moyume

Meet Four Swedish Startups In London Today

Anders Fredriksson of Tablefinder fame has organized a trip to London with some Swedish startups that are today presenting at minibar, London.

The Swedish startups are looking to share expertise, learn from London startups, and meet great contacts. The startups in London are:






Videoplaza.com – An ad server for video – they help companies monetize online video.
Jaycut.com – Online video editing – named best entertainment website in Sweden 2007
Bambuser.com – Live broadcasting from mobile phones and webcams – recently received venture backing by a Norwegian firm. (The best bit is that you can get a link send to your Jaiku and Twitter account when you are broadcasting so your friend can go see what you’re up to)
Moyu.me – Instant picture messenger – early startup that just launched their service.

I personally instantly fell in love with Bambuser and Jaycut. I already tried Bambuser and it appear to work nicely, although there is a quite a time lag between the time you record it and when the link appear on your Jaiku or Twitter feed to notify your friend.

If you’d like to meet them Anders told me that he’d be happy to meet up. Contact Anders via Twitter (here) with invitations or meet them at the Minibar London at 6pm if you’re already planning on going.

Moyume Brings Twitter For Photos

Moyume is a Swedish startup offering a service allowing instant sharing of mobile pictures to web. It has been described as the Twitter, or Jaiku, for photos.

The service allows you to deliver the pictures from your phone by MMS or email to the web, sharing automatically with the friends you’ve allowed to see them. The photos are visible on the web site, and you can also get a widget to show the photostream on your web page (example), and you can also forward the photos to Flickr or other sites offering email upload.

A neat feature is however the Adobe AIR based client, which you can download and install on your computer. The photos from your friends will appear directly to the client, and you have the option to comment the photos online or by SMS. The SMS is sent immediately to the photo uploader’s mobile. The account creation process is rather straightforward and I got the first photo uploaded within minutes. The photo shows up instantly on the service. However there seems to be some problems with the website at the moment as I needed to login several times when trying to browse different menu items.

The business model of the company is unclear, but in a video pitch the founder Peter Sandberg
explains they’re working with mobile operator 3 Sweden that provides the MMS destination to send all the photos in, and makes money from the incoming MMS messages from the users of other mobile operators. I would assume Moyume gets some kind of revenue share.