Ultra-minimalist writing app iA Writer now available for Mac

If you?re a minimalism freak you?ve come to the right place. Today marks the release of iA writer for Mac, a writing app or rather ?digital writing tool? with so much minimalism, there?s barely anything there.

Let?s run through the features, won?t take long, and I?ll then share my initial impressions.

Features

1. Zero Preferences
Yes, this is apparently a feature. There are no preferences, what you see is what you get. No font size alterations, no font choices, no background color changes, no formatting, nada. In fact, the only option you have is full screen and ?focusMode?. More on focus mode now?

2. Focus Mode
This patent pending feature essentially places your body of text in the center of the page and fades away each sentence as you complete it to help you to focus on the sentence you?re completing. Why? According to iA founder Oliver Reichenstein ?it?s a common pattern, that, instead of following the voice and fleshing out the text in one go, people start editing before the text is done.?

3. Auto Markdown
Markdown is a way to format your text to add bold and italic text, images, headings and a few other things, without having to use HTML. iA?s Auto Markdown feature automatically formats the Markdown language, keeping your fingers glued to your keyboard.

4. Approximate Reading Time
The app gives you an approximate reading time based on the amount of text you?ve written, not dissimilar to iA?s own blog which includes approximate reading time at the top of every post. iA has also generously included figures for words and characters written, a must for many writers.

5. Syncing over Dropbox
Technically not a built in feature, but one you should know about. Being an ultra simple text editor means it saves in plain text making it very easy to edit on other applications should you choose to leave. More significantly if you?re an iA for iPad user, you can sync to iA Writer for iPad and continue writing on the tablet.

So what do I make of it?

In all honesty I might have come into this review with a little bias. I?m tired of these ultra minimalist applications that sell themselves based on how few features they have. Yes, there?s value in being highly aware of ?feature creep? but occasionally I imagine developers are snickering behind our backs at the fact that they can now sell applications for higher prices but with barely any features. But I digress, I?ll save this discussion for another piece on another day. However, needless to say, when Reichenstein sent over the release of iA for Mac, I took a deep breath and prepared to think positive.

?No font changes, no text-size alterations, no preferences whatsoever?? Sounded almost ridiculous but I kept positive.

I installed it and launched it. I won?t pretend I didn?t miss the initial ?let?s have a play? time that I enjoy with most new apps, after all, with iA there really is very little to test out. However once I accepted the app for what it is ? a place to do nothing but write ? words did seem to roll off the tongue so to speak. Typing felt fun, in large part thanks to the text being perfectly sized, font ideally chosen, background color easy on the eye and a genius of a feature in ?focus view?, it?s a beautiful touch and does seem to help ensure a continuous flow of thought and text with few interruptions.

Will I use it? Probably not as much as I?d like to. As I primarily write on The Next Web, I need multiple windows, formatting, ability to insert links, images, auto spell check and much more. For a book or long form author however iA writer is likely to feel like a breath of fresh air, but if you?re a blogger or someone who enjoys ?creating? the look and feel of a post or article as you write, iA writer for Mac isn?t going to be your cup of tea.

iA writer is built by the team at Information Architects, a well respected strategic design agency headquartered in Tokyo, Japan. The company focuses primarily on increasing page views for media companies across the globe through a combination of design, business and technology. It?s a smart team lead by Swiss born founder Oliver Reichenstein who launched the company in 2005. The company?s blog is full of must read articles giving, primarily Reichenstein?s, perspective on web typography, user experience, development and digital content.

Download

Download iA for Mac here for $17.99. Yes, I think that?s a little expensive too but as with many Mac developers, it?s something they feel they have a right to charge for a well thought out product and millions of sales tell us customers are happy to pay for it. If you?re interested in a couple of alternatives for your mac, it?s worth checking out BywordWriteRoom, Ommwriter, Writer and heck, Textedit :)

Note: It?s also important to note the application only currently supports Latin alphabetical languages and Russian.

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Source: http://thenextweb.com/apple/2011/05/28/ultra-minimalist-word-processor-ia-writer-now-available-for-mac/

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Political Memo: A Republican Stays Connected in Democratic Massachusetts

But with a marquee Senate race in 2012, no high-profile Democrat has yet emerged to take on Mr. Brown, the lone Republican in the state?s Congressional delegation and one of the most popular leaders in Massachusetts. Obvious heavy hitters like Gov. Deval Patrick and Mr. Kennedy?s widow, Victoria Reggie Kennedy, have ruled out running.

National Democrats are so worried that they have begun recruiting Elizabeth Warren for the seat; she is the Harvard professor struggling to win confirmation to the new federal consumer financial protection agency. But some Democrats here openly wonder whether an Ivy League academic could beat an incumbent admired for his common-man persona.

?Right now, I don?t think we have the candidate who can show me and others they can win,? Mayor Thomas M. Menino said Friday, adding that Mr. Brown has ?somehow continued the magic? with voters.

So what is going on with Massachusetts? Could the state that produced such emblematic liberals as Tip O?Neill, Michael Dukakis and the Kennedy clan have run out of Democrats with star power? Has a Republican whose life story includes posing nude for Cosmopolitan magazine become such a formidable politician that he could be re-elected with no serious competition?

The Kennedy family?s long prominence in Massachusetts politics may help explain the deficit of high-profile candidates; Mr. Kennedy was in the Senate for nearly 50 years, and the expectation was that other family members would always be ready to step up. Looking toward 2012, some voters are feeling jilted.

?Kennedy was in for so long and his illness was not expected,? said Jerry Schumacher, 74, a lifelong Democrat from Wellesley who was visiting the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum on Friday. ?He hadn?t groomed anyone and the party hadn?t groomed anyone.?

Some Democratic strategists are more optimistic, pointing out that the Senate contest will take place in a presidential election year, in a state that tends to solidly support Democratic presidential candidates. President Obama won Massachusetts by 26 percentage points in 2008 and remains popular here.

Thus far, Democrats who have entered the race ? including Setti Warren, the mayor of Newton; Bob Massie, a former candidate for lieutenant governor; and Alan Khazei, a founder of a national service program ? are barely known. A few House Democrats, including Representatives Michael E. Capuano and Stephen F. Lynch, have expressed mild interest but are lying low so far. Mr. Menino, a Democrat first elected in 1993, said the lack of compelling candidates was partly because of a transformation under way in the state?s Democratic Party that began when Mr. Kennedy died.

?Teddy used to bring people together in the Democratic Party like nobody else could,? he said. ?That?s what we?re missing ? we need that unifier who can bring people together, who people respect.?

He added, ?We?re still waiting for that next great leader.?

On Thursday, Senator Patty Murray of Washington, chairwoman of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, told reporters that party leaders were talking to ?a number? of potential candidates for the race and expected to have ?a good strong candidate within weeks.?

Matt Canter, a spokesman for the committee, said voters should be focusing on Mr. Brown?s record, saying, ?Scott Brown is voting in lockstep with Republicans and already demonstrating exactly why he is wrong for Massachusetts.?

His record is actually more complicated; while he often votes along party lines, he has gone the opposite way on several occasions, including Wednesday?s vote on a contentious bill that would reshape Medicare. Mr. Brown was one of four in his party to vote against it, reflecting the cautious line he walks as a Republican in a Democratic state.

Mr. Brown also voted with Democrats to repeal the ban on gay men and lesbians serving openly in the military, and on last year?s financial regulation bill. Critics paint him as a finger-to-the-wind politician ? to their glee, he appeared to indicate support for the Medicare plan before coming out against it last week ? but it is unclear whether that will hurt him with voters.

?When he casts these types of votes he makes himself more appealing to the vast majority of Massachusetts voters,? said Peter Ubertaccio, a political science professor at Stonehill College. ?He makes it very difficult for the Democratic Party in the state to land a punch.?

Dan Payne, a longtime Democratic media consultant, pointed out that Massachusetts is not as monolithically liberal as outsiders believe. The state voted twice for Ronald Reagan, and thanks largely to support from independent voters in the suburbs, it was led by Republican governors for 16 straight years, until Mr. Patrick broke the streak with his 2006 landslide election.

?They like the idea of having what they perceive to be an independent Republican,? Mr. Payne said.

Mr. Brown, who defeated the well-known state attorney general, Martha Coakley, to win the Senate seat, has already raised more than $8 million for next year?s race and has tested some campaign themes. In a commencement address at Lasell College this month, he criticized the ?go-along-to-get-along attitude that deeply saturates the one-party control of government in this state.?

Some theorize that Mr. Capuano and other House members will forgo a costly campaign against Mr. Brown in hopes that Senator John Kerry will become secretary of state in a second Obama term, thus creating an open seat in 2013 that would be easier to win.

?If you?re a member of the delegation,? said Mary Anne Marsh, a Democratic political consultant, ?maybe you?re saying, ?You know what, I can get another swing at this and I don?t have to give anything up.? ?

Others said candidates who seemingly have no shot can become heavy hitters almost overnight, as Mr. Brown, formerly a little-known state senator, did last year.

As for ?legacy politicians? like the Kennedys, Mr. Dukakis and Mr. O?Neill, Ms. Marsh said any Democrat who could defeat Mr. Brown would become one.

?If you beat Scott Brown,? she said, ?you have a legacy.?

Katie Zezima contributed reporting.

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Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=1040938e677825ddf943917fb57ea942

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Rainmaker completes your contacts with a single mouse click [$30k API Contest]

How many address books do you have? Personally, just with Google accounts, I have three and they are also synchronized to my Android device. Almost every entry that I have is incomplete, consisting only of a name and an email address. Sometimes you need more than that.

There are great solutions such as Rapportive and Xobni for pulling in contextual information and Google?s newly-announced sidebar for Gmail will help as well. But for that other information, there hasn?t really been a solution until Rainmaker.

Rainmaker is a startup that?s presently working its way through the TechStars program in Boulder, but part of its product is already live via the Rainmaker website and Chrome app. The micro-scale idea is that it pulls in publicly-listed information for your Google contacts and then syncs them back in real time. The effects are pretty astounding, if you have someone with a hefty amount of public information, but even those with light information get relevant, up-to-date details added.

Need an example? I found a good one in Barry Schwartz from Search Engine Land. Here?s the before:

And then after I ?Make it Rain?:

As you can see, it pulled in Barry?s website information, plus the public address for his business. The team is working hard right now to make Twitter results more reliable, but it generally does an admirable job of pulling those in, too.

I had a chance to talk today with Dan Lynn, the CTO of Rainmaker and what the company has going on is really impressive. First off, Lynn clarifies what Rainmaker is wanting to do on a more macro scale:

?We?re effectively building a people search engine. We?d love to be able to provide information like ?hey, we found this information about you, and we found it in these places?. We want to do all of this in a white-hat sort of way.?

We talked for a bit on privacy, and this is something that Lynn says is vitally important to the Rainmaker team. By the team?s estimation, about 40% of people simply don?t know and don?t care about their information being on the Internet. Another 30% vehemently protect that information and the remaining 30% are the more social types who see the Internet as a personal branding opportunity and so they regulate the information that is available.

?We don?t want to market fear. We?d rather empower people to know where we found information and then have them be able to correct it or opt out of it completely.?

As for the money? Right now, you?re given 25 Raindrops for signing up and another 25 for verifying your email address. That should be a decent start for you to decide whether or not it?s worth the few cents per contact to have full information. Beyond that though, there is an API that is bringing in cash for the service. Non-commercial use of the Rainmaker API is free, and commercial use is only $.01 per match.

The team has put together a contest (details here) surrounding that API and there are over $30,000 in prizes available for it. The only rule? Build something cool. The first place winner will get $2,500 in cash, plus mentorship from TechStars, books from Brad Feld and David Cohen plus a huge list of other niceties.

I?m about as OCD as could be when it comes to keeping my contacts tidy. Rainmaker solves so many issues for me with a single button click that I?ll be using it for everyone in my most contacted list. As we push ourselves toward more transparent online identities, I think that it?s critically important to have information at hand. The beauty of Rainmaker is that a single click of the mouse can replace countless time spent digging for information.

Give it a shot. I?d love to hear your thoughts, even if you?re just telling me to stop being so anal-retentive.

Which won?t happen, by the way.

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Source: http://thenextweb.com/apps/2011/05/28/rainmaker-completes-your-contacts-with-a-single-mouse-click-30k-api-contest/

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A Gas Power Plant to Make Renewables More Practical

General Electric announced on Thursday that it's designed a gas-fired combined-cycle power plant that can start up rapidly. The goal is to help electricity grids adapt to the variability of renewable energy.

With a small but growing proportion of electricity in Europe being supplied by wind and solar power, grid operators need new ways to deal with fluctuations in supply. The supply from solar drops dramatically at night, while wind installations only provide power when the wind is blowing. GE's new plant can ramp up electricity generation at a rate of more than 50 megawatts a minute?twice the rate of current industry benchmarks. The plant can start from scratch in less than 30 minutes.

GE is testing a pilot plant at its facility in Greenville, South Carolina, but the plant won't come into operation any earlier than 2015.

The plant will have a base load fuel efficiency of 61 percent, higher than other gas combined-cycle power plants. A base load power plant is one that's dedicated to providing a continuous supply of energy. Nuclear and coal plants commonly provide base load power. Such plants offer relatively cheap energy, but they can take hours or days to start up, which isn't fast enough to meet fluctuations in supply from renewables.

GE's 510-megawatt plant design is the result of a $500 million investment by the company. It features new, more efficient gas and steam turbines, as well as a new integrated electronic control system.

Paul Browning, vice president of GE Thermal Products, said at Thursday's announcement that the plant uses nickel-based super alloys, which are used in aircraft engines, because they can withstand the high temperatures inside the plant. The new turbines can ramp up quickly, much as a jet engine can ramp up quickly to provide thrust for takeoff.

GE estimates that the new technology could save some power utilities $2.6 million a year under typical operating conditions. The company also says the plants could cut annual carbon-dioxide emissions by more than 12,700 metric tons, with an annual fuel savings of 6.4 million cubic meters of natural gas.

The new plant has a power frequency of 50 hertz, meaning it can be built in Europe and many other parts of the world, but not in North America. GE says it will announce a 60 hertz version for the U.S. market at a later date.

Jim Watson, director of the energy group at Sussex University, says he's impressed by the enhanced flexibility of the plant. "This is just the kind of plant we need," he says. "It's not a low-carbon technology, but it could be part of a low-carbon system."

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Source: http://feeds.technologyreview.com/click.phdo?i=5f78a21aba1fb384e09c60be1e3f22f8

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Weekend Open Forum: Do you keep antivirus protection running 24/7?

Having antivirus protection has become a fact of life for most computer users, as it's certainly not uncommon to hear of massive botnets recruiting infected PCs for spamming operations or Trojans that steal or damage your information. But it's also true that with a little experience recognizing the nefarious from innocuous and practicing safe browsing habits one can navigate the web in peace with minimal security in place.

For a while now I've been using my main computer without active antivirus protection and only scan files rarely if I'm suspicious of something. It's not for everyone -- certainly not work environments or anyone likely to fall prey for tricks that a mildly experienced computer user would spot. You might even say it's a bit reckless.

But given our tech-savvy audience we think it's a fair question to ask -- and actually revisit, since we've touched on this topic before: do you keep an antivirus program running on your computer at all times? If so, what do you use? If not, have you had any issues you've had to regret not having active antivirus protection on your machine?

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Source: http://www.techspot.com/news/43987-weekend-open-forum-do-you-keep-antivirus-protection-running-24-7.html

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The Witcher 2 patch 1.1 removes DRM, boosts framerate

CD Projekt has released the first patch for The Witcher 2: Assassins of Kings today, delivering new content and fixing game-breaking performance issues. According to various user reports, the DRM mechanism that ships with retail versions of the game drastically reduces frame rates and loading times. One user quoted by TorrentFreak claims the SecuROM-riddled copy of Witcher 2 takes 32 seconds longer to launch, 8 seconds longer to save, and runs nearly twice as slow.

That only occurs in physical copies of the game sold through stores such as Amazon. Digital copies sold through Steam version rely on Steamworks while GOG's version is completely DRM-free -- and such is the case for retail copies with today's update. By removing the copy protection, patch 1.1 reportedly improves the game's framerate by up to 30%. It also contains the first free DLC called "Troll Trouble," adds an inverted mouse option and more. The full release notes are below.

CD Projekt's Adam Badowski said DRM schemes mostly hurt paying customers. "Our approach to countering piracy is to incorporate superior value in the legal version. This means it has to be superior in every respect: less troublesome to use and install, with full support, and with access to additional content and services," he said. The developer was primarily concerned about preventing The Witcher 2 from being pirated before its release, so the DRM has already served its purpose.

Although the company may have a relaxed DRM policy, it doesn't plan to let pirates off scot-free. CD Projekt declared war against illegal file-sharers last November, collaborating with legal and tech firms to employ the "pay or else" tactics popularized by the US Copyright Group and small-time filmmakers. People caught downloading The Witcher 2 illegally might receive a letter demanding a settlement fee or run the risk of being sued, according to CD Projekt co-founder Marcin Iwinski.

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Source: http://www.techspot.com/news/43989-the-witcher-2-patch-11-removes-drm-boosts-framerate.html

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Texas Governor Hints at G.O.P. Run for White House

Asked at a bill signing if he would think about a presidential run after Memorial Day, Mr. Perry, a staunch conservative and a Tea Party favorite, said without a hint of irony: ?Yes, sir. I?m going to think about it.? Then a couple of beats later, he smiled and added, ?But I think about a lot of things.?

For more than two years, Mr. Perry has insisted he has no interest in going to Washington, even as he has been raising his national profile and laying the groundwork for a possible campaign with strong support from the right wing of the Republican Party.

He embraced the Tea Party movement early on when others dismissed it. As the chairman of the Republican Governors Association, he has championed states? rights, bashed President Obama and written a book asserting that the federal government had overstepped its bounds on nearly every issue.

At home, he made it a priority to pass several bills this session appealing to conservatives, among them an anti-abortion bill requiring women who are considering abortions to have sonograms and a measure aimed at preventing cities from becoming sanctuaries for illegal immigrants.

Facing a huge budget shortfall this year, he also took a hard line against raising taxes or tapping the state?s flush reserves. Instead he pushed an austere budget through the Legislature that cuts $15 billion in spending, mostly from schools and health care.

This has endeared him to conservative pundits, some of whom have hinted they would like to draft him to run. Rush Limbaugh has praised him and floated his name recently as a great candidate.

Mr. Perry was coy this week on the Fox News Channel when he told an interviewer that he was tempted to run ?but this is something I don?t want to do.? Then he expressed the hope that the Republicans would come up with a candidate to unite the party.

Yet on Friday, with a few offhand words, Mr. Perry joined a list of Republican leaders who are testing the waters for 2012.

Mike Toomey, a longtime friend of Mr. Perry?s who was his chief of staff in 2004, said the governor had been encouraged to enter the race by several business leaders and Republican donors, in Texas and on the national level. But he has not sent signals to his friends and close advisers that he wants to run, nor has he formed a committee to explore the idea, Mr. Toomey said.

After Mr. Perry opened the door to a run at the news conference, his aides tried to play down the importance of what he had said, saying he still has no intention of entering the fray. ?He said he?s thinking about it, but nothing has changed,? said his spokesman, Mark Miner.

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Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=3574d51a9f872873953d9af6663804be

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The Witcher 2 patch 1.1 removes DRM, boosts framerate

CD Projekt has released the first patch for The Witcher 2: Assassins of Kings today, delivering new content and fixing game-breaking performance issues. According to various user reports, the DRM mechanism that ships with retail versions of the game drastically reduces frame rates and loading times. One user quoted by TorrentFreak claims the SecuROM-riddled copy of Witcher 2 takes 32 seconds longer to launch, 8 seconds longer to save, and runs nearly twice as slow.

That only occurs in physical copies of the game sold through stores such as Amazon. Digital copies sold through Steam version rely on Steamworks while GOG's version is completely DRM-free -- and such is the case for retail copies with today's update. By removing the copy protection, patch 1.1 reportedly improves the game's framerate by up to 30%. It also contains the first free DLC called "Troll Trouble," adds an inverted mouse option and more. The full release notes are below.

CD Projekt's Adam Badowski said DRM schemes mostly hurt paying customers. "Our approach to countering piracy is to incorporate superior value in the legal version. This means it has to be superior in every respect: less troublesome to use and install, with full support, and with access to additional content and services," he said. The developer was primarily concerned about preventing The Witcher 2 from being pirated before its release, so the DRM has already served its purpose.

Although the company may have a relaxed DRM policy, it doesn't plan to let pirates off scot-free. CD Projekt declared war against illegal file-sharers last November, collaborating with legal and tech firms to employ the "pay or else" tactics popularized by the US Copyright Group and small-time filmmakers. People caught downloading The Witcher 2 illegally might receive a letter demanding a settlement fee or run the risk of being sued, according to CD Projekt co-founder Marcin Iwinski.

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Source: http://www.techspot.com/news/43989-the-witcher-2-patch-11-removes-drm-boosts-framerate.html

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Weekend Open Forum: Do you keep antivirus protection running 24/7?

Having antivirus protection has become a fact of life for most computer users, as it's certainly not uncommon to hear of massive botnets recruiting infected PCs for spamming operations or Trojans that steal or damage your information. But it's also true that with a little experience recognizing the nefarious from innocuous and practicing safe browsing habits one can navigate the web in peace with minimal security in place.

For a while now I've been using my main computer without active antivirus protection and only scan files rarely if I'm suspicious of something. It's not for everyone -- certainly not work environments or anyone likely to fall prey for tricks that a mildly experienced computer user would spot. You might even say it's a bit reckless.

But given our tech-savvy audience we think it's a fair question to ask -- and actually revisit, since we've touched on this topic before: do you keep an antivirus program running on your computer at all times? If so, what do you use? If not, have you had any issues you've had to regret not having active antivirus protection on your machine?

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Source: http://www.techspot.com/news/43987-weekend-open-forum-do-you-keep-antivirus-protection-running-24-7.html

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Rainmaker completes your contacts with a single mouse click [$30k API Contest]

How many address books do you have? Personally, just with Google accounts, I have three and they are also synchronized to my Android device. Almost every entry that I have is incomplete, consisting only of a name and an email address. Sometimes you need more than that.

There are great solutions such as Rapportive and Xobni for pulling in contextual information and Google?s newly-announced sidebar for Gmail will help as well. But for that other information, there hasn?t really been a solution until Rainmaker.

Rainmaker is a startup that?s presently working its way through the TechStars program in Boulder, but part of its product is already live via the Rainmaker website and Chrome app. The micro-scale idea is that it pulls in publicly-listed information for your Google contacts and then syncs them back in real time. The effects are pretty astounding, if you have someone with a hefty amount of public information, but even those with light information get relevant, up-to-date details added.

Need an example? I found a good one in Barry Schwartz from Search Engine Land. Here?s the before:

And then after I ?Make it Rain?:

As you can see, it pulled in Barry?s website information, plus the public address for his business. The team is working hard right now to make Twitter results more reliable, but it generally does an admirable job of pulling those in, too.

I had a chance to talk today with Dan Lynn, the CTO of Rainmaker and what the company has going on is really impressive. First off, Lynn clarifies what Rainmaker is wanting to do on a more macro scale:

?We?re effectively building a people search engine. We?d love to be able to provide information like ?hey, we found this information about you, and we found it in these places?. We want to do all of this in a white-hat sort of way.?

We talked for a bit on privacy, and this is something that Lynn says is vitally important to the Rainmaker team. By the team?s estimation, about 40% of people simply don?t know and don?t care about their information being on the Internet. Another 30% vehemently protect that information and the remaining 30% are the more social types who see the Internet as a personal branding opportunity and so they regulate the information that is available.

?We don?t want to market fear. We?d rather empower people to know where we found information and then have them be able to correct it or opt out of it completely.?

As for the money? Right now, you?re given 25 Raindrops for signing up and another 25 for verifying your email address. That should be a decent start for you to decide whether or not it?s worth the few cents per contact to have full information. Beyond that though, there is an API that is bringing in cash for the service. Non-commercial use of the Rainmaker API is free, and commercial use is only $.01 per match.

The team has put together a contest (details here) surrounding that API and there are over $30,000 in prizes available for it. The only rule? Build something cool. The first place winner will get $2,500 in cash, plus mentorship from TechStars, books from Brad Feld and David Cohen plus a huge list of other niceties.

I?m about as OCD as could be when it comes to keeping my contacts tidy. Rainmaker solves so many issues for me with a single button click that I?ll be using it for everyone in my most contacted list. As we push ourselves toward more transparent online identities, I think that it?s critically important to have information at hand. The beauty of Rainmaker is that a single click of the mouse can replace countless time spent digging for information.

Give it a shot. I?d love to hear your thoughts, even if you?re just telling me to stop being so anal-retentive.

Which won?t happen, by the way.

Powered By WizardRSS.com | Full Text RSS Feed | Amazon Plugin | Settlement Statement | WordPress Tutorials

Source: http://thenextweb.com/apps/2011/05/28/rainmaker-completes-your-contacts-with-a-single-mouse-click-30k-api-contest/

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