Posts Tagged Decks

Evernote hits 10m users as premium membership takes off

Posted by on Monday, 6 June, 2011

After taking 992 days to reach 5 million members, Evernote said today it’s now hit 10 million members just 208 days later. It’s also eclipsed 400,000 premium members, putting the company well on its way toward its goal of 1 million paid users.

Evernote hit 5 million users on Nov. 10 last year and was up to 6 million users by the first of the year. It’s since grown by 67 percent in a little over five months to 10 million users with the last million signing up in 32 days. It had 3.6 million unique visitors in the last 30 days, up 70 percent since the beginning of the year. And perhaps most impressive is Evernote’s paid conversion growth. Premium users have more than doubled from 201,308 on Jan. 1 to 424,736 now, a 111 percent jump.

“Ten million users seemed like an inconceivable number when we were getting ready to launch the service into open beta less than three years ago. Well, it wasn’t literally inconceivable; we actually put it on business plans and investor pitch decks and everything. Yup. 10,000,000 users in three years. That what we told people. We had really pretty graphs showing the projections. Reality is much more impressive than projections,” wrote CEO Phil Libin in a blog post.

The latest news caps off a wave of activity this year by Evernote, which has been working to improve its products across different platforms. In March it launched Evernote 4, a new version of the app on the iPhone with better tools for accessing and organizing notes. It followed up later that month with a more robust web-based app that showed how Evernote was making the web a priority. More recently, Evernote provided new updates for Android, Windows and Mac with better sharing, editing and security features. Evernote said three quarters of its members access the service from two or more platforms.

The company is showing that it’s not sitting still after taking in million in Series C funding in October. At the time, the company said it still had million of the million it previously raised but was taking on more funding to help it achieve its goal of hitting 1 million paying customers. Phil Libin, CEO of Evernote, said last year that Evernote was converting about 2 percent of its customers to its paid service. By January, it was up to 3.3 percent and now, it’s up to 4.2 percent.

The company still needs to more add many more users if it wants to hit its premium user goal. But with sign-ups accelerating, it might not be that far off. We’ve been fans of the service for some time because of its simple way of helping you wade through notes and memories. And it’s been a great example of how a freemium service can thrive with the right balance between paid and free services. Things are getting more interesting now that Apple just included a reminder service in iOS 5 for note taking and shopping lists. But with Evernote’s fast growth, it’ll take more than that to derail its momentum.

Related content from GigaOM Pro (subscription req’d):

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Mopho DJ uses your iPhone to track turntable movement (instead of your movements)

Posted by on Saturday, 14 May, 2011
We have to admit, we never thought of this one — and it’s pretty, pretty slick. Instead of using time-coded vinyl to interface your turntable with your computer as with Final Scratch Pro or Serato Scratch, Nicholas J. Bryan’s Mopho DJ uses an iPhone. That’s right, our man at Stanford University literally affixes his smartphones to his decks via a perspex disc and some sort of adhesive. The smartphones each run an app which sends accelerometer and gyroscope data to a computer, which then adjusts playback of your music accordingly. It’s still a work-in-progress at the moment, but if you’re in Oslo the first week in June make sure you check it out at the NIME (New Interfaces for Musical Expression) conference. This is definitely the kind of iOS location tracking we can get behind! Check it out on video after the break.

Continue reading Mopho DJ uses your iPhone to track turntable movement (instead of your movements)

Mopho DJ uses your iPhone to track turntable movement (instead of your movements) originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 14 May 2011 19:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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What is a better choice for a tournament: machina gadget or infernity?

Posted by on Thursday, 2 September, 2010

Question by Matthew: What is a better choice for a tournament: machina gadget or infernity?
I have both decks built. I need to know the better of the 2.

Best answer:

Answer by ↗半身第1↙ Key
Infernities in this format
I am assuming Infernities are still good enough in the next format

Give your answer to this question below!


Q&A: What is the purpose of a gadget oppression deck in yugioh?

Posted by on Tuesday, 1 June, 2010

Question by MarvinB: What is the purpose of a gadget oppression deck in yugioh?
i am thinking about making a gadget deck i and i was just curious. Also how are they so good and if possible could you make a good deck list for me

Best answer:

Answer by SINFINID
I played one for awhile…not my forte but anywho….there are different ways to go about the deck. One is like the Heraklinos GB lock where after you summon him you use oppression so the can’t sp. summon anything big to take down Heraklinos. In this way you sp. summon Tragoedia and since you can’t use oppression during damage than Trag. doesn’t have to worry about being Oppressed so you can set up the Oppression before and work to get it. Another way is to run cards like shrink to keep your opponents monsters from knocking down your monsters and at the same time you’ll continue summoning with Gadgets. It slowly knocks down the opponent and prevents most big decks from working.

Give your answer to this question below!


Fantasy gadgets: in-line A/V switch

Posted by on Friday, 12 March, 2010


Question: why doesn’t this thing exist? I’m reviewing projectors the size of decks of cards, and my phone has turn-by-turn GPS navigation, but I still need to use a full-size AV receiver when I need to plug my SNES into my home stereo? I was wondering about this, and just doodled up this little thing here. It seems like for less than $100, a little gadget like this, probably about the size of a paperback, should be able to instantly convert any input stream to another. Why do I need a separate adapter for every single kind of connection?

Correct me if I’m wrong, but nothing really exists out there for this purpose except for:

  • Individual adapters (HDMI –> DVI, RCA –> 3.5mm)
  • Full-size AV receivers (fine but wall-bound)

Sure, the first doesn’t require power and the second is an integral part of any home AV system, but… really, there’s nothing in between?

In a day and age where all our devices have different inputs and outputs, we don’t have a universal, battery-or-USB powered gizmo that just takes whatever you put into it, detects what you’ve plugged in the other end, and outputs in that format. There might be a little upscaling if you’re going from RCA to HDMI, but a little dedicated graphics chip would make short work of that, and really, nobody cares about quality with an old-school analog input like that. You could have a couple models with a variety of inputs and outputs. Analog to digital, studio specialty, that kind of thing.

Seriously, you put a little low-power processor in there, it runs a simple BIOS that simply hears the input and puts out the output. The components have to be cheap enough that it’d be peanuts to build, and a 3000mAh battery should make it last at least four or five hours — enough to watch a movie or power a party where the speakers need a digital input or something.

I mean, I’ll totally take it back if there’s something practical out there for this purpose, but to my meager knowledge there isn’t. Maybe every store sells ‘em and I just don’t know it. Don’t you guys think this would be useful to have around?



Test-driving the Acer Ferrari One Netbook

Posted by on Wednesday, 23 December, 2009

The new Ferrari One 200 from Acer takes a basic 11-inch Netbook shell and decks it out in official Ferrari red, with the automaker’s iconic horse logo.