Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Copy-Paste Text Minus The Excess Baggage, Strip the Formatting

It's a common problem. What you get from the clipboard is not what you want.

When you copy some text from a web page or a Word document to the clipboard and then paste that text inside an email message or another rich text editor, the formatting (font sizes, colors, images) stays intact.

For Microsoft Word and other Office programs, you can use the "Paste Special" command that will auto-convert the pasted content from rich text as plain text format.

remove html tags

But if you copy-paste text between browsers, a neat solution is Clipboard Scrubber, which as the name suggest, automatically strips the text of all formatting as soon as you copy it to the clipboard. Everything that gets to clipboard after you hit Ctrl+C is converted to plain text.

You can also (optionally) remove all HTML tags from the clipboard text, which is excellent for copying and pasting things from the web, without getting all the extra markup.

Clipboard Text Scrubber [via Eddie Awad]

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Ross Levinsohn And Jonathan Miller To Announce New Buyout Fund Next Week

This news has been simmering for a while. When Ross Levinsohn (pictured left) resigned as the President of Fox Interactive Media late last year it was rumored that he intended to raise a large fund to acquire Internet startups. He soon partnered with Jonathan Miller, the former Chairman and CEO of America Online and the two have been out raising capital for the last few months. Their new entitiy is called Velocity Investment Group.

They’ve found their partner - $15 billion hedge fund General Atlantic. Details on the amount of capital committed to the new fund are scarce, but General Atlantic issued a press release today announcing that Levinsohn and Miller have become advisors to the fund. The timing is interesting - 5:14 pm EST on the Friday before the long weekend. The press was circling on this story, and the release was obviously made to preempt the news from breaking.

More news should be coming next week as details leak - size of the fund, etc. The new venture will compete with Demand Media and others for acquisitions. Demand Media, which has raised $220 million in capital, was founded by former Intermix Media CEO Richard Rosenblatt. Ironically, Intermix Media, the parent company to MySpace, was acquired by Fox during Levinsohn’s tenure there.

Update: We beat the WSJ by 16 minutes on this one. Their story is here.

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Genwi: Browse and Share Syndicated Content

As if to demonstrate how powerful internet syndication technologies like RSS can be for the discovery of new media, Phoenix startup Genwi has been quietly developing an entire social network centered on RSS-syndicated content.

The site, which looks very similar to Facebook, provides all the basic social networking features: profiles, friending, messaging, etc. However, it also incorporates media from across the internet that users can discover and share with one another.

Content feeds - whether for videos, blogs, podcasts, or news - are pulled in as “channels” and each has its own page. These pages display most recent items, suggest related channels, and solicit consumer opinions.

Genwi’s wide-ranging selection of channels can be either searched by term or browsed by category. When you find a channel that you like, you can subscribe to it. Recent items from all of your subscribed feeds will show up on a personalized mashup page. If you can’t find a particular feed, you can manually add it to the site’s collection.

So far, this sounds very much like any other feed reader (although the browse, search, and discovery capabilities of Genwi are arguably better than even Google Reader’s). Genwi distinguishes itself primarily by its attempt to build a social network around the sharing and discussion of feed items. When you come across a feed or item you particularly like, you can opt to share it with all of your friends through your profile page.

It will be interesting to see whether Genwi can pull off an entirely autonomous social network centered around the concept of content sharing. RSS sharing is already possible within Facebook so Genwi will have to come up with ways to really enhance the media discovery experience. My hunch is that users will not be drawn in large numbers to the site until the company beefs up Genwi’s feature set to match Facebook’s non-RSS offerings.

Genwi may sustain an edge over other social networks by rolling out premium content integration, which it plans to do first with music sales. The co-founders Killian McKiernan and PJ Gurumohan were involved in the development of the MediaRSS standard, and they plan to use what they learned from that experience to turn Genwi into a distribution channel for a variety of ad-supported and paid content.

Genwi has been under development since early 2006 but only respectable since early 2007. It claims 100,000 uniques per month and about 4,000 registered users. The founders have operated without external funding so far.

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Animoto Mix

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MetaCard: The World’s First Virtual World Credit Card

metacard.jpgSingapore based FirstMeta has launched MetaCard, a credit card for Second Life that is claimed to be the world's first virtual world credit card.

The MetaCard works in the same way as a normal first life credit card works. Applicants are provided with a credit limit and present the card when purchasing goods at merchants who accept the card.

MetaCard comes in two flavors: Basic and Gold. The Basic card is subject to a avatar check and provides a credit limit of L$5000 ($18.60) per month. A Gold MetaCard offers a credit limit of L$10,000 ($37.20) per month and can only be obtained by providing real world credentials and a real life credit card for automatic payments. Interest is charged at between 0.13% and 0.15% per day, which would we roughly 54% per annum, but compounding. Payments are 2% of the total amount used plus fees outstanding at the end of the month, and users have 21 days to make their monthly payment. MetaCard holders must also spend L$500 ($1.86) per month or face a monthly maintenance fee of L$300 ($1.12).

FirstMeta also offers MetaCard holders a savings account under the MetaSavings brand, offering interest rates of between 0.06%-0.09% daily.

Although the amount of credit offered by FirstMeta is (in real life terms) rather low, it will be interesting to see how services like these develop in online worlds given that in effect they are financial services that would likely be subject to real life laws. Whilst Second Life companies such as the World Stock Exchange clearly state that they are in effect pretend outfits (ie: games), and therefore are not subject to real world laws, FirstMeta is actually providing credit that is tied to a real world account; in effect by securing their credit services they have crossed the line into the real world.

(in part via SL Insider)

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