The latest roundup of the action happening in Silicon Valley:

youtubespoils.bmpFirst evidence of YouTube wealth — What do you do with your money, when you get it? One way is to spend $20 million to buy Andre Agassi’s Tiburon estate. That’s what Stuart Peterson, of Artis Capital Management, an investor in YouTube, did, as PE Week’s Alex Haislip reports. Or you can invest it into night clubs, as some Web entrepreneurs have done.

Google Answers shuts down, while Yahoo Answers booms — This is one more confirmation that Google does best with automation. It started its answering service before Yahoo did, yet was blown away by Yahoo. Google is not adept at the messy business of getting humans involved. Yahoo claims 60 million unique users of Yahoo Answers. It just signed a deal with Answers.com, too. This is a rare victory for Yahoo, and should encourage it to stay focused on its relative advantage at implementing “community”-oriented projects.

Allow comments anywhere on your site — There are some places on blogs or web sites where comments aren’t enabled by the site’s software. So Lev Walkin, a Cisco Security Engineer out of Santa Clara, has come up with a way to let you place them pretty much anywhere, called JS-Kit (via Techcrunch).

Will U.S. Supreme Court brake global warming action? — The future of many clean-tech start-ups here in Silicon Valley depends in part on Washington. The U.S. Supreme Court is deciding whether California can move ahead with strict pollution controls. In European, meanwhile, the opposite is happening. Brussels is forcing stricter controls on member states, rather than braking.

Danger raises $10.3 million from Sharp –This deal makes sense, because Sharp is building a Danger “hiptop” device, similar to the one distributed by T-Mobile, to run Danger’s software. Also, in case you missed it, see the update on our recent snarky post about Danger and its IPO. Hank Nothhaft took exception, and we clarified some facts. He says the company’s valuation has increased, which is a good sign.

Fuddy U.S. companies on London’s AIMNow the Brits are suddenly asking why the U.S. companies going public on the London alternative stock market AIM are doing so poorly. Two thirds of them are losing money for investors. Could the reason be that the only reason U.S. companies listing on AIM is because 1) they couldn’t do it in the U.S., or 2) they couldn’t raise money from private equity investors (or venture capitalists) at a time when it is very easy to raise money?

Presto launches the photo service for elderly or tech-phobic — We wrote about Silicon Valley company Presto’s product a while back. Presto has $10M from venture firm Kleiner Perkins and others.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Trackback URL

3 Trackbacks

  1. VentureBeat » YouTube and Sequoia Capital’s family ties said:

    [...] Sequoia made a killing off its investment into video site, YouTube when it was sold to Google for $1.6 billion, and eyebrows were raised when it emerged that the obscure Artis Capital had also been in on the investment. Who were these guys? One of its partners has since bought the $20 million Tiburon estate of Andre Agassi. Is it a coincidence that David Lamond, who has been with Artis since at least 2005 appears to have been among the few to benefit from the YouTube investment? And is it a coincidence that since that time, Artis has landed as an investor alongside Sequoia in a surprising number of deals, from Aruba in Sept. 05, to Open Silicon in Oct. 05 and AdBrite in February, to name just a few? [...]

  2. VentureBeat » Sequoia keeps it in the family with Cast Iron said:

    [...] one of Artis’ partners, Stuart Peterson raised eyebrows shortly after the YouTube sale by paying $20 million to buy Andre Agassi’s Tiburon, Calif. estate after the YouTube [...]

  3. VentureBeat » Roundup: Google invests in China/Tianya, gDrive, Pubmatic and more said:

    [...] relaunch in Russia earlier this year, . Remember, an earlier version of Google’s service couldn’t handle stiff competition from Yahoo Answers in the U.S., and shut its doors last year (that version [...]

4 Comments

  1. Anonymous said:

    Presto launched months ago — at DEMO, I think. Just this week I saw it advertised in a SkyMall magazine.

  2. Brian said:

    Im not pleased with how they potray boomers in their marketing campaign. If you’re interested to see why I say this, check out my blog on Nov 28

  3. wuyasea operator said:

    sorry to hear google answers closing down. I personally liked it very much. enough for the bad news. now the good news:

    wuyaSea.com welcomes all google answer refugees.

    WuyaSea.com allow you to ask question for free or for a fee (minimum $2). any category, any topic.
    WuyaSea.com also allow you to answer any questions, our commission now is 20% + $0.20.

    Check it out plz. Thank you.

    http://www.wuyaSea.com
    wuyaSea Operator

  4. win now said:

    I just want you to know that I think you did a terrific job on this websight.

Add a Comment