributors will never get their money out, even if a challenge is never won. Pepper told me that if a challenge has no activity (in the forums on the site, among other places) for more than two years, the funds earmarked for it will get redeployed to a newer, hopefully related challenge.

There's also no simple way to put a time limit on a challenge, such as the one the X Prize had on it. I think deadlines are important, but having them would force the issue of returning money to funders on the unfulfilled challenges.

While I have strong doubts that BigCarrot will become the clearinghouse for incentive-driven invention and see a huge amount of cash flow through it, it a cool social experiment in direct action. Prizes can excite entrepreneurs to create clever solutions to any kind of problem, and letting individuals contribute gives them a piece of the satisfaction when the prize is won. I would hope to see more direct payback to the funders in the future, though.

December 6, 2007 2:57 PM PST

Tabulate brings smarter tabs to mobile Safari users

by Josh Lowensohn
  • Post a comment

There's no denying the mobile version of Safari found on the iPod and iPhone Touch offers an above-average browsing experience for a portable device. That said, the software is not without its shortcomings, and one of them is how it handles links found on various Web pages. Depending on how they've been coded by the author, links can be set to open up in a new window or tab, or simply in the same page. Usually you don't find this out until you click on them, which can be a juggle considering the device is only capable of keeping eight windows open at a time. On the desktop, using a mouse with multiple buttons lets you make your own decisions about how you want links to open, but there is no such luxury in the one-finger world of Safari.

To help give users a little more control in this situation, the folks at Inventive Labs have put together their own solution called Tabulate. It's simply a bookmarklet with some JavaScript that you can bookmark on your desktop browser, and sync up with the device when you plug it into iTunes. The next time you're browsing in Safari mobile, you just have to invoke it from your bookmarks list, and it'll work on any link on that browser tab.

The application works by giving you the option to open any given link in the same window or a new tab, like you'd find in the contextual menu on your desktop browser. There's also a third option to flag the link, which will set it up in a little queue in the corner of the screen. Clicking this will simply open up any saved links in new browser windows at the same time.

Considering Apple hasn't really opened up the mobile version of Safari for third-party developers to work with (yet), bookmarklets are a fairly simple way to add functionality without requiring any hacking or file manipulation. They're also dead easy to install, although it would be nice to simply be able to do it without needing a secondary computer in the first place. I can easily see something like StumbleUpon, or other social-bookmarking tools making their way to the platform using the same technology.

[via The Unofficial Apple Weblog]

Tweak Safari mobile to give you more control over how links open and operate with Tabulate from Inventive Labs.

(Credit: InventiveLabs.com)

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