iphone blog

February 28, 2010

An Exclusive Look at Upcoming Shooter ‘Cocoto Magic Circus’

Eurocenter, who brought us the popular Cocoto Kart Online, has given us an exclusive preview of their upcoming iPhone shooting gallery game Cocoto Magic Circus, a conversion of the Wii original.

In Cocoto Magic Circus, you take on the role of Cocoto, Shiny, Neuro, or Baggy on a mission to save poor Fairy, the pixie, who has been kidnapped by a sinister and disturbing clown. In order to save her, you must progress through five different creepy carnival settings, wielding your dart-gun like a champ, tapping true on the clown's various minions to knock them into oblivion. There are seven shooting gallery-style mini-games in each of the settings, making for 35 challenges in all.

While it's true that shooting gallery titles are generally rather simplistic affairs — and there's certainly no lack of such games in the App Store — Cocoto Magic Circus is a surprisingly enjoyable little game. The visuals are very well done — cartoonish, cute, and atmospheric. Complexity is added to the title's tap-to-shoot dynamic by way of line-of-fire obstacles as well as floating bonuses and special effects that, when shot, trigger things both good and bad: double shot score, free hits, lights out, gun jams, flip screen, etc. It's a nice touch.






The game offers an Arcade mode, which is progressive play through the various settings and challenges, as well as a Training mode that allows you to jump in and play any challenge in the game. Online multiplayer is also included, allowing you to engage in real-time matches with players around the world. (Unfortunately I was unable to test this component as there is no community at present, since the game has not yet been released.)

I've enjoyed my time with the game, learning its ins and outs for this post. Getting through it requires some fast reflexes, especially in the later challenges, which ramp up the difficulty and pacing — it's no cakewalk. One thing to note is that it's not a particularly lengthy affair; most users could get through it in an hour or two, but that's helped a bit from a replay perspective by the three available levels of difficulty, with Normal presenting a decent challenge.

Cocoto Magic Circus is a shooting gallery title that delivers a good deal more than most games of its sort. It's a cute little game that's fun to play and, as IGN called it, “a surprisingly fresh breath of air.” I'd wager most gamers out there would enjoy it more than they think.

Have a look at the gameplay video to help you decide.

Cocoto Magic Circus is set to debut in the App Store on Thursday, March 4th.

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An Exclusive Look at Upcoming Shooter ‘Cocoto Magic Circus’

Preview: OddBlob – Claymation Fun Coming Soon

OddBlob is a neat little arcade game with a groovy little clay dude, that is coming soon to an App Store near you. Oddblob loves to bounce, and it’s your goal to control his bouncing guiding him from the bottom of the screen to the top of the screen. Oddblob can move in every direction with a simple tap in that direction, and once he bounces on a tile it falls away so you have to be careful.

The entire game is in claymation which looks really well done. You bounce across a squishy maze that if full of of bonuses, fruit, and cake. Cake slices result in a special mini game ‘Cake or Doom’ where the more bounces you take before collecting the cake, the more points you score. Special bounce and double bounce tiles are included to make it over gaps.

Four difficulty levels are included to fit all ages, but the game is said to get very tough. It’s a puzzle game you’ve played before as tiles disappear behind you as you move, but the bonuses and claymation look to set it apart. OpenFeint is included as well for those scores to mean a little bit more.

The game was submitted yesterday, and should be out shortly. The game’s normal price will be $2.99, but will have an introductory price of $0.99, and will have a full review shortly after the release. See the screenshots below to get a look and feel of Oddblob.





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The iPad as a Peripheral Display

Filed under: theappleblog — Tags: , , , , , , , — @ 7:47 pm

I was thrilled to hear that current apps will be compatible with the iPad, but I’m more excited for apps that haven’t been written yet. Apps for the iPhone and iPod touch are designed for use while being held. There’s an exciting new use case that comes with the iPad — when it’s sitting in the dock. Owners not only have a new device to read news while on the couch, but they also have the perfect peripheral display.

What’s a peripheral display? Something that provides basic information without distracting you from your primary task. It runs silently in the background and it’s there when you need to retrieve some glanceable information. You already use plenty of them every day: clocks, stock tickers, weather icons, unread email icons, etc. I currently use one app on my iPhone as a peripheral display: Flip Clock. I think we are soon going to see a lot more apps like this.

My perfect peripheral display app would come with a few basic widgets like a clock, calendar, stocks, weather, and access to photos on the iPad. The app could then offer upgrades (perhaps $2.99 each) for access to services like Flickr, Picasa, Twitter, Facebook, CNN (and other news sites), etc. The app could be free with the requirement that one of the widgets shows advertisements. A quick paid upgrade (perhaps $9.99) would remove the ads and offer a spot for another widget.

I’ve taken the liberty of mocking up in Photoshop what this app may look like using the iPad GUI. Below you can see a few basic widgets, a tweet that changes every few minutes, and a photo slideshow powered by Flickr. The tweet includes a link which when tapped should close this app and launch Safari. This applies to the other widgets too; tapping them should launch their corresponding apps. Interactivity makes this app better than any digital picture frame available.

There are tons of apps that provide basic information, but now they can be combined to take advantage of the larger screen.

Now that I’ve filled your head with ideas, go build it! Just think of me when you publish the app to the store. Also, let me know if you think this is a good idea.

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The iPad as a Peripheral Display

Sunday Fun Photoshops: If iPad is a Big iPhone, What’s a Big iPad?

Filed under: tipb — Tags: , , , , , , , , — @ 7:32 pm

500x_evoipad2

A little Photoshop fun with the idea that if the iPhone grew into the iPad, then the iPad is just waiting to grow into… Well, see above.

[BeGeek.fr via Gizmodo, thanks to everyone who sent this in!]

Sunday Fun Photoshops: If iPad is a Big iPhone, What’s a Big iPad? is a story by TiPb. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

TiPb – The #1 iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch Blog

TiPb Gear — Pogo Sketch for iPhone (Macworld 2010)

Filed under: tipb — Tags: , , , , , , , , — @ 7:14 pm

Pogo Sketch Stylus for iPhone

Live from Macworld 2010, Rene and Leanna talk with Peter Skinner of Ten One Designs about their Pogo Sketch stylus for the iPhone… and iPad!

Watch along after the break and let us know what you think! (Especially if you came from PalmOS or Windows Mobile!)

TiPb Gear — Pogo Sketch for iPhone (Macworld 2010) is a story by TiPb. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

TiPb – The #1 iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch Blog

Games To Download For Free Today: Draw Slasher, LetsTans, And Strimko

It’s just another lazy Sunday, so why not download some free games and entertain yourself for a while?  Today we have three free games from developers Mass Creation, Grabarchuck Puzzles, and Quokka Studios for you to check out.

Draw Slasher ($.99 -> Free): A survival action game that features black and white sketch graphics and lots of blood. In the game you control a ninja via on-screen direction buttons or you can just tap to move. Pirate monkey zombies will be attacking from all directions and you must slash off their heads and limbs by tapping and dragging on the screen.

The game features multiple gameplay modes, the ability to earn huge combos, and OpenFeint integration for leaderboards and achievements. Draw Slasher is free today only (2/28/10).

LetsTans ($.99 -> Free): It’s Tangrams, just on your iPhone or iPod touch.  LetsTans features over 210 different puzzles to solve with over 70 Tangram shapes.  Manipulating pieces is simple, just tap and drag to move, tap to spin, or double tap to flip.

LetsTans contains three different gameplay modes, including a Classic mode, advanced hint system, time counter, and a guest player option.  LetsTans is free today only (2/28/10).

Strimko ($.99 -> Free): A logic puzzle game that features 120 never before published hand-crafted puzzles.  The rules of the game are as follows: Each row, column, and connected group of circles must contain only unique numbers.  Numbers can be placed on the playing field via a dial, and you can pencil in multiple numbers in case you aren’t exactly sure of the solution at the moment.

The game features four difficulty levels, intelligent hint system, four puzzle sizes, OpenFeint integration for achievements, and the ability to purchase additional level packs.  Strimko is available for free today only (2/28/10).

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AutoPark – A Toolbox For Big City Drivers

Have you ever asked yourself whether you parked in the orange section or the purple section? How much time is left on the meter or where’s the nearest bathroom? I know I have.

Thanks to its set of tools, FrolicWare’s AutoPark App wants to make sure you’ll never have to ask yourself those questions again.

It comes with a GPS car finder, which allows you to mark your car’s location on a map and makes it easy to find later (just like Find My Car does). If you’re on the clock, it also includes a meter timer, letting you know via Push Notification when you have to run back to your car to drop in another coin.

Parked in a parking garage? It will keep track of your floor, section, and space number so you don’t get lost Seinfeld style. You can even take a picture of your car and attach it a note if that’s your way of finding it.

Lastly, AutoPark’s Nearby services gives you a list of banks, gas stations, and public bathrooms near you to figure out that next stop……before it’s too late!

It’s $5 and just won Macworld’s Expo Best of Show distinction so go check it out.

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19 Startups Showing Their Wares At TechCrunch Japan’s TokyoCamp Demo Event

Filed under: techcrunch — Tags: , , , , , , , — @ 3:00 pm

A total of 19 Japanese startups were given the chance to show their services at TokyoCamp, a demo event held by TechCrunch Japan (one of the country’s biggest blogs) this Friday. The event, which was co-organized by hosting company KDDI Web Communications, was a blast and attracted over 200 people this time.

This was the third TokyoCamp (see here and here for my previous reports), and here are short profiles of all the startups that presented there. (Please note not all of the services offer English homepages.)

Demo 1:
AQUSH by Exchange Corporation
Launched by Tokyo-based Exchange Corporation in December last year, AQUSH is a peer-to-peer lending service that is similar to ZOPA in the UK. AQUSH aims to unlock some of the more than US$7 trillion of retail cash and bank deposits (that are earning nearly 0% interest) by offering individual investors access to the US$300 billion Japanese consumer loan market.

Lenders set their desired investment amount and interest rates from 4% to 15% for 5 classes of borrower credit risk, as denoted by AQUSH itself. AQUSH loan applicants are screened based on their credit histories, financial situation and FICO scores.

The service has been in operation for 2 months and so far the average annualized ROI for investors is 10.58% after fees. AQUSH says for borrowers, interest rates range between 25% to 50% cheaper than available from specialized consumer lending companies.

If you can read Japanese, there’s an in-depth (and fairly recent) article on AQUSH on TechCrunch Japan.

Demo 2:
Maysee by Mogura
Japan is business card country, which means that your average salary man collects hundreds of these cards in any given year. Maysee is a service that scans business cards for clients, corrects OCR errors manually and makes the data accessible via PCs or mobile phones through a web app (for $20 per month per user/$0.35 per business card). The company is currently looking for business partners overseas.

Demo 3:
Sketch Piston by Team Lab
Sketch Piston is the name of a “new game genre” created by Tokyo-based Team Lab. There are two “Sketch Action” games available at the moment, Sketch Piston 3 and 4 (both of which were made for Team Lab clients). Players can interact with characters in the Flash games by “sketching” various objects with a virtual pen, stamp and eraser. The games have no goal per se, but users can make and share creative gameplay videos on a dedicated platform.

Demo 4:
Cacoo by Nulab
Cacoo is a what appears to be a powerful online drawing tool that allows multiple users to create designs collaboratively and in real-time. The designs can be shared with certain users or published on the web, for example on blogs or wiki sites. If you make changes to the designs in Cacoo, the blog or wiki the designs were pasted into gets updated automatically and in real-time, meaning there is no need for another upload.

Mainly made for technical illustrations (wireframes, software design diagrams, network diagrams, UMLs etc.), Cacoo is completely browser-based, free and available in English.

Demo 5:
Link Knowledge by SAN SAN
Link Knowledge is an SaaS solution with a focus on CRM and SFA (sales force automation). Much like Maysee (profiled above), Link Knowledge digitizes information found on printed business cards, puts the data into context and stores it in the cloud for customers who can then access their data from anywhere they want.

Demo 6:
Wishcovery
Wishcovery aims at matching people who have the right skills with those who have uploaded requests or project proposals on the site. The service is scheduled to launch in alpha in April. TechCrunch Japan covered Wishcovery just last month after it won the “TechCrunch Japan Award” at the first Startup Weekend Tokyo event.

Demo 7:
Conyac by anydooR
Dubbed “social translation service”, Conyac is actally based on a virtual currency called “Conyac Points”. The way it works is that “requesters” need to pay a certain fee upfront, upload a text and indicate which languages the text should be translated into. Registered translators (who don’t need to get screened or examined) translate texts they think they can handle to earn Conyac points. Those points can then be converted into real money via Paypal, with the service itself getting a 20% cut.

Demo 8:
LIFEmee
TechCrunch50 demopit company LIFEmee presented a revamped version of their eponymous life management service that will go live early next month. Expect less clutter, a simplified UI, fresh features (i.e. a scheduler) and a new mobile version (scheduled for release next month).

Demo 9:
Mangaroo by Mobakids
Mangaroo is a free, social manga service that allows comic artists (amateurs and professionals alike) to upload and share self-created works with other users. Readers can just read the comics, leave comments, bookmark their favorite manga or rate them.

Here’s how a typical “e-comic”, submitted by a Mangaroo member, looks like (click to enlarge):

Each manga is based on Flash and can be embedded in other websites.

Demo 10:
meme memo by meme design
meme memo is a free, Flash-based “pin board” that can be covered with “virtual Post-its”. Each user can set up to ten pin boards (folders) and embed up to 1,000 Post-its (“cards”) to scrape, organize and share various information. Some cards require work by the users themselves (i.e. the ToDo card or the address book), but others get updated automatically once you add them to your folder (i.e. the Twitter card or the RSS card). Apart from pure text, it’s also possible to add videos (YouTube card), images or audio files to the pin board.

Demo 11:
TwitCasting Live by sidefeed
As one of the few iPhone apps that were shown at TokyoCamp, Twitcasting Live (iTunes link) is a free Twitter client that lets you broadcast (video and audio) live through your Twitter account. The app splits the iPhone screen in half: You can see what you currently broadcast on the top and access your Twitter timeline on the bottom. When you start the recording, Twitcasting tweets a link to your followers who can watch the live broadcast on their PCs or iPhones. The app works with both 3G and Wi-Fi and supports the 3G as well as the 3GS (click here for a demo video).

Demo 12:
Bang Me! by DigitalNomad
Let me explain the name first: Bang Me! is a wordplay of sorts on the Japanese word for “program” or “show”, which is pronounced “ban-gu-mi” (seriously). Provider DigitalNomad is marketing the downloadable software as a dead-simple video editing tool for beginners or online businesses that don’t have the budget to produce flashy promo videos.

Bang Me! was featured on TechCrunch Japan last month and appeared to be much better than the name suggests (I was told they will change it when the software goes on sale internationally).

Demo 13:
Hanashirabe by Knowledge System
In case you ever stumbled upon a flower whose name you either forgot or were interested to know, Hanashirabe is the solution for you. Just upload a picture of the flower in question, crop it, specify when you took it and the “flower recognition engine” will reveal the name of the flower in a heartbeat (demo video).

Demo 14:
Talknote
Pitched as “Yammer for private use”, Talknote is a micro social communication service that has yet to launch. The main selling point of the service is that it enables multiple users to text-chat across a number of different devices – virtually in real-time. Talknote will be the first service that allows iPhone users to communicate with owners of regular Japanese handsets this way (PCs, Symbian, Blackberry, Android etc. will eventually be supported as well). The conversations are stored as “talknotes” and can be accessed again anytime later. I was able to play around with the iPhone version, which looked pretty nifty already.

Demo 15:
Qlippy by SpinningWorks
Presented for the first time at TokyoCamp, Qlippy is an iPad application that extends to the web in the form of a social network for book lovers. The app will let users download EPUB-based ebooks off the web to read on the iPad. Provider SpinningWorks says readers will also be able to clip pictures or texts on the iPad to create their own scrapbooks. The clipped elements and scrapbooks can be shared with other people on the Qlippy website (demo video).

Here is an early screenshot (click to enlarge):

Demo 16:
waarp by Waaotn
Korean transplant Dong Yol Lee has presented a very early version of waarp, his 3D audio augmented, “eyes-free” social network system that eliminates the need for a visual UI.

Demo 17:
Video Analytics by sus4
Video Analytics is a freemium-based “Google Analytics for video” that’s especially geared towards e-commerce and education sites. The tool helps to analyze how visitors view videos by breaking down which keywords from search engines are the most effective, how many times a certain video was accessed, how many users watched it from beginning to end, at which points users pushed the stop button etc. All data is visualized online through a Google Analytics-like dashboard.

Demo 18:
mindia
mindia wants to be the online “encyclopedia of your mind”. The main idea behind the service is to provide a platform for people to share their viewpoints on any given keyword with the world (in Japanese, at least). Unlike Wikipedia, mindia encourages users to post what they personally think and makes all discussions public, with every member having a specific profile page (example). In other words, mindia is like Wikipedia with a social network built on top of it. The platform is free to use, but there’s also a solution for enterprises.

Demo 19:
Fastweet/Fastweet Live by Glucose
Tokyo-based startup Glucose presented three Twitter apps for the iPhone. Fastweet is one of the many, many Twitter clients out there and is available in the App Store as a free version (which stores just the latest 200 tweets) or as Fastweet 2K (for $1.99), which keeps the latest 2,000 tweets. Fastweet Live (iTunes link) is a good solution if you search for specific keywords or hashtags. The app then displays just the relevant tweets dynamically, which makes sense during an event or if you want to stay informed continuously on a current hot topic or a specific news item (demo video).

The next TokyoCamp will probably take place in April. Thanks to all attendees, startups and co-organizer KDDI Web Communications, and a sorry to the many people who couldn’t make it on the guest list this time!

Go to TechCrunch Japan’s Flickr account to see more pictures of the event.


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19 Startups Showing Their Wares At TechCrunch Japan’s TokyoCamp Demo Event

Review: Battle of Puppets

Filed under: AppAdvice — Tags: , , , , , , , — @ 12:00 pm

The Overview

Castle Defense games are a dime a dozen on the App Store (well, at $0.99 each, they are actually $11.88 a dozen, but I digress…) with games like The Wars, Castle Conflict, Galaxy Front, Knights Onrush, Defend Your Castle, and the Top 10 reigning champ for weeks on end, Cartoon Wars.

Then the genre evolved into “Trenches” style games like 2012, Zombies vs Aliens and…well…Trenches, where you get a lot more direct control over your units.

BoP is much more of the classic Castle Defense style game: Build units and send them on their way. Upgrade your castle and build bigger units and send them on their way. Upgrade, build, deploy…of course, there is a little more to it than that…but,in essence, that IS Castle Defense.

So, if you wanted to bring something new to the Castle Defense genre, what would you add? That’s right! Opera and Marionettes! Wait…what?!? Battle of Puppets has you playing a puppeteer for one of five classic operas, Aida, Carmen, Valkiria (Valkyrie), Salome, and Madama Butterfly. And you battle another puppeteer on a unique stage reflecting the local city’s character and regional flavor.

The Features

New in 1.2 is OpenFeint integration. Leaderboards exist for each city and overall score. Achievements are now available, including secret achievements (sorry, I haven’t unlocked any of those, YET!, so I cannot tell you what they are!) plus basic achievements just for doing something the first time, as well as accomplishing feats.

Battle of Puppets provides three different battle modes to provide alternate challenges for each city: Standard Battleground – destroy the enemy castle; Timed Battleground – destroy the enemy castle within a set time limit; and Survival – just keep the enemy from destroying your castle for a specific amount of time (Survival is usually required in cities where you unlock a profession).

Three player slots are included so your kids won’t ruin all your progress and there are  three difficulty levels, including and easy one so your kids can actually beat most of the levels.

BoP has twenty-two different cities to beat on your way to Broadway. Each city has its own unique backgrounds related to the region and scenery that changes as day switches to night and then back.

There are six “Professions” to aid your troops. Professions are gestures you perform that have different effects on the gameplay  speed up your troops, slow/stop the enemy troops, or toss sacks on the enemies, temporarily take control of enemy soldiers, etc. Professions must take time to recharge after each use, so you cannot constantly use them, though you can choose which to use after each recharge.

The Breakdown

The Good

BoP has five different styles of opera puppets (one, Salome, has to be unlocked) that fight better or worse depending on the local theater’s weather.

There are gorgeous graphics for each of the army units and for the individual backgrounds of each city’s theater (is anyone else getting a little tired of of the slapdash cartoon/stick style of so many games – a little spit and polish goes a long way, people).

You can take multiple routes to get to Broadway taking advantage of the weather that helps out your troops or going off path to unlock specific Professions.

The Bad

It’s a Castle Defense game…meaning the game play gets a bit redundant after a while. After you have mastered the basics, defeating each city consists of using your favorite strategy of troop deployment and utilizing your favorite of the six Professions.

Cartoony opera music is still opera music. :)

The Verdict

Battle of Puppets is a beautiful Castle Defense game. It does not really bring anything new to the genre…but…Damn!…did I mention that it was beautiful? If you dig Castle Defense games, pick Battle of Puppets up and enjoy all that it has to offer…it is leaps and bounds above The Wars and many other CD games in the fun department.

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The Pitter-Patter of Little Features

I was out of the country for much of 2009, so it wasn’t until I spent two months back in San Francisco that I noticed a big change in the Web community. Babies. I’m not talking about whiny Millennials coming out of college and demanding venture capital for their iPhone app. I’m talking about actual babies. The ones that crawl around the house wearing diapers.

In 2006, I co-wrote a BusinessWeek cover story on the then-burgeoning Web 2.0 movement, and one the hallmarks of the scene was a sense of having been burned by the dot com boom and bust. That was when many of the leaders, investors, and foot soldiers of the Web 2.0 movement had moved to Silicon Valley and had their first taste of startup life. As a result many of them, like Max Levchin of PayPal and Slide or Evan Williams of Blogger and Twitter, had lived a rollercoaster of wild life experiences when it came to business—takeovers, ousters, commanding millions in venture capital, but not much in the way of traditional “life experiences.” You know marriage, kids, and the like. Despite having net worths in the millions of dollars, many of them didn’t even own a house. Many didn’t think they had time.

My, how that has changed. The 30-something Valley generation that moved to the Valley fresh after college, stuck out the crash and got in early on the Web 2.0 movement are now married and having babies. Lots of them.

Examples include not only Levchin and Williams, but Jeff Veen of Adaptive Path and now Small Batch, Narendra Rocherolle of WebShots and The Start Project, James Hong of HotorNot, Jason Calacanis of “the Jason Nation,” Caterina Fake and Stewart Butterfield of Flickr and now Hunch, Ben and Mena Trott of Six Apart and more. At a recent dinner party at our house, my husband and I looked around the table and realized for the first time in a decade in the Valley we were the only ones without a babysitter. Recently married Phillip Kaplan of FuckedCompany.com/AdBrite/Blippy told me he had big news at lunch the other day and my immediate question was, “Are you having a baby?”

“No,” he replied. “But given my friends, good guess!” (A few others are expecting but I’m not outing them here. That’s private. RIP Valleywag.)

I’ve asked a few people what caused this about face, at a relatively late stage of life compared to elsewhere in the US. Many said it’d taken them a while to find “the one” and once they did, a baby felt right. Many others had gone through the insanity of the dot com bubble, the brutal crash, and then jumped back on the treadmill for Web 2.0. Now in another recession, it just seemed like there should be something more.

This kind of thinking would be anathema a few years ago, but several entrepreneurs have said in private conversations, “This current company could go under, but I still have my family.”

To anywhere else in the US, this may sound “So what? People have babies all the time.” But in the Valley, this is a staggering injection of work-life balance into the 24/7 Web space. Perhaps it’s just the reality of this generation getting older. After all, the still early-20s Mark Zuckerberg isn’t having kids, neither is the still-acting-in-his-early-20s Kevin Rose. But given the supernova of the late 1990s, it’s a big population of Web influencers and taste-makers that are all of the sudden cooing and speaking in baby-talk.

What does this mean? For people like me, who live here, lots of little things, like kids birthday parties and chats about diaper rash. But for the Web, it means something too. This generation has always designed out of need, they’ve built things they’d like to exist. My bet is that in the next five years we’re going to see a boom of baby and kid Web and gadget ideas, as the people with the most clout (and in some cases, money) in the Web world start to realize how the rest of 30-somethings in America live.


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