Monday, 1 June 2015

women raises more money on startup is this true?



After a month of friendly crowdfunding competition, a D.C.-based gender equality organization that looks to promote the rise of women-led tech companies — Women Who Tech — raised more than $365,000 to support the first annual Women Startup Challenge.
180 women-led startups participated in the first round, where teams worked to encourage donations and interest in the Challenge. Of the 180 startups, 30 of those companies were chosen to move on to a second round which will be organized similarly to a startup pitch competition decided upon by a panel of judges — comprised of angel and VC investor.

Women Startup Challenge, launched by Women Who Tech in partnership with Craigslist Founder Craig Newmark, will award $50,000 (among other prizes) to the grand prize winner on June 30. The final round of pitch competitions will be held at General Assembly in Washington, D.C.
“The lack of funding for women-led startups is unacceptable, and we want to do our part to change it … To help get way more badass women running amazing and successful startups, Women Who Tech is launching a crowdfunding competition, to showcase and raise money for innovative women-led ventures that are committed to solving problems for people, businesses, and the planet,” the Women Startup Challenge website reads.
The first round began on April 29 and ended on Friday, May 29. In addition, “even if you don't get the opportunity to go to the pitch competition, you get to keep the money you raise during the campaign,” Women Who Tech said in a statement.
Founded in 2007, Women Who Tech works to bring together talented female entrepreneurs and to provide them with helpful tools to grow their startups.
Originally known for its Women Who Tech TeleSummits, the organization has brought together leading figures like Joanne Wilson, Arianna Huffington, WordPress usability expert Jane Wells of Automattic, Shaherose Charania of Founders Labs and Women 2.0 and Shireen Mitchell of Digital Sistas to speak about the challenges and successes they have experienced as female tech leaders.
“Women are founding innovative startups more than ever before, yet only 7% of investor money goes to women founded startups. We want to help women pitch their startups, and get their startups funded,” Women Who Tech’s website reads.

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Wednesday, 27 May 2015

Tech Bubble

evan-spiegel-code-conference-2015

                                              click here 
Snapchat has a monster valuation and relatively small revenue.
But Evan Spiegel isn’t afraid to say that we are currently living through a tech bubble, even if he and his Los Angeles-based company are taking advantage of it. The CEO of the popular messaging service said on Tuesday that it’s a matter of when, not if, the tech bubble will burst.
“I think that people are making riskier investments and … there will be a correction,” he said on the first night of the Code Conference in an interview with Kara Swisher and Walt Mossberg.

“[I]t’s definitely something we factor into our plans,” he added.
Spiegel said the investment bubble is being fueled by an “easy money policy” and low interest rates, which may not last a whole lot longer according to recent economic indicators. Those low interest rates are funneling investments toward stock markets, hedge funds and, yes, startups.
Earlier in the interview, Spiegel discussed how he’s intending to make the product easier to use to attract a bigger audience, which, in turn, could help build the business to live up to its valuation hype.

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Monday, 25 May 2015

Lamborghini Aventador



What's this, then?
The Super Veloce, or ‘super speed', is a faster version of the Aventador. Which means it's faster than a very fast thing. Faster in every respect, too: more power, less weight, much more downforce.
So it goes, stops, and grips more than the car that has already put on some pretty insane performances on the occasions we've had it on a track.
How insane?
Well, there's that very bonkers video of it on the Nurburgring Nordschleife at the hands of a Pirelli test driver who was in its development team. He comes home (just) in under seven minutes (just). A 'normal' Aventador is reckoned to be at least 20 sec slower.
How did they do that?
It's up to a headbanging 750bhp, and the V12's rev limit is now 8500, with a loud new exhaust so everyone knows it. But the extra horses are only a part of it. Some 50kg has been carved out.
And once you're above 60mph or so, there's a truly significant amount of downforce. The tyres are specially developed super-sticky Pirellis on bigger rims. How does 355/25 21 strike you for a set of garden rollers?
The pushrod suspension now has adaptive dampers, the superior magneto-rheological kind. And most controversially of all, there's active steering.
Any more details?
Here are the pass notes from the car's launch at this year's Geneva Show.
How does it feel?
Mad. Crazy fast. Lamborghini's V12 really is one of the wonders of the mechanical universe. Its epic hunger for speed is utterly naked. Its connection with you is nerve-meltingly vivid, going as it does without the bubble-wrap of turbos or electrical enhancement or a torque converter transmission, or even in this case much sound deadening.
Every twitch of your toe gets action - big action, right now. So think through the consequences before you ask.
Six-and-a-half litres is enough to bring massive mid-rev torque, so you can tackle corners a gear higher than you first expect. Then as the dial goes clockwise, the thrust amplifies even more. There's no sudden peak or kick-point: it just goes and goes, excitement rising but precision and proportionality intact.
I'm at the Barcelona F1 circuit. Any track like that usually makes a road car feel meek. But the Lambo manages to stamp its impression even here. You're never at full throttle for long. Even the pit straight is consumed as a series of quick chattering bites through third-fourth-fifth.
And yes, the V12 sound echoing off the grandstands really does tingle like the heyday of F1 power.
How does it compare to the regular Aventador?
You know what? I never drove the standard car and came away thinking, 'What this slug needs is more poke'.
A 10 per cent increase in high-rev power-to-weight ratio and a 3 per cent improvement in torque-to-weight, with the same gearing, was never going to be transformative. But hey, I'm not complaining. Anyway, other changes are much more significant.
Which ones?
The chassis, and in particular the steering. I really was sceptical about this. Every active steering system ever built has robbed you of any realistic feel of the road.
But, miracle ahoy, Lambo has cracked that. The wheel rim nibbles and goes light as the front tyres wash into slight understeer. It weights and unweights over cresting corners. It guides you to get the best from the tyres and scolds you when you don't.
There's still a good old hydraulically assisted rack, and your hands have a direct link to it. That's the good news.
Less convincing is the system that interposes itself to change the steering ratio. It moves the rack to add to, or subtract from, your input. And it's unpredictable in your first miles. Its map changes with speed, but not only with speed.
Also with - deep breath - steering angle, rate of steering angle change, inputs from the ESP sensors about cornering load and slip, and the position of the three-way strada-sport-corsa (road-sport-race) switch.
Its main job is to greatly reduce steering input in tight bends, as well as to make the car more stable at big speed. It does, but it made me feel uncomfortable.
And because it's so direct in tight bends, the car's dartiness was amplified by my hands' nerves.
Still, eventually I settled into it, stopped trying to second-guess it, and started to revel in the sense of agility it brings. But I was never quite convinced of the need. The SV is in any case the most agile Aventador ever.
How so?
Less weight, less understeer, more grip everywhere. There is still a little early understeer, but that's right and proper for a road car as it makes you feel secure. The tiniest lift or momentary unwinding of steering lock will cancel it.
Then the SV's gumballs build massive grip, and in fast corners there's aero to help you. We refer the jury once again to that 'Ring video. The SV's big yellow instrument cluster actually includes a g-meter, bigger than the (tiny) speedo. But you've got to be pretty sure of your cornering lines before you pay it much study during a fast lap.
Thing is, you don't need a g-meter. The whole car is telling you what it's up to. You feel the front tyres working, the weight of the engine when you lift, the bulging effort of the rear wheels as you lean on them out of a corner. It all feeds back to you.
And it does it well before you hit the grip limit. This - and not just its sheer theatrical presence and towering poke - was always what made the Aventador so captivating on the road as well as the track.
Even the SV's test drivers and engineers told me it's best to stay inside the limits because when this thing goes, it really goes. So I kept the ESP on. In corsa mode it lets the car squirm a fair bit anyway.
And on the road?
Good question. Today its minders wouldn't let it out of the captivity of the circuit. It'll be noisy on the street, that's for certain-sure. Not just from the new four-pipe exhaust, either.
Absent much of the cabin insulation, there's more (good) engine thrash from behind and more (bad) gravel rattle and tyre hum from below. But I don't fear for the SV's ride. The springs have been only marginally stiffened over the regular Aventador and the new adaptive dampers are, in their relaxed mode, more supple.
The rocket-capsule cockpit architecture is inherited from the standard car, but one-piece shell seats, new instruments and a view of the carbon bones of the car make it more special.
Does it look as bonkers in the flesh?
Cast your eye over all those blades of newly crafted carbon fibre around the periphery of the car, not to mention the acreage of voids set into them to admit and exhale and direct gales of air.
See too the cartoon-size wheels. But then the rest of it, the faceted body and radically raked glass and scissor doors and immense girth and snake-hip height, that's all inherited from the standard Aventador.
Makes the standard Aventador look a bit tame, right?
I'm not so sure. Yes, the SV is extraordinary, and yes, in the hands of a banzai expert it can pelt round a track at a hypercar rate. But if I'm honest, on today's (albeit brief) experience with the SV, I'm left with one abiding impression. Which is what a life-changing event it is to be exposed to an Aventador. Any Aventador...

2.8 million victims on Minecraft

Cheaters cheated, then fleeced by premium SMS 'malware' removal tools

ESET researcher Lukas Stefanko says a whopping 2.8 million users have downloaded malicious Minecraft Android applications.
Stefanko found 30 malicious apps uploaded to the Google Play store over nine months masquerading as Minecraft cheats and tip guides.
"All of the discovered apps were fake in that they did not contain any of the promised functionality and only displayed banners that tried to trick users into believing that their Android system is infected with a 'dangerous virus'," Stefanko says.
"Users were then directed to remove viruses by activating a premium-rate SMS subscription that would cost them €4.80 per week.
Stefanko says "... several of them were installed between 100,000 and 500,000 times and the total number of installations of all 33 scareware applications lies between 660,000 and 2,800,000."
Fake apps
One of the fake apps
The apps craft an SMS which sports text masquerading as an anti-virus activation request. Replying to the message results in the victim signing up to the weekly premium SMS subscription.
Flash ads littered the applications pointing users to fake anti-virus warnings and other scareware sources.
Google's Play Store anti-malware Bouncer framework has since 2011 reduced malicious applications by 40 percent. That mechanism is combined with manual review by actual humans to help detect increasingly sneaky malware techniques that attackers use to give Bouncer the slip.
Malicious authors may upload benign and legitimate applications in a bid to accrue users before later pushing malicious updates. These updates are often successful in stinging users who do not pay attention when approving new application permission requests

Google spotted on streets

Uber's self driving car has been spotted for the first time.
As this picture reveals, the firm is already testing an early version of its system, which is being developed with Carnegie Mellon University.
The firm hopes to develop a self driving taxi to take on autonomous car projects from Google, Apple and others. 



It was spotted on the streets of Pittsburgh, where it has been revealed Uber has secured a massive warehouse to house the lab. 
The firm is already working with Carnegie Mellon University on driverless cars.
The vehicle spotted by the Pittsburgh Business Times had the words 'Uber Advanced Technologies Center' on the side.
Uber confirmed the vehicle was part of its project. 
'This vehicle is part of our early research efforts regarding mapping, safety and autonomy systems,' Uber spokeswoman Trina Smith said in an email. 
It is believed the system installed on the roof contains sensors and cameras that can map nearby objects. 

speed cameras are not in use


New figures released under a Freedom of Information request have revealed that 40% of Lincolnshire’s static speed cameras are not currently in use.
The data, obtained by price comparison website Confused.com, has shown that of the 50 fixed cameras in the county, only 30 are in working order.
An additional five mobile cameras are used by Lincolnshire Police across 70 different sites.
The number of static cameras not in use in Lincolnshire is considerably higher than the national average of 23%.
John Siddle, Communications Manager at Lincolnshire Road Safety Partnership, said: “The 50 sites are covered by Gatso and Truvelo with the other two sites being covered by the Vysionics Specs system (average speed system) making a total of 52 sites.
“Two of the fixed sites on the A15 will be changed to an average speed system within the next 18 months.
“20 of the fixed sites are in the process of a digital upgrade and the remaining sites, not in use due to maintenance issues, will be resolved in due course.”
Despite this, in the first four months of this year, over 15,000 motorists have been clocked in Lincolnshire.
Of these, nearly 13,000 were flashed by fixed cameras, with just over 3,000 being caught by mobile ones.
However, Roger Reynolds, the policeman who first introduced the speed camera to the UK 23 years ago today (May 22), has spoken of his scepticism at how speed cameras have been implemented.
He said: “Speed cameras have not always proven an effective method of tackling speeding offences.
“Enforcement agencies have been too strict with minor offenders – 1 in 8 (13%) motorists said they have been sanctioned for driving just 1-4 mph over the limit – in order to raise revenue and not tough enough with those who really pose a danger on the roads.”
Research conducted by Confused.com to complement the FOI data also revealed that nearly two-thirds of drivers (66%) admit to speeding, with nearly one in five (18%) of those saying they flout the legal limit on a daily basis.
Less than a third (31%), however, said that they have actually been caught.
When it comes to average speed cameras, 61% said they always drive on or below the speed limit when they are in force.

Double delight for Tom Sykes

     Tom Sykes.

TOM SYKES made it six wins in a row to equal Carl Fogarty’s record at Donington as the Kawasaki rider claimed a double at the British Grand Prix.

The 29-year-old from Huddersfield has won every race at the Leicestershire circuit in the last three years in World Superbikes and he cemented his reputation as a master of the 2.5-mile course by beating its best lap time.
Sykes triumphed in the day’s thrilling opening World Superbike race after a tense scrap with team-mate, fellow Briton and championship leader Jonathan Rea.
Sykes started from pole position but was bumped down to second on the opening lap when Donington-supported Leon Haslam slipped into the lead at the Old Hairpin, after making a great start from fourth on the grid, before Rea took charge.
Sykes found his way past Haslam on lap four, and then set his sights on Rea. Under pressure, Rea ran wide at the Old Hairpin and Sykes took the lead to see out the win, despite Rea snatching the lap record along the way.
The second race was a more comfortable affair, with Sykes dominant throughout and winning by 9.7 seconds. He also claimed back the lap record by clocking a fastest lap of one minute and 27.64 seconds.
“It’s been a perfect weekend,” Sykes said.
“We dug deep in race two as I saw Jonathan claimed the lap record in race one so I pushed hard to get that in race two and take the fastest lap.
“We were beaten at Imola but it’s been a great weekend and the whole of Kawasaki has done a great job with one-twos in qualifying and both races.
“I’m really pleased and I feel I’ve turned the corner and we can now focus on the rest of the season.”
It was a good day all round for British riders, with championship leader Rea finishing second in both races, while Ducati’s Chaz Davies was third both times.