crunchies

Crunchies post-party photos

Paul Boutin · 01/19/08 04:23AM

While the rest of the shutterbugs are off slacking, Duncan Riley commits an act of journalism and quick-posts photos from Friday night's Crunchies party. Too bad I'm in half of them. Helpful hint, Duncan: Most readers prefer photos of pretty girls. If you hit Page Down a few times you'll get to soon-to-be-all-over-national-TV CNET reporter Natali Del Conte flashing that Britneyesque — and I mean that in the best possible way — smile of hers just before leaving for New York City. Lots and lots more photos at Helluvajob. That's Lane Hartwell's camera in the left of this shot, and I saw Brian Solis snapping away, too, so there'll be more pix over the weekend.

Crunchies tickets available if you click now

Paul Boutin · 01/18/08 06:52PM

Click here to buy your $40 ticket to tonight's latest round of Web 2.0 awards. It had been sold out, but I just tested a purchase and there were multiple seats available for the balcony and dress circle section of the Herbst Theater. Full disclosure: TechCrunch editor Michael Arrington and I get along just fucking fine, thank you. Mike doesn't confuse me with Nick Denton — unlike certain other journalists I could name, except they picked up the tab so it's all cool.

Ajax voting machine redefines democracy

Paul Boutin · 01/03/08 05:20PM

After casting my daily vote for The Crunchies awards, I wondered: How does the site stop me from voting more than once a day? Does it just set a cookie, even though that's the first thing any Web 2.0 geek who wants to hack the vote will think of? Can I delete my cookies from vote.crunchies.techcrunch.com and vote again, as many times as I want? Bingo: I can now state with confidence that Digg will sweep this event.

Vote early and often for latest Web 2.0 awards

Paul Boutin · 01/03/08 04:40PM

Didn't TechCrunch just run some sort of honors event? They're holding another awards show in two weeks. The contest's Web 2.0 gimmick: The Crunchies' Ajaxified ballot lets everyone vote once a day, every day from sometime before Christmas until the contest closes a week from Saturday — a sort of Persistent People's Choice Awards. I predict Kevin Rose is going to win this one big-time.