We just got featured on AllThingsD!
By Alex Capecelatro in press No Comments Tags: allthingsd, article, discovery, feature, press, social
By David in uconn, Uncategorized No Comments Tags: 2012, at, atthepool, atthepool.com, friends, hyphos, Involvement Fair, pool, Spring, suck, the, uconn, Your Friends Suck, Your Friends [probably] Suck
Yeah, you read it right– “Your Friends [probably] Suck” was Hyphos at UConn’s tagline at today’s Spring Involvement Fair.

But what if we could use technology to turn the tables? We already use the internet to find the cheapest flight or the best school, to broadcast our ideas to the world, and to interact with our closest friends. So what if we could use it to make new friends? And not just anyone, but people who we’ll really resonate with because we have so much in common.
That’s how we’ll make friends in the 21st Century, and, before too long, that’s how we’ll be able to start making friends on At The Pool. It’s the latest invention coming from Hyphos, and we’re looking forward to using it as much as anyone to awesome new people nearby.
And as a perk for students at UConn, we’re offering you a free photo shoot with a photographer so that your profile picture, which features prominently on the new site, will look as good as you do. Email dfkr@hyphos.com to set up an appointment.
By Alex Capecelatro in Design No Comments Tags: design, female, funny, Raj, Suraja, want, what, women
At Hyphos we’re providing a fun way to meet new people. In doing so, we’re designing an emotional experience helping to socialize the world around you. It is often pointed out that women are inherently more social than men (not saying I agree…), and thus we’re determined to understand what exactly it is that women like. It was with this goal in mind that our (only) female team member, Suraja, put together the following presentation. We enjoyed it and hope you do too!
By David in Hyphos, Interviews No Comments Tags: Environmental Activism, Environmentalism, Green Drinks, greendrinks.org, hyphos, hyphos.com, shane
One of the great things about launching a website geared toward meeting people is that you get to meet a lot of really interesting people in the process. It seems like the idea of a social network that encourages people to actually be social resonates with a lot of people. Some have been so intrigued that they’ve joined the Hyphos team at UConn, and I’m really thankful to be able to work with such an intelligent, enthusiastic, and diverse group of people. Others are just excited to use the site because they see how they could use it to help them pursue their own passions– and they can’t wait for the time when everyone uses Hyphos so that they can find even more people who share their interests.
One such person is Shane– I met him on launch day when he flew past our booth in a hurry to get to class, with, as always, business-casual clothes, retro frames, and a goatee. He’d said he’d be back because he was curious about Hyphos, and I’m glad he kept his word. Just as we were packing up the booth, he strolled up and started talking. As soon as I explained the site to him, he immediately saw its application in his life: he’s all about environmental activism and loves to meet people who share his passion. So he agreed to talk more some other time when I wasn’t struggling to pack all our promotional materials into my roommate’s car and running late to my evening class.
So a few weeks later, I sat down with him over dinner in the dining hall, and he told me a bit more about himself and his desire do be involved in environmentalism. He explained that living off campus has made it much harder for him to get involved in environmentally-focused activities with fellow students, concluding frustratedly: “I can’t be the only one who’s 26 and can’t come to campus at 9 PM for a club meeting, and there must be others interested in environmentalism here.” But with the current social technologies, his ability to find those other people is significantly limited. So instead of getting involved with things on campus, he went to some Green Drinks, environmentally-focused social gatherings organized through the website greendrinks.org.
Green Drinks are all about meeting people. The About page on their site explains that, just like Hyphos, they’re trying to engineer what is normally left up to serendipity, those “oh-since-you-like-X-I have-to-introduce-you-to-so-and-so-who-knows-all-about-it” moments. Basically, environmentalists in a city get in touch through the website and arrange a night out where they share the latest that they’ve learned from environmental blogs, network with each other, and arrange trips to protests and the like. Through social networking at events like Green Drinks, Shane was actually able to arrange a trip down to Washington D.C. to protest the Keystone Pipeline.
He believes that by coordinating with existing contacts he’s made through Green Drinks, and new ones he’ll make with Hyphos, he will have many more opportunities to engage with others in the Storrs community to promote environmental awareness. He thinks Hyphos can be a means for college students to merge with their broader community to work toward share goals. He’s just brimming with ideas, and I’m looking forward to talking with him again to hear all the new ways he’s thought of using Hyphos.
If you want to meet people interested in Environmentalism, or anything you’re passionate about, head over to Hyphos.com, and get social!
By Alex Capecelatro in Goals, Hyphos No Comments Tags: ahn, cmu, collaboration, crowd, luis, online, source, von

If you have a Facebook or Twitter, you’re familiar with what a CAPTCHA is. In fact, nearly 750 million people have completed them. What you might not know, however, is how much value they provide. According to Luis von Ahn (see video below), about 200 million CAPTCHAs are typed every day. But if one assumes 10 seconds wasted per CAPTCHA, that’s a total of 500,000 hours thrown out every day.
That’s a lot of hours.
But Luis was determined to do something great with his invention. Instead of just proving you’re human and moving on after filling out a CAPTCHA, Luis created the reCAPTCHA. The reCAPTCHA grabs a word from an untranslatable text and leverages your ability to decipher it in order to digitize the world’s knowledge. Today, 750 million people have translated at least one word, which is a little over 10 percent of the world’s population.
This massive collaboration is extraordinary. If you consider only 100,000 people contributed to landing a man on the moon, imagine what can be achieved with 10% of the population!
As with reCAPTCHA and sites like Wikipedia, we at Hyphos are working to unite humanity in order to solve some really large and very interesting problems. We’re currently in the middle of a redesign with which to launch soon. If you’d like to get involved, head over to hyphos.com and join our guestlist. We are extremely excited to give each and every one of you the power to make a meaningful contribution to the world’s knowledge and well-being.