Videos: Making the DemoFall pitch
Small companies tout their media products, many of which integrate various types of software and connectivity.
You've got 6 minutes to make your pitch, and the future of your company or your idea may live or die in those moments. That's flame bright or die.
That's Demo. And we have video of some the brighter ideas to stream through the DemoFall conference in San Diego.
Many of this year's entrepreneurs are pitching products that integrate popular technologies such as GPS navigation, Wi-Fi and cellular connectivity, video editing, satellite radio, MP3 storage and music recording.
To see all of CNET News.com's most recent videos, click here.
CNET's Rafe Needleman gets a demo of the HP Presto from Presto President and CEO Raymond Stern. See how to print a picture from a printer hooked up to a phone line.
CNET's Rafe Needleman speaks with Be Here CEO Stephen Von Rump about the company's upcoming video conference phone system TotalView. Touted as a cheaper, every company's alternative to Microsoft's upcoming Roundtable, it sports a full 360-degree view with only one lens.
Headplay co-CEO Glen Ward tells CNET's Rafe Needleman about the company's media center and head display combo.
What happens when Microsoft brings in psychologists and Web developers to create a social-networking site? You get Wallop, which lets Flash developers build personalization widgets that could cost users a buck or two.
You just flip the top off the new USBCell and plug it straight into a USB port. CNET's Rafe Needleman speaks with Moxia Energy CEO Simon Daniel, inventor of the USBCell battery.
CNET's Rafe Needleman talks with Violet co-founder Rafi Haladjian, the brains behind Nabaztag, the new Wi-Fi-enabled bunny that seemingly does it all.
Dash Navigation CEO Paul Lego presents a GPS system that uses either Wi-Fi or cellular connectivity to give drivers real-time data such as traffic reports and estimated time of arrival.
Cuts CEO Evan Krauss introduces his company's service, which lets people take video content, such as a movie from a DVD or a TV show from iTunes, and edit it at will.
Zing CEO Tim Bucher shows off a radio that enables people to listen to satellite radio, store MP3s and record content and connect to the Net via Wi-Fi. But you have to be Sirius Satellite Radio subscriber.
You've got 6 minutes to make your pitch, and the future of your company or your idea may live or die in those moments. That's flame bright or die.
That's Demo. And we have video of some the brighter ideas to stream through the DemoFall conference in San Diego.
Many of this year's entrepreneurs are pitching products that integrate popular technologies such as GPS navigation, Wi-Fi and cellular connectivity, video editing, satellite radio, MP3 storage and music recording.
To see all of CNET News.com's most recent videos, click here.
CNET's Rafe Needleman gets a demo of the HP Presto from Presto President and CEO Raymond Stern. See how to print a picture from a printer hooked up to a phone line.
CNET's Rafe Needleman speaks with Be Here CEO Stephen Von Rump about the company's upcoming video conference phone system TotalView. Touted as a cheaper, every company's alternative to Microsoft's upcoming Roundtable, it sports a full 360-degree view with only one lens.
Headplay co-CEO Glen Ward tells CNET's Rafe Needleman about the company's media center and head display combo.
What happens when Microsoft brings in psychologists and Web developers to create a social-networking site? You get Wallop, which lets Flash developers build personalization widgets that could cost users a buck or two.
You just flip the top off the new USBCell and plug it straight into a USB port. CNET's Rafe Needleman speaks with Moxia Energy CEO Simon Daniel, inventor of the USBCell battery.
CNET's Rafe Needleman talks with Violet co-founder Rafi Haladjian, the brains behind Nabaztag, the new Wi-Fi-enabled bunny that seemingly does it all.
Dash Navigation CEO Paul Lego presents a GPS system that uses either Wi-Fi or cellular connectivity to give drivers real-time data such as traffic reports and estimated time of arrival.
Cuts CEO Evan Krauss introduces his company's service, which lets people take video content, such as a movie from a DVD or a TV show from iTunes, and edit it at will.
Zing CEO Tim Bucher shows off a radio that enables people to listen to satellite radio, store MP3s and record content and connect to the Net via Wi-Fi. But you have to be Sirius Satellite Radio subscriber.