Jun
26
Happy Birthday Barcode!
Has it really been 35 years? The barcode turns 35 today! I can recall my mom showing me my first barcode when I was two years old and I thought, “Wow, that is going to be big.”
Jun
26
Has it really been 35 years? The barcode turns 35 today! I can recall my mom showing me my first barcode when I was two years old and I thought, “Wow, that is going to be big.”
Jun
17

We are hiring a senior iPhone Developer (Dallas area applicants only, please).
Since 2005 Big in Japan has built web and mobile applications for great brands including MTV, LEGO, FOX and The Federal Reserve. In 2008 we decided to STOP building applications for other companies and START building applications for ourselves. By the summer of 2008 we decided to focus exclusive on mobile application development and our first application was ShopSavvy (barcode scanning price comparison on Android).
We are nearing launch of an iPhone version of ShopSavvy and we need to grow the team to deal with the workload that adding a second platform has added.
Do you live in the Dallas area? Are you interested in joining a nimble, but profitable startup on the verge of something huge? Do you have experience with Objective C development? Maybe a little java? We want to talk to you ASAP.
The position is fulltime and pays between $75,000 and $90,000 base plus bonus and stock options. We cover 100% of your health insurance premiums (health and dental).
Email the following information: - your availability (two weeks or immediate) - your salary requirements - your twitter ID - your LinkedIn Profile - your resume - brief explanation of your development experience to support@biggu.com
Jun
12
Got an iPhone and want ShopSavvy? We are VERY close to being ready to submit ShopSavvy to the iTunes market, but we really need your help. We want to test our image recognition across a large number of actual iPhone cameras and barcodes. Our goal is to test on at least 1,000 iPhones and at least that many barcodes. You can help us - i.e. the faster we get this testing completed the faster we will submit ShopSavvy (oh and it will be free). Here is what we need:
If you can send one barcode we will be appreciative. If you can send ten we will forever be in your debt. Anyway, thanks for your help (in advanced). Please tell your friends to do the same.

Jun
10
We know there is a huge demand for the ShopSavvy experience on the iPhone and we have been working on an iPhone release for some time. Our biggest hurdle has been to perfect barcode scanning using a fixed focal length camera. We are very close to finalizing our solution called Meatloaf. We looked at various ’server-side’ options - i.e. taking a photo, sending it to our servers here in Dallas and then sending the results back to the phone - but we determined that the ‘live’ scanning that our Android users are accustom to was the right direction. We had to come up with a solution that was 100% accurate and FAST - we call the project Meatloaf.
Many of you have surmized (via email and even on TechCrunch) that we will be able to launch on the iPhone 3Gs since it has a variable focal length camera (10cm). While our current solution would work fine on all of the new iPhones it would leave the 40,000,000 existing devices (Apple’s number, not mine) without a solution. Meatloaf; however, will work on both fixed and variable focus cameras - 100% coverage on all current and legacy devices.
Meatloaf will be even more important on Android because, as some of you likely noted, more and more Android handsets will ship with fixed focal length cameras. For example, AT&T is launching an Android phone called the HTC Lancaster which sports a ‘2 mega-pixel fixed focus camera’. Ouch. Any Android application that relies on the ‘traditional’ camera we have come to know and love on the G1 and Magic will be DOA on the AT&T devices. AT&T is the second-largest mobile provider in the US and the largest smartphone provider - your Android app needs to work on their phones, period.
Along with an updated solution for barcode scanning, the iPhone version of ShopSavvy will get a complete UI makeover. Smartphones are not equal and they each have strengths and weaknesses. Porting ShopSavvy over from Android would leave a lot to be desired so we spent a LOT of time making sure that ShopSavvy took advantage of all of the iPhone features and UI users have come to know and love. ShopSavvy is still ShopSavvy, but it is optimized for iPhone. Make sense? Here is a screenshot to give you an idea:

Jun
10
MG Siegler over at TechCrunch wrote a nice post on ShopSavvy titled, “The New ShopSavvy: Faster, Bigger, Stronger!“ Thanks MG.
