Showing posts with label Companies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Companies. Show all posts

Saturday, 4 April 2015

SaaS Companies Look To Change The Interface Of Web Design

The Promise Of Outsourcing To VietnamEditor’s note: Dennis Mitzner lives in Tel Aviv and writes about startups, technology trends and politics.
Code-free web design platforms are an increasingly popular tool among web designers. Companies behind these tools promise a design experience that doesn’t require any coding skills or the need for an expensive third-party developer.Giants of the DIY website industry, Wix and Squarespace, promise a hassle-free, almost effortless ability for anyone to design a site within minutes. Unlike the two giants, new SaaS platforms such as Webydo and Webflow target professional web designers who have no interest or patience for coding.With Webydo, the user must have a design background working with software such as Adobe Photoshop in order to design sites from scratch, whereas Wix users with no background in design can create a site by modifying an existing template. Tel Aviv-based Webydo was founded to empower the web designer and subsequently diminish the role of the developer in the design process.“We initially felt enslaved to an old process that depended on developers to manually convert graphic design into handwritten code,” said Shmulik Grizim, CEO and co-founder of Webydo. “This professional process, which had not changed much since the 90’s, was slow, expensive and cumbersome. Consequently, we hired a group of mathematicians, engineers and developers who developed a revolutionary code generator.”It’s an industry norm for a large chunk of the design budget to go into development. After the designer submits the design, developers start working. This is often time-consuming and tends to have a bloating effect on the budget.Webydo, Webflow and Adobe Muse provide a service that makes the outside developer redundant. The distinguishing feature between companies such as Webydo and Webflow comes down to responsiveness and how elements on the canvas act in relation to each other.“Responsive design is the main issue. Companies that offer code-free web templates, need to choose between two approaches: fluid or adaptive,” said Nir Barlev, product manager at Webydo.With the fluid approach, the elements are arranged automatically according to the screen of a given device. Webydo uses an adaptive approach (the designer has full control over the position of each element independently) and Webflow has opted for the fluid approach.“The main weakness of adaptive design is that elements do not automatically arrange themselves in a responsive manner, which means that the designer needs to manually make sure that elements work in mobile, tablet and desktop,” Barlev said. “That makes their designs to be pixel accurate. With the fluid approach, all elements move on the canvas in direct relation to one another. To move one, you need to move all.”Regardless of minor yet important differences in interfaces, Webydo and Webflow are trying to reverse the trend that has seen developers dominate the industry. Now, the two companies are slowly helping designers take control over their work and build independent web design businesses and eventually bring their vision to life, independently.But are Webydo and Webflow putting developers out of business?“No, we’re not — the world is still in great need of developers,” Grizim said. “We’re just taking the repetitive, Sisyphean work out of the equation. We need developers to create new widgets and plugins, and many other creative coding tasks.”Whether SaaS design startups will be able to modify and eventually disrupt the standing of developers in the design process is an interesting question and will ultimately be answered by designers themselves.

Tuesday, 17 March 2015

Y Combinator Talks Numbers: 842 Companies Funded To Date, 23% With Women Founders In Current Batch

Your Windows 10 Password Will Be Your FaceY Combinator, the startup accelerator known for being the birthplace of Dropbox, Reddit, Airbnb, Stripe, and a number of other companies, released some updated stats this morning showing just how big it’s gotten — and how diverse its current class of companies is.
Y Combinator says it has now funded 842 companies to date, and those startups have raised upwards of $3 billion in investment and have a collective market cap of more than $30 billion. There are four Y Combinator companies that are worth more than $1 billion at the moment, and 32 companies valued at more than $100 million (that figure also includes companies that have been acquired.) As my colleague Josh Constine has written, these figures mean that YC itself could currently be worth more than a billion dollars on paper.
And YC, which funds two batches of startups per year in a winter and summer cohorts, says its current winter 2015 batch is its largest yet, with 114 companies. This class also has a more diverse mix of founders than we’ve seen in the past: 23 percent of startups in winter 2015’s YC class have a female founder, eight percent have a black founder, and 5.3 percent have a hispanic founder, according to YC.
There is more diversity on the age front as well in YC’s winter 2015 batch, with the youngest founder in the class being 20 and the oldest at age 66. That makes for an average age of 30.27, and median age of 29 — which means it might be time to put the old stereotype of the “best” startup founders being teenaged college students to rest for good. You can see more stats about the winter 2015 class here.
There’s still a long, long way to go for the tech industry as a whole when it comes to diversity. But if YC is an early indication of which way the industry is going, it seems to be taking small steps in a positive direction.

Tuesday, 24 February 2015

Two Companies Are Adding “Smarts” To The Classic Jump Rope

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Thursday, 19 February 2015

Medium Founder Ev Williams Wants Better Metrics For Online Companies

Ev Williams thinks Internet companies should be judged on more than just their monthly active user numbers. In an interview this morning at the CODE/Media conference, the founder of Blogger, Twitter, and Medium said there are other metrics those companies and their investors should be paying attention to.

SkyGiraffe Raises $3M More To Help Companies Build Mobile Apps

SkyGiraffe, a startup that helps companies quickly build and deploy apps, has raised a $3 million Series A round of capital, led by Trilogy Equity Partners. Prior investor 500 Startups participated in the capital event. Trilogy, unsurprisingly, picked a board seat as part of the round.
The market that SkyGiraffe focused on, custom apps for businesses, is a hot space at the moment. Earlier today, K2, another firm that helps companies build apps, recently raised over $100 million in a single Series C round. TrackVia, which also helps companies build mobile apps, indicated last year that it expected to grow its revenues 100 percent in 2014.
Of course, each company offers something different

Saturday, 14 February 2015

Obama Signs Executive Order Encouraging Private-Sector Companies To Share Cyber Security Information

President Barack Obama asked for more collaboration and the open sharing of information between private-sector companies and the U.S. government at the White House Cybersecurity Summit at Stanford today.
While pushing for that collaboration, he admitted it would be a challenge to both keep up with cyber threats and protect American’s right to privacy at the same time.

Thursday, 12 February 2015

At The TechStars-R/GA Demo Day, Ten New IoT Companies Go Live

Here at the TechStars/RGA accelerator Demo Day, ten companies are looking to make a difference in the world.
Back in August, TechStars and R/GA got together to form a brand new type of accelerator, focused entirely on connected devices and the IoT space. Today, the fruits of all that labor are about to be unveiled, with ten new companies launching into the scene to figure out how the marriage of software and hardware will make our lives better.
We’re here at the demo day to bring you all the live action, and will be updating this post as the companies present.
Lisnr

 

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