Gap - Spring Sale: Up to 75% off select merchandise

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Posted 10 hours, 13 minutes ago

At Best Buy today, the Insiginia 28-In. LED HDTV DVD Combo is priced at a mere $169.99 and ships free. Inside it's packed with features like 720p, a 60Hz refresh rate, and 6000:1 dynamic contrast ratio. Add one to any room of the home or apartment at this price only on 04/30/2015.

Stores: 20x200, 6pm, Amazon, Apple Store, American Eagle, Banana Republic, Best Buy

Sections: Automotive, Computers, Electronics

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Old Navy - Up to 50% off entire store + FS on orders of $50 or more

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Posted 9 hours, 57 minutes ago

At Best Buy today, the Insiginia 28-In. LED HDTV DVD Combo is priced at a mere $169.99 and ships free. Inside it's packed with features like 720p, a 60Hz refresh rate, and 6000:1 dynamic contrast ratio. Add one to any room of the home or apartment at this price only on 04/30/2015.

Stores: 20x200, 6pm, Amazon, Apple Store, American Eagle, Banana Republic, Best Buy

Sections: Automotive, Computers, Electronics

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Disney Store - Swim Sale: Styles from 30% off

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Posted 8 hours, 58 minutes ago

At Best Buy today, the Insiginia 28-In. LED HDTV DVD Combo is priced at a mere $169.99 and ships free. Inside it's packed with features like 720p, a 60Hz refresh rate, and 6000:1 dynamic contrast ratio. Add one to any room of the home or apartment at this price only on 04/30/2015.

Stores: 20x200, 6pm, Amazon, Apple Store, American Eagle, Banana Republic, Best Buy

Sections: Automotive, Computers, Electronics

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Brookstone coupon - $25 off orders of $99 or more today only

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Posted 8 hours, 58 minutes ago

At Best Buy today, the Insiginia 28-In. LED HDTV DVD Combo is priced at a mere $169.99 and ships free. Inside it's packed with features like 720p, a 60Hz refresh rate, and 6000:1 dynamic contrast ratio. Add one to any room of the home or apartment at this price only on 04/30/2015.

Stores: 20x200, 6pm, Amazon, Apple Store, American Eagle, Banana Republic, Best Buy

Sections: Automotive, Computers, Electronics

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MacMall - Save $370 on the Samsung 34" Ultra Wide Curved LED Monitor: Now $1,000

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Posted 8 hours, 6 minutes ago

At Best Buy today, the Insiginia 28-In. LED HDTV DVD Combo is priced at a mere $169.99 and ships free. Inside it's packed with features like 720p, a 60Hz refresh rate, and 6000:1 dynamic contrast ratio. Add one to any room of the home or apartment at this price only on 04/30/2015.

Stores: 20x200, 6pm, Amazon, Apple Store, American Eagle, Banana Republic, Best Buy

Sections: Automotive, Computers, Electronics

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Nielsen Will Begin Measuring Video Ads On Roku

In further proof of the rise of streaming video services and the cord-cutting trend in general, TV measurement firm Nielsen today said it would begin to track viewing data and audience demographics across Roku’s 10 million+ devices, including its media players and Roku TVs. The move is being heralded as an industry-first by the two firms, as it will allow advertisers to measure Roku’s over-the-top audience according to Nielsen demographics, as well as track their video ad campaigns’ reach.

Roku says that, today, around half of its 250 most-watched channels are delivering ad-supported content. But advertisers have until now been lacking in the ability to effectively measure this audience the way they could previously with traditional network television. These viewers, however, streamed over 3 billion hours of video in 2014.

The new strategic partnership will offer demographic data on viewers, which means that advertisers have the equivalent of audience guarantees as they would otherwise have on network TV. To make this possible, Nielsen will begin collecting usage data from Roku devices (stripping out any personally identifiable information along the way), then use its National People Meter television panel to assign audiences, explains Variety, detailing how the new system will work.

Nielsen and Roku will initially offer OTT (over-the-top) measurement through Nielsen Digital Ad Ratings, which will allow advertisers to “measure, guarantee, and report campaign audience delivery” through the Roku platform, the companies said.

The deal means that an advertiser will not only know how many impressions their ad campaign saw, but how many in a particular demographic segment – like the 18-34 demo – viewed it.

roku3

For Roku, the partnership is one that elevates its platform’s importance in the streaming industry as being as worthy of measurement as top streaming providers like Netflix or Amazon (Amazon Prime Instant Video), for example. Last year, it was reported that Nielsen would begin measuring viewership numbers for both Netflix and Amazon’s streaming services, and Nielsen CEO Mitch Barns confirmed earlier that this data would start being collected for the first time by mid-2015.

Nielsen and Amazon have historically been unwilling to share their viewership numbers for specific shows, which has made it difficult for networks to determine the value of their older content, or whether or not streaming was eating into traditional TV viewing, noted Bloomberg in March. But the streaming providers have argued that because they don’t show ads, they don’t have to share this data.

In the case of Amazon and Netflix, however, Nielsen is tracking TV viewing only, and is providing data just to content owners themselves. The Roku deal, on the other hand, is making the audience and campaign data available to advertisers, too.

Roku says it will offer the Nielsen tracking as part of its current offerings for publishers and advertisers known as Roku Audience Solutions.

“We believe all TV will be streamed, and with it all TV advertising,” said Scott Rosenberg, vice president of advertising at Roku, in a statement. “We’re excited to join forces with Nielsen to significantly advance the measurement and value of OTT advertising. With Nielsen, we’re integrating these capabilities directly into the Roku OS, enabling Roku’s channel publishers and advertisers to measure and transact on the industry’s leading metrics.”



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Windows 10 is now available on Raspberry Pi and Arduino

Microsoft is aiming at making Windows 10 the OS for all connected devices, and now it’s aiming at the Internet of Things by releasing a build for Raspberry Pi and Arduino.

The developer preview for Windows 10 IoT Core insider will work with the Raspberry Pi 2, MinnowBoard Max and Intel Galileo0 Otherwise, you can connect with other Arduino devices through Windows Remote and Windows Virtual Shields.

You can download Windows 10 IoT Core here. And though Windows for the Internet of Things is just getting started, Microsoft’s has already prepared some projects you can work on.

Developing…

➤ Windows 10 IoT Core




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NeonMob Is A Platform For Creating, Trading, And Collecting Digital Art

Digital art is gaining popularity, with companies like Curioos dedicating entire marketplaces to the medium, but the idea of scarcity when it comes to the internet is relatively new.

NeonMob is looking to change the way we think about that with a platform dedicated to digital art collectibles.

The company offers tools to creators so that they can build out a collection of art — perhaps based around a theme like “trees” or “unicorns” — and then users can pay to collect those works. The artist chooses the price of each piece of art, as well as the quantity of each piece of art, which introduces the idea of digital scarcity.

“Digital scarcity is kind of radical and goes against the way most people think about how the internet and data works,” said founder Mike Duca. “Since NeonMob inherently promotes the notion of digital scarcity, we have to show people why it’s no different than Andy Warhol choosing to create 50 prints of each Campbell soup poster instead of 1 or 1000. People aren’t used to relating to data, or art, in this way.”

NeonMob has set up an authentication program to ensure that each piece of art collected on the platform is in fact owned by the user and not forged, and the company is currently working to set up a blockchain so that ownership of prints is verified both on and off the NeonMob platform.

  1. Bing and Ann by Vic Bell in Yummi

  2. Casting by Ruby Zhao in Vincent and Alice

  3. Chick Chick by Cleonique Hilsaca in As Big As Mountains

  4. Chomper by Craig Bruyn in Punx

  5. Cold Tree by Danny Ivan in Explorer

  6. Corinth by Isaac Montemayor in Unicorn Empire

  7. First Meetings by Elizabeth Kidder in Journey to Vapourri

NeonMob offers a compelling platform to artists, who receive up to 70 percent of every sale that happens on NeonMob. Unlike Curioos, which handles printing and distribution of digital art and thus takes a much larger cut of each sale, NeonMob has the opportunity to keep costs low without ever building or distributing a physical product. In short, artists can actually make livable money off of their work.

But at the same time, convincing users that they want to spend money on collecting digital art may be a tough sell.

“We have all different types of art that appeal to different people,” said Duca. “Everyone appreciates art even if they don’t consider themselves a collector, and when we delight people with a fun user experience, we find that they get more excited about the idea of collecting the art that they enjoy. We’re trying to show people that collecting online can be just as satisfying as or more satisfying than offline collecting.”

And it seems to be working. Since launch in 2012, NeonMob users have collected more than 4.8 million pieces of digital art.

The company has raised a total of $2 million in seed funding from investors such as Max Levchin and Dragoneer Investment Group.

You can check out NeonMob here.



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Dopay Banks $2M To Launch A Cloud Payroll Service For The Unbanked

Dopay, a London-headquartered startup that offers a payroll service for the unbanked, has closed a $2 million seed. Investors in the round of funding include global private equity firm ACE & Company, plus a syndicate of angels from the banking, private equity and hedge fund industries.

Dopay went through Barclays London-based fintech accelerator last year, as part of its inaugural cohort of startups. Barclays partnered with TechStars for that program — and the latter’s VC arm, Techstars Ventures, is also investing in DoPay’s seed round now.

Dopay’s product is a cloud-based payroll service that employers can use to calculate and remit salaries electronically to staff who don’t have bank accounts of their own (and also to those who do have bank accounts). Unbanked employees receive their salary in a dopay account, which comes with a debit card.

They can also manage access to their dopay account via an app which lets them view a real-time balance, as well as send money to others, and top-up prepaid mobile. If users can’t access the Internet there is also a call centre option for accessing their accounts. Part of the funding will go towards developing more features for the app, dopay said today.

dopay

The first market for the service is Egypt, where dopay soft launched this week with a couple of companies. Founder Frans van Eersel tells TechCrunch the team will also be using the new funding for a full launch there in June, and to expand into additional markets — in the Middle East, Africa and India. The size of the market it’s attacking is the roughly two billion people globally who have jobs but no bank account.

Dopay accounts, which are being powered by Barclays* and Visa, do not accrue any interest for the account holder. If the employee leaves their workplace they can retain their dopay account and have a new employer deposit wages into it. Deposits are also possible via direct debit from another bank account.

*Dopay does not have a banking license itself, so remitted money is held at an escrow account at Barclays Egypt in its initial market.



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You can now watch Amazon Instant Video over cellular on iOS in HD

Are you an Amazon Instant Video user? You’re in luck! An update to the app for iOS users today makes it possible to watch videos even if you’re on a mobile connection.

The change also means you can stream over cellular in HD, if you’ve got enough data on your plan, and adds AirPlay so you can send what you’re watching to Apple TV.

If you’re ready to blow your mobile data on watching movies on the go, grab the latest update on the iOS App Store.

➤ Amazon Instant Video [iOS]




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Zero’s New Email App Can Help You Reach “Inbox Zero”

A new mobile email application called Zero is launching today to help users power through their inbox on the go, in order to achieve the often sought-after state of “inbox zero” – meaning an inbox that has no unread emails. Aimed at heavy email users who receive a lot of inbound email, an app that promises to speed up email processing by 30% or more sounds too good to be true. But while still far from perfect in its present state, Zero has developed a clever way to work through your emails with an interface that’s reminiscent of scrolling through a social app’s feed.

The idea with the new app, explains CEO Alexander Volkov, previously the Director of Business Development at ImageShack, is to address a pain point that a number of professionals today face: mobile email. With Zero, the app is designed to let you move through your inbox faster by turning the emails themselves into a feed that you scroll through vertically, one-by-one, using swipe gestures.

That’s a different approach than most email apps today which present users by default with a birds-eye view of their inbox, allowing them to pick and choose which messages they want to read.

While it seems like looking at each individual email would take longer, that’s surprisingly not the case. For starters, Zero presents the information in a card-style layout that allows you to preview email summaries as text-only for faster reading. As you swipe up on the message to move through your feed, the emails are automatically archived.
swipes

From this feed, you can also reply to an email, tap a star button to keep it in the inbox instead of having it archived, or move the email to a designated folder – helpful for those who actually like to organize emails to some extent. Other buttons at the bottom of the app let you view your inbox, your folders, or search across all your messages. And if you need to view your email attachments, you can simply tap on the attachment icon at the bottom of a message in order to load them.

Though I’ve personally shied away from a number of email “triage” apps, including the ever-popular Mailbox, because of their lack of flexibility, Zero is the first email app that I could actually see myself using…well, at some point. When testing it, I found that I was able to quickly jet through a crowded inbox, and its “social feed” format made it feel like I was just reading and responding to updates on Twitter, rather than having to craft lengthy email replies.

That said, the app currently lacks the ability to “flag” an email, which is a categorization system many email users today, myself included, rely on. Instead, the “star” button only saves an email from being archived. And because of its focus on achieving inbox zero status, there’s no option for marking emails read or unread – which is something that email users do from time to time to make sure they don’t forget to respond to an important message that they can’t deal with at the present, or one that requires a longer reply.

Plus, the feed itself today mirrors your inbox itself, which means if you rely on other apps’ “priority inbox” views (like that in Gmail or in Microsoft’s Outlook mobile app for iOS and Android, for example), you may find yourself dealing with less essential messages first.

But Volkov says that a number of these concerns will be dealt with in future releases. In fact, plans to prioritize the emails in your main feed are already in the works, but just weren’t finished in time for launch. However, in the meantime, the lack of support for one feature or another could be a deal breaker for some email power users who can be very picky about losing functionality they depend on.

The startup’s plan is to keep its application free, but to eventually launch a marketplace for email plugins that target business users’ specific needs – like the ability to track emails, or integrate with a company’s CRM system, for example. The team is also starting to look at a way to port the app to the new Apple Watch platform, as well.

Zero is backed by a small amount of angel funding, including investment from ImageShack CEO and ex-Googler Jack Levin, Eugene Malobrodsky (co-founder of Anchorfree), and Luc Dumont (VP of Corporate Development at Dailymotion). The startup is now raising seed funding.

Since January, the app, which works with most major email services, has been in private beta testing with 180 people, but is now live for anyone to try from the iTunes App Store.



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Airtable Launches Its API And Embedded Databases

airtable

Two months after launching its unique organizational tool, Airtable is rolling out two new features that’ll make it easier to share your personal spreadsheet/database hybrids with others in a way they’ll find useful.

In addition to sharing direct read or edit access to the relational databases you create in its app, Airtable is today letting you draw from the underlying data using a powerful API, so you can embed that information in an application or website in a way that seamlessly blends into the experience. If that’s a bit outside of your skillset, Airtable is also rolling out the ability to share your data as an embed that you can customize and share as simply as you would a YouTube video.

For those unfamiliar with the startup, Airtable’s app makes it easy to handle the non-calculation tasks people sometimes jam into Excel — organizing lists of participants in an event, links to relevant materials for a project, or a list of restaurants in your area you think would be nice to try, organized by price or style.

Instead of just making it easier to put together rows and columns of arbitrary text and numbers on your phone, Airtable put a relational database behind the scenes so your information can be logically linked together to provide a broader organizational structure.

Professionally, a team might use it to replace a legacy CRM so everyone can keep track of their leads without using an app that somehow managed to forget the design lessons of the last decade (you know what I’m talking about, person who has used any CRM application ever). Or a production studio might use it to keep everyone on the same page for shooting schedules, combing lists of crew, cast members, locations, props, and scenes into something cohesive.

In a visit to TechCrunch earlier this week, Airtable co-founder Howie Liu also showed me how he’s been using it for personal organization. In a similar fashion to the movie production use case, Liu organized a camping trip, tying together the people going, groups going in different cars, and who was bringing which supplies.

Liu used this example to demonstrate the new embed system. While the list of camping supplies was created for a specific trip, the supplies themselves are useful for a wide variety of outdoors-y situations. So maybe you want to share that list on your blog as recommendations for others — you could open up Airtable, bring up the embed interface, cut out irrelevant data, and have an embed code ready in less than 30 seconds.

Airtable is hoping that people will adopt the app for themselves, and then bring it to their workplace, and vice-versa. To promote such adoption, the startup watches for users coming up with neat ways to use the app, and when it finds something that could be used broadly, adapts the custom solutions made by users into templates that others can build from. Liu says he wants the template options to one day evolve into something resembling an app store, with Airtable itself getting out of the way but enabling customization for power users willing to dig in to its features and integration with other services.



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The most sought-after startup jobs: Revealed

Startups need to hire the right talent to help steer towards success. They tend to offer a laid-back, dynamic environment, where you can improve, develop, and be a part of something special.

We’ve taken a look at the hottest startup jobs to see which are some of the most sought after roles in startups across Europe, based on those that have solicited the most applications to date.


1. Business Development (18.47% Application Rate)
This person is usually responsible for creating long-term value for the company. Networking is their middle name, it’s all about client acquisition and retention. They feel most comfortable when interacting with others and creating relationships that bloom into opportunities for growth.

Can often be found networking, reaching out to leads, advertising or engaging in activities that attract prospective clients. Sitting behind a desk all day isn’t their natural habitat, they’d much rather prefer being on the move, visiting clients, meeting for lunch and attending networking events.

Education: Bachelors in business, sales or marketing


2. Online Marketing 
(18.13%)

This person is usually responsible for the creation of rich, effective and concise online content. Not only is this person responsible for the social streams on Facebook or Twitter, but they’re also in charge of online campaigns, content distribution and creative advertising.

Can often be found exploring trends, developing strategies and executing campaigns. They play a leading role in establishing an effective presence on social media sites, driving traffic and monitoring the company’s online presence.

Education: Bachelors in marketing, design or digital media


3. Business Intelligence Analyst (BIA) 
(13.09%)

This person wrangles data into actionable insights. They are very performance driven and thorough testers, figuring out market and business trends that will increase reach, conversions and overall performance.

Can often be found crunching numbers and tracking key performance indicators. They’re able to predict upcoming opportunities and ways to exploit them for the company by analyzing big chunks of data.

Education: Bachelors in business, computer science, IT or statistics.


4. Sales Agents 
(10.57%)

This person is about getting things done when it comes to selling the company’s products or services and creating/maintaining relationships with clients.

Can often be found on the frontlines of sales outreach, calling leads, coordinating between clients and company staff and representing the company personally.

Education: Bachelors in business, sales or marketing


5. Customer Service 
(9.7%)

This person is usually responsible for ensuring customer satisfaction.

Can often be found tackling incoming comments, suggestions and complaints. Whether it’s face to face, by phone, e-mail or IM, customer service reps are in charge of providing all the help, tips and advice to users and customers.

Education: Bachelors in business, management or communications


6. Front End Engineer 
(5.96%)

This person is usually responsible for how a website looks and feels, on a more technical level. Front End Devs work with designers to implement new page designs, features and various other elements. It is up to the Front End Dev to make sure the website performs well within the browser of the user. They’re directly responsible for turning design ideas and concepts into usable web pages.

Can often be found arguing about version 2 of AngularJS and whether or not jQuery is too powerful.

Education: Computer Science, Multimedia Design, or Media Technology


7. Back End Engineer 
(5.29%)

Backend developers are the very backbone of modern web applications. They create the models, classes and databases needed to process, store and deliver information to the front-end. They are responsible for creating efficient data structures and access points that can be used to present information to all the users.

You’ll often find a backend dev refactoring huge functions and avoiding having to write proper documentation.

Education: Computer Science, IT, or Media Technology


8. Full Stack Engineer 
(4.22%)

A full-stack engineer is like the Jack of all software development trades, boasting a savoir-faire in pretty much all technical layers of the product cake.

You’ll find them giving their two cents and some change when it comes to servers, networks and hosting environments, databases, API interaction and anything to do with front-end tech, like jQuery, CSS animations and silky-smooth SVG’s. They are very valuable when it comes to bridging the front-end with the back-end and coming to technical conclusions that everyone can be happy with.

These days, you can pretty much always count on a full-stacker to be able to design, code and implement a completely interactive, and working website all by his or herself.

____________

Check out some of the exciting startup jobs available across Europe on TNW Jobs. And if you’re part of a startup looking to expand your crew, take advantage and post your vacancies here.




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Amazon Brings HD And Cellular Streaming To The iOS Instant Video App

Amazon has answered a long-standing request with an update to Amazon Instant Video that delivers streaming of HD resolution content, and allows streaming over cellular connections, rather than just Wi-Fi. The new 3.0 update also lets you beam the Amazon Instant Video library of movie and TV shows to your Apple TV via AirPlay in HD.

Basically, this means you finally have the full control over your own streaming destiny that should be your right as a streaming media service subscriber. Amazon’s decision to ease back on the handholding has ramifications, however, since using the highest level of streaming quality over a cellular connection will easily break the back of most users’ data plans.

Still, it’s nice to have choice, and the HD option is plenty useful over Wi-Fi connections. As a Prime member, I’m looking forward to being able to dig into the collection on the go, especially since it also works with the Apple Digital AV Adapter to playback content in HD over a hardwired HDMI connection, which is super useful for bypassing the expensive and ugly in-room entertainment system offered at most hotels.

The universal Amazon Instant Video update is available free via the App Store.



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Mobile Action Raises $2 Million To Help App Makers Attract More Users

Getting apps discovered in an increasingly packed app store is a challenge, which is why a number of firms in recent years have launched services that help app publishers figure out how to better optimize their app’s search result ranking when users type in various keywords into the app store’s search interface, as well as gain other competitive intelligence. One such firm, San Francisco-based Mobile Action, has now closed on $2 million in funding led by Felicis Ventures to continue to grow its business.

Others participating in the round include Streamlined Ventures, 500 Startups, 500 Mobile Collective, CrunchFund* and various angel investors.  (*Disclosure: TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington also founded CrunchFund.)

According to Mobile Action founder and CEO Aykut Karaalioglu, his business has been doubling every month since December 2014, and is now used by the developers of over 70,000 apps representing over 4 billion downloads and more than $1.5 billion in app store revenues. The service, which also offers a freemium tier, is used by a number of well-known brands, including StubHub, Runtastic, Raise, Frankly, ZipRecruiter, Fitbit, CareerBuilder, Pic Collage, Golf Channel, The New York Times, Slice, Panjo, Glassdoor, SoundHound, Tictoc, Zipcar, Edmunds, and Ticket Fire.

While there are today several competitors on the market when it comes to offering ASO (app store optimization) services and other app store market intelligence services, including industry leader App Annie for example, what makes Mobile Action different is its development of the “App Visibility Score.” This metric – a letter grade ranging from A+ to F – gives app makers an easy way to determine their app’s overall visibility in the app store using a combination of factors including its keyword search score, keyword rankings, reviews, seasonality, and category ranking calculation.

  1. 14 days trial for Premium

  2. Historical Visibility Score

  3. Review Analysis

  4. Recommend Actions Page

Mobile Action then uses this score to offer customers “actionable” recommendations that help them improve their ranking. For example, it may suggest the best time to run a campaign. It can also leverage competitor data and other insights to improve its suggestions.

Pricing for the paid tiers starts at $499 per month, which offers customers the ability to download data for five countries. Enterprise packages with more options are also available. Mobile Action reports it continues to be cash-flow positive.

Today, the firm tracks over 3 million apps across the iTunes App Store and Google Play, and uses over 8 billion data points to make its recommendations. But now, says Karaalioglu, a former growth hacker who decided to productize his knowledge in the form of a business (and sold his first client before the company launched), the plan is to expand Mobile Action to include the top 10 Chinese app stores as well.

That’s a notable expansion for the startup, which currently has offices in San Fransisco, New York and Turkey, and soon, Asia, as the Chinese app stores combined with other Android app markets are now delivering more revenue potential than Apple’s App Store alone. Mobile Action also plans to expand to support the Apple Watch and other “internet of things” devices in the future, too, the founder says.

The additional funding will be used for hiring staff in sales, biz dev, and in engineering and make product improvements, including the support for insights related to app users’ demographic data (“personas”), the integration of third-party analytics services into the Mobile Action dashboard (like Flurry or Localytics), and more. The company will also be working to expand its partnerships with those who resell its service.  The now 22-person startup expects to reach 35-40 people by year-end.



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Microsoft’s cross-platform Visual Studio Code app is based on technology from Github’s Atom editor

Microsoft released its first cross-platform code editor to great fanfare yesterday, but it’s not quite what it appears when you peek under the hood.

Visual Studio Code is based on technology found in GitHub’s open-source code editor, Atom. If you crack into the files, you’ll notice a number of binaries are named “atom.exe” on Windows and on OS X a peek inside the Application shows a number of Atom resources.Screen Shot 2015 04 30 at 2.04.57 pm Microsofts cross platform Visual Studio Code app is based on technology from Githubs Atom editor

Microsoft didn’t specifically point to the technology during the keynote this week for being the foundation underneath Visual Studio Code, however in an associated licensing file it notes a number of packages it has used from the Atom project.

Specifically, the Electron Shell project which was formerly part of Atom is used to allow Web technology to be used as a desktop code editor.

Microsoft has added a number of features not seen in Atom or similar editors on OS X and Linux, such as Intellisense support.

It’s interesting to see Microsoft adapting technology from a company like GitHub to build a cross platform editor. Many others already do the same to power their editors, but this is the first time Microsoft has embraced outside technology so heavily.

The editor itself uses a version of Monaco, found in Visual Studio Online, along with a number of other technologies including Chromium.

A Microsoft spokesperson told us that the technology is indeed based on Electron Shell:

Visual Studio Code is built primarily with standard web technology (HTML, CSS, JavaScript).  We leverage Electron [previously Atom] as a cross platform host.  This allows us to focus on the core experience and put our efforts into developer productivity (Editing, code navigation, code understanding and debugging) and offer these features on Mac OSX, Linux and Windows.  We are working with the Electron team and actively contributing back to that framework.

➤ Visual Studio Code




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Go Ahead, Play Prince Of Persia In This Tweet

If you want to relive your classic MS-DOS gaming experiences, you need venture no further than Twitter. The Internet Archive’s website-embeddable games also now work directly in tweets, when you’re viewing them on the web, or in native embed like the one below. Jordan Mechner’s classic Prince of Persia is a good place to start, if you ask me, but anything in this collection should work just as well.

I was already reeling about the demonstrably cool arrival of classic X-Wing and TIE Fighter games on Steam, but this is next level. Think about it: These games used to sometimes span multiple floppy discs, and now they’re just living inside tweets almost as an afterthought.

Hope you were prepared to fall down a nostalgia hole today.

Via TNW.



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Apple Looking Into Built-In Telephoto iPhone Camera Lenses

Apple’s iPhone is just about the best smartphone camera you can get, but a new patent application provides a good indication of how it could get even better. The patent is for a “small form factor telephoto camera (via AppleInsider) and describes how the company might make a camera with a narrower field of view, but a much higher magnification factor, and also how such a camera might be paired with a wider angle unit like the one that’s already used in your current iPhone to give you a range of options on a single smartphone device.

The patent describes the mechanics behind creating a small lens suitable for use in a device like the iPhone, or the iPad and mobile Macs. In one version, the small camera would be built in such a way that you could adjust zoom using different focal ratios for true optical magnification. Apple’s current iPhone camera uses digital zoom, but this results in far more degradation of quality vs. true optical magnification like those found in DLSR telephoto lenses, and compact cameras with traditional zoom lenses.

Apple’s patent application document mostly dives into the nitty gritty around how it would achieve different magnifications and what materials it would use, along with specific dimensions needed to construct the proper lenses involved in the system. The mot interesting piece may be that Apple includes a provision that would allow this new telephoto lens to be used right alongside the kind of general purpose wide-angle camera that’s currently found in the iPhone, which gives a much more expanded field of view suitable to more general everyday photography.

The patent application is a relatively new one, first filed in October 2013. On paper, it seems like a very worthwhile thing to pursue for Apple, since it would provide a significant lead in the mobile photography arena where it already has a reputation for outshining its competitors. Two factors that might affect whether or not we ever see it actually implemented include component cost, and space within the case. Here’s hoping they do eventually ship it, so something like it, however, since built-in telephoto would pretty much eliminate any need I have to carry a dedicated camera.

Photo: Olloclip third-party accessory.



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Uber reveals updated version of its SOS alert system for riders in India

Uber introduced an SOS button to its app in February so you could connect with your local law enforcement in the case of an emergency during your ride.

The service was beta-tested in Kolkata and today, Uber announced that it has been updated and that the company is working with local authorities across India to implement the feature in various cities.

When you hit the SOS button on the new version, it will immediately connect you to the authorities through a call and at the same time, it will generate an SOS alert that goes directly to the local Police station on a dedicated Uber alert screen. UberSOS 540x535 Uber reveals updated version of its SOS alert system for riders in India

The alert will give your local Police station an exact location of the car using GPS.

Safety in Uber cars is something that has come under scrutiny in India in particular. Last year, following an alleged rape case, the Delhi state government banned the car service from operating in New Delhi.

Uber has said will be rolling the new feature out across the rest of India in the coming weeks.

➤ INTRODUCING AN INTEGRATED SOS ALERT SOLUTION FOR LAW ENFORCEMENT [Uber]




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Riddle makes it easy to create viral lists, polls and ‘commenticles’ from anything on the Web

You probably know all about Buzzfeed’s listicle posts by now, so if you’ve always wanted to create your own viral content in Buzzfeed style, Riddle, a new social tool may help.

The premise is simple: you can create a list post, poll, quiz or “commenticle” quickly and easily, then embed it anywhere.

For example, here at The Next Web, we’ve been debating what to call the vegetable below. If we wanted to let you, the readers, vote on that, we can use Riddle to quickly throw together a poll or slideshow about them.

The same goes if you wanted to quickly comment on an article you saw (like this one) without creating a whole new blog post or something as short as a tweet.

Each Riddle post only takes a few seconds to throw together and has a unique URL so you can share it directly to social media.

Screen Shot 2015 04 30 at 1.29.04 pm1 Riddle makes it easy to create viral lists, polls and commenticles from anything on the Web

The company has successfully run collaborations with companies on its new platform recently. Riddle says that Cats Paradise, a cat community, says it saw a spike of fans and page views using Riddle with its service and a 62 percent gain in revenue over the first month.

Riddle’s format could be an interesting, more informal approach to blogging that doesn’t require actually maintaining or running a WordPress or Medium site. As mediums like ‘screenshorts‘ become more effective due to their shareability, Riddle could become incredibly useful for quickly sharing ideas.

It’s easy to throw together something that can be shared almost anywhere with Riddle, so I expect these will start appearing in a Twitter feed near you soon.

➤ Riddle




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Micro Tug Robots Can Pull Objects 2,000 Times Their Own Weight

Like the noble ant or the sassy-yet-lovable tugboat, Micro Tugs can pull more than their own weight. The robots, which come from Sanford’s Biomimetics and Dextrous Manipulation Lab, use a “controllable adhesive” plate that sticks to surfaces only when shear pressure is applied. In one case a 12 gram robot was able to pull objects 2,000 times its own weight.

“This is the equivalent of a human adult dragging a blue whale around on land,” wrote the researchers.

How does it work? The robot uses two simple wheels to scoot around and then drops onto its sticky belly when it needs to pull an object. A built-in winch then pulls the object briefly, allowing the little robot some slack to move forward a little on its wheels. It can repeat this process ad nauseam, allowing it to pull huge objects without much trouble.

The goal of the project is to create a robot that can drag heavy objects into difficult areas and thanks to the controllably adhesive pad it can drag objects across any relatively smooth surface. While you won’t be able to go crawling in the grass, tile, glass, and concrete are fair game.

via RoboticsTrands



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Oops: Instagram forgot to renew its SSL certificate

Instagram’s website is showing a curious error right now for many users that the company’s security certificate is invalid.

It appears that Instagram forgot to renew its security certificate, as it expired at 2PM Central Time on April 30. It’s causing errors for anyone that tries to visit the company’s website right now and Chrome blocks access entirely.

Screen Shot 2015 04 30 at 2.37.46 pm Oops: Instagram forgot to renew its SSL certificate

Instagram’s mobile apps seem to be working without issues so the problem only affects the company’s web interface. Evidently even the biggest companies forget to renew their certificates occasionally.

We’ve contacted Instagram for comment and will update when we hear back.

Update: It’s fixed now! Go back to your regularly scheduled photo browsing…




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The curious online afterlife of a 20th century suicide cult

On May 8, 2014, I sent an email to the inbox of the Heaven’s Gate ‘cult’, the bulk of whose members took their own lives on March 26, 1997. It was short and to the point:

How many emails a day do you get from people who found out that you still reply?

Just over four hours later, I received my first communication from the couple who maintain the group’s website, preserved just as it was on that spring day in 1997. Their message was equally concise:

A couple of dozen a day.

That brevity is representative of all the emails I’ve exchanged with the pair, who have never used their real names in the correspondence, and who I’m not going to name despite their identities being easily discoverable online.

I have kept up my communication with them on and off ever since. They are unfailingly polite, prompt to reply and conscientious in their adherence to the instructions left for them by the group.

Screenshot 2015 04 30 11.25.43 540x195 The curious online afterlife of a 20th century suicide cult

I’m far from the first journalist to discover that the group’s website is still online or that emails to its address receive replies. It’s been a source of fascination on Reddit for quite some time and Gizmodo wrote an extensive piece on group’s history and aftermath.

But there’s been a big misconception in almost all of the reporting around the enduring life of Heaven’s Gate online. Because the website remains – and the group ran an early web design business to generate cash – many people have characterized it as an ‘internet cult’. It was never anything of the sort.

Watching the world and Wikipedia

I asked the custodians of the Heaven’s Gate website why they continue to maintain it 18 years on. Their reply was simple:

We were in the group for 12 years and will always follow through with what they asked us to do.

They have normal lives and jobs outside of running the email account and ensuring the Web site remains online. And they do read what people write about the group:

…nearly all of it varies from misinformed to outright distorted.

I asked why they feel that is and whether they want to correct what they consider to be inaccuracies:

It is natural for people to react in fear to the information and lash out with anger and sarcasm.

 Sometimes they ignore it and others ridicule it. We have dealt with it since 1975 and try to understand it without reacting to it.

Many times in reviewing what is written about [the group], we see people laying misinformation on top of misinformation and calling it journalism. Very few have really dug down to the truth. They don’t have to believe any of it, but there should be a desire to deal with the facts of it. We are here to provide correct answers regarding the information.

We don’t write or edit the story, we just provide the facts. That is when they even ask us.

We recently got three college professors to work together to write the true story in the distorted Wikipedia. That new and factual presentation will be made available to the world via Wikipedia later this summer through all the standard protocols of that site.

Initially that sounded as though the pair were aiming to have the article rewritten to represent their perspective, which would be against the spirit and rules of Wikipedia.

I asked them: “How did you come to connect with those professors? Won’t that be a necessary partial account if it’s one that you approve? Have you seen any journalism that you have felt was fair?”

They were quick to clarify:

We have been dealing with sociologists, psychologists and all members of the academia since the early 1980s. When true scholars try and get the true facts, they eventually come to us.

We don’t think you understand, as we stated before, we don’t approve anything. We just provide verifiable facts. We will not be writing or editing the Wikipedia page. It is totally in the hands of the scholars to present their information. If you look at a lot of what is on Wikipedia, some of their source material on other subjects is dubious at best.

At least this one will have been looked over by experts on this subject from different points of view.

A recent book on this subject, ‘Heaven’s Gate – America’s UFO Religion’ by Benjamin Zeller has been the best work we have seen so far.

That’s when I wrote to Professor Zeller and things started to get really interesting.

The beginnings

Screenshot 2015 04 29 21.52.17 The curious online afterlife of a 20th century suicide cult

Heaven’s Gate’s origin story begins in a hospital. In his book ‘Messengers of Deception: UFO Contacts and Cults’, Jacques Vallée, the French venture capitalist and UFO researcher, gives a contemporaneous account of the beginnings of what was then called Human Individual Metamorphosis (H.I.M):

In November it was discovered that the two people who claimed to be the leaders of that outer-space organization were in fact quite ordinary humans: M.H. Applewhite, 43, born in Spur, Texas, a musician and opera singer, the son of Presbyterian minister; and Bonnie Nettles, age 48, a nurse who met him in Houston in the early ‘70s while he was recovering from a mental breakdown. They had first created meditation centres, then about 1973 they began recruiting for H.I.M.

The pair came to believe that they were the two witnesses referenced in the Book of Revelation 11:3:

And I will appoint my two witnesses, and they will prophesy for 1.260 days, clothed in sackcloth.

Vallée reports that “the Two”, who used a variety of aliases – most notably “Bo” and “Peep” – before setting on “Do” (doe) and “Ti” (tea), met with initial but fleeting success:

They found many people to listen to them. At the Stanford meeting [which Vallée attended], they made half a dozen new converts. Later, however, they began losing members. The people who left their group would just go home and, for several weeks, simply stare at walls.

Though their early recruitment efforts seem to have been ineffective, Do and Ti’s theology remained relatively consistent from the start, leaning heavily on ideas of resurrection, salvation, apocalypse and the notion that believers were students waiting to ‘graduate’ from a class.

Professor Zeller explains:

The basic theology of Heaven’s Gate was that life on earth was relatively unimportant compared to life in the heavens, which should be our ultimate goal. Put that way, that’s what most Christians believe, particularly evangelical protestants who are a major force in America.

The sociologist Robert W. Balch, like Vallée, encountered the group in its earliest incarnation. He writes in foreword to Zeller’s book:

Late in 1975, David Taylor and I infiltrated H.I.M to find out for ourselves what was really happening ‘behind the scenes.’ Suffice to say, instead of a dangerous cult, we found a group so lacking in leadership and structure that it appeared to be falling apart. Shortly after we finished out fieldwork, the group stopped recruiting and disappeared from public view…

One potential reason for the group’s disorganized state at that time was that Do ended up in prison. In August 1974, he was arrested for failing to return a rental car and jailed for six months. It was during his period that he began to shift his theological thinking towards extraterrestrial life.

Throughout 1975, Do and Ti began to gather followers. During this time they were using the “Bo” and “Peep” monikers and arranged at least two public events to wait for the arrival of UFOs. When a spaceship failed to land at a gathering in Waldport, Oregon, the group still gained 30 new followers.

They then settled on a nomadic lifestyle moving across the United States. In April 1976, Ti announced that the group would no longer hold public meetings and its membership dropped dramatically – from more than 100 to around two dozen.

The group lived in campgrounds with Do and Ti beginning to establish stricter demands on their followers to bind them together. Zeller told me the culture was spartan:

There were a lot of people who left the group because they couldn’t handle the religious practices like celibacy, communal living and dedicating their whole life to the group. They were living as monks and nuns. A lot of people left because they didn’t want to commit to that degree. In the same way that there are Catholics who wouldn’t want to be monks or nuns.

Despite the strict rules, there are no disgruntled ex-Heaven’s Gate members to speak of. Unlike other notorious groups such as the Branch Davidian and Jonestown which were brought down by former acolytes, people who left Do and Ti remained fond of them.

‘The Two’ were careful to ensure good relations as Balch explains in his essay ‘Waiting For The Ships: Disillusionment and the Revitalization of Faith in Bo and Peep’s UFO Cult’:

Bo and Peep were good salesmen, but people shopping for new cars routinely encounter much more pressure and manipulation. People joined the UFO cult with virtually no pressure to convert, and they enthusiastically adopted group norms even before the socialization process began.

Zeller adds:

The other interesting thing about Heaven’s Gate is that because they believed in reincarnation, ex-members believe they’ll get another chance.

That’s part of the reason the keepers of the group’s online presence remain so committed – they still wholeheartedly believe in the teachings. They told me how they explain them to people they meet today:

We just talk about the main understandings of it. The information is actually timeless. The basic core truth goes back to the beginning of man on this planet and will be part of human aspiration forever. If they bring up the suicide issue, we deal with it head on and explain it to them the best we can.

The decisive death

In 1985, the mass suicide was still 12 years away, but death touched the group significantly. After two years suffering with cancer, Ti died. Do told his followers that she had gone to ‘the Next Level’ because she contained too much energy to remain on Earth, and had abandoned her Earthly vessel for the journey.

Following the loss of his companion – the pair were not lovers – Do began to adjust and evolve the theology of what would come to be renamed Heaven’s Gate. He decided that Ti’s consciousness had been conveyed to a spaceship when it had left her body. Previously the group’s teachings had focused on actual physical ascension, but Ti’s passing had made that belief untenable.

Essentially, as Zeller has noted, Do’s theology was that of the Christian Bible filtered through a belief in aliens and heavily influenced by science fiction, particularly Star Trek. It’s no coincidence that the 39 Heaven’s Gate members who took their own lives called themselves ‘the Away Team’, nor that several of their videoed ‘exit statements’ include references such as “39 to beam up.”

Do believed once the group had reached ‘Evolutionary Level Above Human – the Next Level’ they would be able to leave their physical ‘vessels’ and be transported to heaven – a literal planet – on a spaceship controlled by extraterrestrials. One of those beings was Jesus. In Do’s doctrine, Jesus was a gateway to heaven, but on his first visit to Earth found humanity to be unready for ascension.

For Heaven’s Gate members to be ready for ‘the Next Level’, they had to shed their attachments to human concerns and, ultimately, leave their bodies behind them. Their earthly existence with the group was “the classroom” from which they would inevitably graduate.

Another central tenet of the theology was that planet Earth was about to be “recycled” – in Do’s words “refurbished, started over” – and that leaving would be imperative.

The appearance of the Hale-Bopp comet in May 1996, which grabbed the attention of the world’s press, provided the catalyst for the group to take its final action. In his book, Zeller explains that there were other facts that drew their attention:

…claims about a mysterious object, a ‘companion’, following the comet that seemed to move unnaturally and even influence the movements of the comet became the focus of the group.

While these claims would later be debunked, and the members of Heaven’s Gate ultimately indicated that the nature of the mysterious object was in fact irrelevant, the interest in the companion and the comet among members of the fringe and conspiracy-orientated alternative media attracted the attention and interest of the group’s adherents.

Heaven’s Gate’s belief system meant they were inclined to begin preparing their exit from Earth, even if the mysterious object might not be the spaceship they had been anticipating for so long.

If it happened today, the mass suicide of Heaven’s Gate members who be the stuff of memes in the darkest corners of the internet. The details were precise – black uniforms with matching “Away Team” patches, new white Nikes, purple shrouds. Each member with rolls of quarters and five dollar bills in their pockets, and duffle bags beside them.

The means of death was not Kool-Aid – ‘drinking the Kool-Aid’ is one of those phrases whose dark origins are breezily forgotten – but apple sauce laced with the barbiturate phenobarbital, chased down with vodka. While the members who consumed that deadly cocktail knew they were going for good, they didn’t neglect to make preparations to communicate with the people left behind.

Screenshot 2015 04 30 11.32.46 540x217 The curious online afterlife of a 20th century suicide cult

Spamming Star Trek groups on Usenet

The continuing existence of the Heaven’s Gate website, a gaudy memorial built with GIFs and basic mid-90s graphics, is initially confusing. It’s not surprising that many people who have come to write about it assume that it existed as a recruitment tool. I was only 13 when the group came to its dramatic end. At best, I remember it as a brief flash of shocking images on the news.

Heaven’s Gate’s careful preparations to maintain its online presence and careful documentation on video of its aims, gives the impression to late comers to the story that it was an ‘internet cult’. Zeller explains that the website had a different purpose:

It was important as a repository of information. They made a digital book that they uploaded. They put transcripts of their videos, had they had the bandwidth and the technology they would have hosted them there. But it was too early. The site was one directional. It wasn’t really about interaction.

And it didn’t lead to new followers during the group’s lifetime either:

Their attempts to interact were total failures. They posted to Usenet a lot but the response was uniformly negative. Most people didn’t respond and the ones that did respond were mostly making fun of them.

In 1995, Do posted a rambling messaged titled ‘Undercover Jesus Surfaces Before Departure’, declaring himself Jesus, and received little more than scorn. The following year, Heaven’s Gate posted hundreds of variations of the same message to numerous Usenet groups, including ones related to Star Trek using the title ’THE REAL Q – AN E.T. SPEAKS OUT.’ Those posts were similarly dismissed.

Screenshot 2015 04 30 11.16.55 540x203 The curious online afterlife of a 20th century suicide cult

Not an ‘internet cult’ by design

Another aspect of Heaven’s Gate’s story that has led some to conclude that they were in some way a tech cult is Higher Source, an early web development company that the group ran as one of its means of support. It built sites in Java, Visual Basic, SQL and C++, with the same clunky approach the group applied to its own internet presence.

Screenshot 2015 04 30 12.21.58 540x197 The curious online afterlife of a 20th century suicide cult

Higher Source’s clients include movie producers Kushner-Locke Company, and The San Diego Polo Club, but they were kept in the dark about the developers’ other activities. In her exit statement video, Heaven’s Gate member JWNODY recounted:

…as a quote ‘monastery’, we had a little business that we called Higher Source, from which we earned our income so we could consume while we’re on this planet. We always were self-supporting, which a lot of entities in our position might not be.

But we’d like for those individuals we worked with to remember how they felt about us, what kind of work we did for them, and to try not to be influenced by what the media might say. Because we suspect, knowing the track record of the media, that it might not be all too favourable or objective. There’s been more than one client who suspected there was something unusual about us…

So while, the existence of Higher Source could lead you to conclude that Heaven’s Gate was intrinsically tied to the early Web, the reality was more mundane. It was simply a reflection of the limited development skills of some of the group’s members and an attempt to bring in some money – “to earn sticks” as they put it – by using them.

Screenshot 2015 04 30 11.18.20 540x142 The curious online afterlife of a 20th century suicide cult

Zeller says:

They had the Higher Source business but it was very late in the movement’s history. The internet was a way to make money and get ideas out, but in no sense were they an internet cult.

However, reports in the immediate aftermath of the mass suicide were quick to connect the Web business to the group’s wider beliefs. One CNN report featured this speculation:   

“One of the intriguing aspects here, and it could be a first, is the connection to the computer world,” [said] Jerrold Post, a psychiatrist who has studied hate groups on the Internet.

It goes on to quote two computer experts who were far from impressed with Higher Source’s work:

“They weren’t very good Web designers. I don’t know what kind of money they were making. They have white outlines on the edges of the text that kind of mooshes it against the background,” said Kevin Rardin, a technical communications expert in Mountain View, California.

Morgan Davis, operations director of CTS Network Service, one of San Diego’s largest Internet providers, agreed.

“They’re rather mediocre. … Their art work is kind of amateurish. The layout and typesetting is not cutting-edge. It really looks like anything anyone could have done in their spare time.”

i.e., like every website from that period looks to our modern eyes.

Screenshot 2015 04 30 11.44.57 The curious online afterlife of a 20th century suicide cult

The task of TELAH

During the evolution of the group, the concept of ‘the Evolutionary Level Above Human (TELAH)’ became so key to its beliefs that it registered a legal entity, the TELAH Foundation, to maintain the website and its intellectual property after it was gone.

That’s one way the custodians of the Heaven’s Gate site still identify themselves. Before they turned on WHOIS privacy, the site was registered in that name.

The website itself only came online in its current form on December 22, 1996, when the group purchased the HeavensGate.com domain. However, only one member joined the group as a result of discovering the trove of online material. Zeller says:

Only one member of the group who committed suicide encountered them through the internet. The members who joined in the 90s were still people they met through face-to-face meetings. There were a few people who emailed them. And there was one person who emailed them and then left.

While the site did not prove to be of huge importance prior to the mass suicide, the group realized it would be pivotal once they were gone. It sent a press release, copies of the ‘exit statement’ videos, keys to its storage lockers and specific instructions about the website to its current guardians:

We uploaded the HeavensGate website to an ISP in Romania and we also FedEx’ed the Romanian webmaster the diskettes containing the final press release and the Earth Exit Statements by Students (these final statements are on a separate disk which hopefully RKK [another ex-member] will be able to upload, however the Romanian fellow will have the entire site on diskette as back-up.)

We have prepaid two months of web hosting on this Romanian server under the name Sister Michael Remi…The webmaster speaks and writes English well enough for us to communicate with him, and seems to be an agreeable fellow. All he knew about us however, before now, is that we are a small interfaith monastery with some new ‘non-traditional’ views. So we’re not sure what his response will be to this most recent event.

The mundanity of that last phrase – “this most recent event” – is indicative of how calm and matter-of-fact the Heaven’s Gate members were about death. They did not see it as an act of ending their lives, but one of extending them.

Screenshot 2015 04 30 11.58.47 540x173 The curious online afterlife of a 20th century suicide cult

In a sense, the continued existence of the Heaven’s Gate website is another effort in life extension. But, its custodians do not update or amend it in any way. Zeller says:

They see the website as a legacy or a memorial. The class is over, to use the terminology they use. There’s nothing left to add.

And what will happen when they are gone? I asked them about their contingency plan. Their response was as concise as ever: “We think we have a plan for the website, so it should be taken care of.”

Zeller expands a little on that, based on his time with the couple:

I suspect they’ll want to have it preserved in a university archive. They’ll be the ex-Heaven’s Gate members who run the website for the rest of their lives.

I got the sense that they were pretty normal people. We had to schedule the interviews and our meetings around their work and personal lives. They have normal jobs and friends.

The pair’s trust in the academic – “[He] is willing to pursue a fact no matter where it takes him. Like a CSI TV program, he is willing to come across information and conclusions that are not run of the mill…” – led them to attend a symposium at the American Academy of Religion for other interested researchers last year, and answer questions about their time in and outside the group.

Screenshot 2015 04 30 12.00.03 The curious online afterlife of a 20th century suicide cult

Though they are the only ex-Heaven’s Gate members in control of the group’s legacy and archives, there are other former adherents.

One, Rio DiAngelo wrote a book about his experience. Another, Sawyer, has a frequently updated blog, and often appears in the comments of articles and YouTube videos about the group.

The response from the Heaven Gate’s website admins gives a hint at the underlying tension between them and other ex-members. When I asked them about Sawyer, they replied:

There is one other person who was in the group who writes a blog but the group did not give him any instructions when they left and he hasn’t been in the loop of what is currently going on with their information. Simply said, he is doing his own thing.

Zeller told me:

There’s a lot of discussion about whether people should add to and explain the group or just let it be over. There’s a lot of debate over who owns the copyrights.

The twilight of the cults

Since 1997, when the bulk of the group took their final actions, we haven’t witnessed any true internet cults. Extremist groups like ISIS are obviously very active and effective at recruiting online, but new religions like Heaven’s Gate have not emerged.

Zeller believes that’s because the internet has made individual expression much easier:

There’s just as much interest in alternative spirituality and religiosity today, but people are more willing and able to consume on their own.

In the 60s and 70s, if you were into those ideas there were some book stores to go to, but most for most people their weren’t outlets for it. If a charismatic figure turned up in town, you could then explore that with them. Now you just pop onto Amazon or download a podcast.

And for people intrigued by what Heaven’s Gate meant and stood for, there are the videos and, of course, that email address.

Image credits: The Telah Foundation

Special thanks to Professor Benjamin Zeller 




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