Snaptiva wants to add a bit more color to the experience of shopping for home design and fashion products, literally.The company’s early-stage mobile app is designed to take photographs snapped by users on their mobile devices and employ a matching algorithm to suggest complimentary products based on color.The idea is that a person could snap a photo of, say, a blue dress, and then be directed to a page of listings from retailer partners of say, necklaces or high-heels that would go with that dress. Or the user could take a photograph of a wooded forest, and suggested furniture pieces for decorating a rustic cabin would appear.”We want to disrupt the $480 billion home and fashion industry to answer the simple question, ‘What should I buy?'” Snaptiva CEO Ramsay Hoguet said. The Marblehead, Massachusetts-based company is among several other mobile startups trying to stand out in the increasingly crowded market of mobile apps.Snaptiva was one of several companies, along with Just.Me, Stash, Traffic Labs and the Monkey Inferno, pitching their social mobile products Wednesday to a panel of Silicon Valley veterans at the DEMO Mobile conference in San Francisco. The trade show, which is put on by the International Data Group, is intended to provide a launch pad and a spotlight of sorts for new emerging technologies in mobile. The panel of judges expressed support for Snaptiva’s app, although some questioned the accuracy of the color-matching algorithm, especially given how subjective fashion can be, and also was unsure whether there were too many steps the user had to take first before receiving a list of matches.Meanwhile, Traffic Labs, another company exhibiting at the show, unveiled its restaurant recommendations app at the conference, which its founders referred to as a stripped down version of Yelp.The app, which is available now in the Apple App Store, uses only the three colors of a traffic light — green, yellow or red — to rate various restaurant listings that its users log into the app.The app, its founders said, is designed to provide more trusted recommendations for places than, say, Yelp, and filter out the resulting noise, because users are seeing only the rating and check-in activity of their friends. Users also have the option to share their posts on Facebook and Twitter, and provide additional comments about the business in 140 characters or less.One judge on the DEMO Mobile panel signaled agreement that the Traffic Labs‘ app achieves what it sets out to do. “I like the less is more aspect of it,” Flipboard cofounder Evan Doll said. “What Twitter is to blogging this could be to Yelp,” he added. Still, Traffic Labs‘ founding team, all former workers in the restaurant business, were questioned how they planned to motivate users to check in and rate businesses when that concept is already so prevalent within other apps like Foursquare and Facebook.Their hope was that the app’s simplicity would solve that problem.One other company unveiled an app that in many ways screams social: Beer
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Tablets may eclipse laptops in 2014, but there's no post-PC future on the horizon
After Apple launched the iPad in 2010, it didn’t take critics long to start asking if this new breed of one-panel touch tablets would kill the PC market as people opted for slates over clamshells. Now, more than three years, four iPads, and a gazillion Android tablets later, the answer to that question is finally taking shape.
Worldwide tablet shipments are expected to overtake desktop PCs in 2013 and laptops will suffer the same fate one year later, according to market research firm IDC. (IDC and PCWorld are both owned by International Data Group). That would seem to be a pretty definitive case that PCs are about to be replaced by tablets—but on closer inspection that’s not what IDC‘s numbers are truly saying.
Tablets rising
There’s little question the market for tablets is exploding. In 2012, IDC said global tablet shipments grew by 78.4 percent compared to the year previous. Meanwhile the market share of desktop and portable PCs (laptops, Ultrabooks, etc.) dropped by 4.1 and 3.4 percent, respectively. And that’s just the start of the bleeding: IDC predicts the desktop market will drop another 4.3 percent in 2013, while laptops are expected to stay relatively flat at a growth rate of just 0.9 percent.
But percentages can be deceiving and they tell only half the tale of IDC’s predictions. Peering ahead to the future, IDC’s numbers suggest that while the overall market share for PCs will decline, shipments will still increase, if only by a hair. In other words, the demand for PCs isn’t dying down—it’s just that the thirst for mobile devices is exploding.
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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld
