On Saturday, I attended WISH 2010 in Tokyo (where I live) to see a total of 15 Japanese startups presenting their services onstage to a panel of judges and an audience of 550 people. The event was organized by online marketing company Agile Media Network (“Japan’s Federated Media“).

Eight of the companies won prizes from various national media (i.e. TechCrunch Japan), and there was one big winner (an e-book publishing platform called Puboo). But here are thumbnail sketches of all of the companies that presented at WISH 2010. (Please note that not all of these services are available in English.)

WISH 2010: Winners

Puboo (Winner: Grand Prix and Mainichi.jp Award)
Puboo is a free e-book publishing service provided by major Japanese book review community Booklog (which currently counts more than 300,000 members). Launched in late June, Puboo has so far allowed individuals to publish 3,000 books (one example) through its interface. The books can be published on Booklog, as PDFs, or in EPUB format (and can be read on the iPad or the Kindle as well).

Conyac (available in English / Winner: TechCrunch Japan Award)
Conyac is a social translation service that requires “requesters” to pay a certain fee upfront, upload a text (or image of a text) and indicate which languages the text should be translated into. Registered translators accept texts they think they can handle to earn “Conyac points”, a virtual currency. Those points can then be converted into real money via Paypal, with the service itself getting a 20% cut. Prices start at $0.3 per letter.

Cacoo (available in English / Winner: Impress Watch Award)
Cacoo is a free online drawing tool that allows multiple users to create diagrams and other graphics (wireframes, software design diagrams, network diagrams, UMLs etc.) collaboratively and in real-time. We covered the entirely browser-based tool (which now boasts 55,000 users worldwide) in more detail here.

Orihime (Winner: Open Network Lab Award)
Orihime is an online shop set up by a female college student who sells self-designed and made-in-Japan PC bags and accessories on the site. The shop encourages buyers to take part in the design and production process by leaving comments and wishes for future products on the site.

Calil (Winner: Asahi.com Award)
Calil is a vertical search engine that lets users find books in over 5,000 public, university and special interest libraries in Japan. The service also provides rankings of the most popular books in those libraries, shows them facilities in their vicinity, lets users create lists of books they plan to borrow and alerts them once they become available.

Garapon TV (Winner: Agile Media Network Award)
Garapon TV is a video recording service that lets users record and store TV programs in the cloud (“on all channels, 7 days a week”). All recorded programs can be watched anytime later on Internet-enabled devices, including the iPhone, iPad or Android phones (3GS demo video). Programs can be tagged, searched and recommended to other Garapon users.

Togetter (Winner: TechWave Award)
Launched a year ago, Twitter-based content aggregation and communication platform Togetter currently boasts over one million unique visitors and nearly five million page views per month, according to creator Yoshida. Togetter lets users submit comments to a certain topic through tweets, pulls relevant tweets into a dedicated page on Togetter and sorts them in a thread. On the page, users can further discuss the topic, contribute tags or add the page to their favorites or bookmarks (example page for a discussion thread on WISH 2010).

Cerevo (Winner: Nikkei Award)
Hardware startup Cerevo is best known for its social camera Cerevo CAM live!, the world’s first digital camera with Ustream live streaming capability (currently sold in Japan only). AT WISH 2010, the company introduced the Cerevo Ustream Box, a small battery-powered and Wi-Fi-enabled device that makes any camera Ustream-compatible (without using a PC). The box (pictured below) will go on sale in Japan this fall.

WiSH 2010: The best of the rest

AQUSH (information in English)
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. 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.

Loctouch
Loctouch is a Foursquare-like LBS application that’s available for the iPhone and Japanese feature phones. Launched by major web portal Livedoor six week ago, Loctouch lets users “touch” spots to indicate their location, recommend interesting places to others and earn badges over time (called “stickers”). Here‘s the web view of a burger restaurant someone “touched” in Tokyo.

Tabereko
Tabereko for the iPhone aggregates information from printed Japanese “gourmet magazines”. Thanks to Google Maps integration, users can not only access the digitized contents but also find stores in their vicinity. Tabereko itself is free but monetizes via in-app purchases.

Lifepalette
Lifepalette is a health-oriented social network. The idea is to help users connect with others through writing diaries on the site, sharing news, asking and answering questions etc. (here‘s an example for a typical diary entry).

Twitnovels (available in English)
Twitnovels is a Twitter-based community for “crowdsourced” novels that launched last month. Users can begin writing a novel and let others continue the story line from any point to create group-edited works (here‘s an example of a Japanese novel in the making by 14 different authors). More information on Twitnovels can be found here.

Decomoji
Decomoji is a Japanese “web font service” for FireFox, IE, Safari, and Chrome. Web site owners can choose between 250 CSS3 fonts for a monthly fee (there’s also a free trial version).

TwiTraq
Launched last month, Twitter analysis tool TwiTraq currently boasts 27,000 users. Twitraq can be used for “self-analysis” (i.e. how often did I tweet in the last days, which hash tags and keywords do I and my followers use most often, etc.), visualizing data in a number of ways (all data can be downloaded as CSV files). The free tool also provides insight about other TwiTraq users, for example by breaking down when, by whom and where tweets about a certain keyword were posted (this page shows the results for keyword “golf”).

From the 15 participating companies, ten were pre-selected, while five (TwiTraq, Conyac, Twitnovels, Tabereko, and Togetter) were voted in by users. For completeness, click here for a list (in English) of the 27 startups that didn’t make the cut.




From WISH 2010 In Tokyo: 15 Japanese Startups Demo Their Services

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One of the big problems with drug and prostitution transactions is that they tend to involve a lot of cash, and cash is hard to launder. Taking credit card payments has never been easier via Square, which lets anyone swipe credit cards with their iPhone.

Sure, it leaves one heck of a paper trail, but you have to wonder if at least a few of those person to person transactions aren’t being done via that sexy startup. I certainly have.

Founder Jack Dorsey has told me that exactly zero drug or prostitution transactions have been completed through Square. I believe he believes that, but I wonder how he really knows for sure.

Anyway, I came across this very funny spoof video by Chris OConnell that just dives right in to exactly what I’ve been saying. Says Chris: “So I got my blow, and I got my 19 year old hooker. Life couldn’t be much better thanks to Square.”

Trust me, you’ll want to watch this:




Square: The Perfect Solution For Tricky Drug And Prostitution Transactions?

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Digg Head of Business Development Matt Van Horn is leaving Digg to move over to the “stealthish” startup Path as VP of Business Development. This Friday will be his last day at Digg, which just this week announced its V.4 redesign.

From Van Horn’s announcement email to colleagues:

When I graduated college in 2006, it was a crazy dream to move to the bay area and join a tech start-up. So I took it upon myself to stalk Kevin and crew repeatedly until they created a position for me. It’s now been more than three years since I started here and I have learned so much and am so grateful for the chance that everyone took in bringing me on board. This has been the opportunity of a lifetime and I am excited for what the future has in store for Digg and will continue to support it in any way I can.

After this Friday, I will be joining up with Dave Morin, Shawn Fanning and Dustin Mierau on a new stealthish project called Path. I used to work with Dave at Apple and I’m excited to be working with him on this new project. We haven’t announced what we’re doing yet, but it’s going to start on the iPhone – you can sign up for more information at Path.com.

The latest we heard about the much buzzed about list-making service was a tweet from investor Ashton Kutcher about his Path anticipation, until today.

From Path CEO and former Facebooker Dave Morin,

“Matt’s focus on distributing the Digg brand throughout the internet makes him a perfect fit for Path as we turn our eye towards launch. At Path we are focused on building a beautiful experience through great design and a focus on quality. We think that Matt will approach the partnerships and relationships that we build with design in mind and are excited to welcome him to the Path team.

Key takeaway from Van Horn’s email: Path will be launching on the iPhone first. Stay tuned for updates.




Path Snags Digg’s Matt Van Horn As VP Of Biz Dev, Approaches Launch

At Facebook’s Places event earlier tonight, they noted that their iPhone app would be updated tonight with the new check-in functionality. Sure enough, here it is. Though the App Store update alert hasn’t kicked in yet, if you go to the actual page and redownload it, it should be the latest version (version 3.2).

As you can see the new Places area is front and center in the app. Clicking on it brings up a list of your friends who have recently checked in to various places. Clicking on those friends show more details about the place they are at.

You stream will now show these Places check-ins as well.

One thing that’s oddly tricky is actually checking in yourself. On the touch.facebook.com version of the site it’s much more obvious.

You’ll also notice that Facebook has changed the Inbox icon on their new app. And to make room for Places, the Notes element of the app has been moved on to the second page.

Again, you can find the latest version of the app here — sadly, it’s only available for U.S. users for the time being. Here’s some quick pictures of what it looks like:




Facebook Places Goes Live On The iPhone. Check-In While It’s Hot

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When AT&T’s monopoly on the iPhone ends in the U.S., it is not going to be pretty. With increasing evidence that Verizon is preparing to offer the iPhone 4 early next year, many people are waiting before buying one or upgrading. Many of those are existing AT&T customers who want the same phone on a better network. According to a new survey by market research firm Morpace, 34 percent of AT&T iPhone owners are waiting for the iPhone to be available on another carrier before upgrading, and a full 47 percent of current AT&T iPhone owners say they would consider switching to Verizon. So almost half of AT&T customers surveyed are not completely satisfied with AT&T’s network.

Those aren’t just angry bloggers. Morpace surveyed 1,000 consumers, and 29 percent (across all carriers) said they are likely to buy a phone from Verizon. Of those, the majority (51 percent) are existing Verizon customers.

These survey results suggest two things. First, there are going to be a lot of people switching from AT&T to Verizon. Second, when Verizon does get the iPhone, it could start to hurt Android sales. Verizon is the biggest seller of Android phones. If 51 percent of Verizon customers are likely to buy an iPhone, that will definitely put pressure on Android sales. So far, Android has been the best choice for Verizon customers looking for a smartphone. When the iPhone becomes an option, the choice won’t be so simple and iPhone sales will begin to cut into Android’s share on Verizon.

The other unknown here is how Verizon’s network will be able to handle all the increased data traffic from new iPhone users. Everyone assumes that it has a better network, but a few million iPhone subscribers could quickly test its limits. Then everyone is going to want to switch back to AT&T.




Survey Says: 34 Percent Of AT&T iPhone Owners Are Waiting To Switch To Verizon