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INNOBLOG

the insider's guide to innovation

Tuesday, August 1st, 2006

Emerging Technology Watch

Jonathan Barrett

In each issue of Strategy & Innovation, we identify some emerging technologies that we think have disruptive potential. Heres a recent sample of some of the things were keeping our eyes on.

Cracking Open Online Video
Posting online video has long required greater technical expertise than posting photographs. Having received its first round of venture funding in January, VideoEgg seeks to address this, becoming the video equivalent of Flickr, a popular photo sharing social network. The company offers a free plug-in that allows users to drag and drop files to the VideoEgg website, pull images to the website through a webcam or camcorder, or send a video directly from a mobile phone. After uploading, one plays the video by clicking on an HTML link. The business model for the service is still being finalized, but the company hopes to enable more use of video on weblogs.

Helping Small Retailers Step It Up Online

StepUp is attempting to provide a skeleton online presence for smaller retailers that dont have their own site. For less than $50 per month, StepUp will use proprietary inventory software to provide companies with mini-store websites with an inventory price list, product photos, and store directions. Products will also be listed on shopping search engines, such as Googles Froogle. Consumers can go online, look for items sold locally, and then drive to the retailer. By November 2005, StepUp had signed up more than 1,200 retail partners to its growing network.

Taking Biopesticides Upmarket

While the word biotech conjures up thoughts of new blockbuster drugs, there is an enormous market for making existing compounds more efficient. Insectigen, a company hoping to reduce the cost and increase the efficiency of the popular but expensive biopesticide Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt), has attracted $2 million in funding. Insectigen will try to develop new forms of its existing extender protein to address the $3 billion market for Bt improvement technologies in transgenic crops. Bt products"used to control moths, butterflies, beetles, small flies and mosquitoes"now consume one percent of the worldwide agrochemical market, but this percentage could increase dramatically if the company can improve Bt performance and reduce Bt costs.


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