The hits just keep on coming for Elevation Partners, the one-time digital media, private equity dream team that has reconfigured itself as an investor in late stage Web 2.0 treasures. Earlier this summer, Elevation requested an extension on investing its $1.9 billion fund, and TechCrunch has learned that that request was denied—a move that came as surprise to us and to Elevation, we hear.

So what does that mean? Clearly, LPs are sending a strong message that has to do with Elevation, but also has a lot to do with the broader market: They want to see some returns before they pony up more money. But the news isn’t nearly as bad as it sounds.

For one thing, we’re only talking about $100 million or so of the $1.9 billion fund. At most, this would have represented one more deal in the portfolio. What’s more Elevation can still call up that $100 million to invest in a follow-on round in existing portfolio companies, so it’s not like the fund size has necessarily been reduced to $1.8 billion. There is just a new restriction on how they can spend that last $100 million.

What does this mean for that Pandora deal? It doesn’t kill it, because Elevation signed an agreement to invest before the original five-year investment period elapsed. But that deal isn’t done and it’s unclear if there’s a snag or the deal is just taking some time. In our earlier story, Pandora confirmed that Elevation had expressed interest and sources close to Elevation say an agreement to invest was already signed.

Either way, the fund will hinge on Elevation’s investments in Yelp and Facebook. As we reported before, if you average together Elevation’s investment in Facebook it holds its shares at a valuation of $29 per share and Facebook has been trading as high as $70 a share on the secondary market. It’s hard to imagine a scenario where Elevation loses money on this, but the concern is when and how do they cash out?

Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg has repeatedly telegraphed that he’s in no hurry to do an IPO, and his use of late stage and secondary deals has alleviated the pressure to do one. Typically companies go public because early employees want liquidity, the company wants a hoard of cash to grow or the company wants a stock currency to do acquisitions. Facebook has checked most of those off. Early shareholders can (and many have already) exit on the secondary market or through one-time deals like the one with DST. The company has raised a whopping $836 million in capital according to CrunchBase and is reported by some to be doing revenues in the $2 billion range. And, again, thanks to the secondary market, Facebook has an externally validated price, making it easier to do any stock transactions than it would have been for a private company ten years ago. On paper, Elevation’s investment in Facebook is soaring. But LPs are going to want to see more than paper if they’re going to invest in a second fund.

That brings us to Yelp. Yelp’s ascendancy is far less of a sure thing than Facebook’s, but Elevation owns a much bigger chunk of the company. It bought shares at a price that valued Yelp at $475 million, just shy of the price it reportedly turned down from Google. Few (rational) people think Yelp will be worth nothing. The question is: Does it wind up somewhere around the price of Slide or does it become one of the few $1 billion winners of the Web 2.0 era? For Elevation to make the kind of return it’s hoping for, Yelp needs to make sure upstarts like Groupon and FourSquare don’t steal its opportunities for micro-local monetization. Personally, I’m still bullish on Yelp’s odds, and the early results of its first San Francisco deal look promising. But a sure thing it is not.

Pandora could be the last deal Elevation does in this fund, or if Yelp goes south, it could be the last deal Elevation does ever. Even though the firm can call that last $100 million for a follow-on, odds are Elevation won’t. Facebook valuations are soaring out of control on the secondary market and the company already owns one of the largest stakes in Yelp. The Palm-batross is gone, and Forbes is what it is. It’s a near-certainty no more money is going towards saving Forbes, especially given Elevation’s re-tooled team and investment approach. The firm has learned the lesson about putting too much into one company the Palm-way.

The bets have been made and Elevation’s partners will have to wait for the roulette wheel to stop spinning, doing what they can in the mean time to help make their companies stronger. I talked to one small limited partner this week who said he personally wouldn’t invest in a second fund, and another who said he loved the new team, but worried the change in strategy just came too late.

Like Yelp, I think Elevation has a decent chance of pulling the second fund off. There is clearly a market for these mega, late-stage transactions, and there aren’t a ton of Valley teams who have experience doing them and few Wall Street teams that have the contacts here. But don’t expect them to hit the fundraising trail until Yelp and Facebook exits look more certain.






Elevation’s LPs Refuse Extension for New Deals, Fund Riding on Facebook and Yelp

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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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IPS Resources – Introducing: Syphon

http://www.ipbskinzo…syphonorder.php
We’re happy to announce the release of Syphon. Syphon is sleak, clean blue skin with cool colors with a professional look. The usernavigation is placed under the
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Posted Image

This skin can be purchased in our store.

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Includes: PSD for Logo & Team Icons , Images XML File, Skin XML File
Additional Info: $5 every 6 months to continue access to support and upgrades.
Demo :Click Here

IPS Resources – Introducing: Syphon

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Amazon has announced today that more “next generation Kindles were ordered in the first four weeks of availability than in the same timeframe following any other Kindle launch, making the new Kindles the fastest-selling ever.” In addition, in the four weeks since the introduction of the new Kindle and Kindle 3G, customers ordered more Kindles on Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk combined than any other product.

The new version of the Kindle started shipping to customers today, which Amazon says is two days earlier than previously announced. The fast growth of the new version of the Kindle isn’t surprising considering Amazon’s recent assertion that it sold three times as many Kindle books in the first half of 2010 as it did in the first half of 2009, with the Kindle continuing to be the number one product sold on Amazon. Amazon says the U.S. Kindle store now over 670,000 books. And the Kindle has reportedly been sold out until the fall.

Amazon announced the new, more affordable Kindle at the end of July. The updated version has a sleeker design with a 21 percent smaller body 15 percent lighter weight, 20 percent faster page turns, up to one month of battery life with wireless off, double the storage to 3,500 books, built-in Wi-Fi for the lower price of $139. The new Kindle 3G with all of these new features plus with free 3G wireless is $189.

Amazon also said today that the Kindle and Kindle 3G are the most gifted and most wished for products on Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk combined. The company recently launched a UK Kindle store with more than 400,000 titles, looking to boost growth internationally. So far, customers in 125 countries on six continents have placed orders for the new e-book device.

Of course, while Amazon is touting the massive traction of the device, the company still faces competition from the iPad and even the NOOK. Of course, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos doesn’t seem too worried about the iPad. Bezos explained recently to Charlie Rose that with the Kindle, Amazon isn’t looking to “create an experience” — they want the author to create the experience. Bezos believes that this differentiates the Kindle from the iPad and and other devices. And there are those reports that the Kindle is outselling the iBooks store 60 to one.




Amazon: New Kindles Selling At Record Rates, U.S. Store Now Has Over 670,000 Books


Earlier today we had a bit of a fire-drill at TechCrunch Headquarters. As I checked into TCHQ on Facebook Places, I also tagged a few of my coworkers, fully expecting their checkins to be delayed until they actually opted into the feature for the first time (unlike some of Facebook’s past controversial feature launches, you have to Opt-In before you can be tagged in Places). Except, as we quickly discovered, you really don’t have to opt in before you can be tagged.

As soon as I checked in on Places, Facebook published News Feed items to my friends indicating that I’d checked in with my coworkers — even the coworkers who hadn’t yet opted into Places. My coworker received an email asking him to confirm the tag, but he had never clicked it. And yet, many of his friends were being notified that he’d just checked into Techcrunch HQ with me. Convinced that this was a privacy flaw I flagged down Facebook PR, who patiently explained to me that this is actually the way things are supposed to work. Huh?

Turns out, there are three different stages of opting into the service. Let’s spell them out.

  • Option one: You’ve explicitly opted into allowing people to tag you into Places. Any of your friends can do this. Pretty straightforward.
  • Option two: You’ve braved the muddled waters of Facebook’s privacy control panel and turned off Places entirely. You can’t be tagged — if a friend does try to tag you in a Places post, your name simply won’t show up in the post.
  • Option three: If you’ve never decided to ‘Allow’ your friends to tag you, but you haven’t blocked the Places feature entirely, you’re in a sort of limbo. This is where the vast majority of Facebook users in the US are right now. As soon as they get tagged for the first time, they’ll get an email and a prompt on Facebook itself asking them if they’d like to allow their friends to tag them at Places in the future. Accepting this will allow any of your friends to tag you unless you go into your privacy settings and cancel it (see Option one).But even if you hit the “Not Now” button, you’ll still be tagged in the relevant Places update. In fact, you’ll still be tagged even if you haven’t even seen the prompt asking you to approve Places tags. Facebook treats this as if you were tagged in a basic status update so it will show up on your Wall and your friends’ News Feeds — you just aren’t associated with whatever Place your friend was tagging you into (i.e. if your friend visits the venue’s Place page, they won’t see that you’ve previously checked in there). The logic here is that your friends could manually tag you in a normal status update anyway.

From Facebook’s standpoint this makes sense, but it’s confusing as hell to users — generally when you opt out of being tagged somewhere, you’d probably expect not to be tagged there at all. For what it’s worth, Facebook knows this is confusing — they’re planning to release a video explaining it in the near future. Still, I think the site should hide any location tags until a user has explicitly said they want to be associated with them.




The Confusing Stages Of Opting Into Facebook Places

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