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Feedburner Sale to Google Confirmed
Journal written by dvhirt (956314) and posted by
ScuttleMonkey
on Wed May 23, 2007 03:32 PM
from the going-going-gone dept.
from the going-going-gone dept.
Techdirt is reporting that the rumored sale of Feedburner to Google has been confirmed. "Feedburner is in the closing stages of being acquired by Google for around $100 million. The deal is all cash and mostly upfront, according to our source, although the founders will be locked in for a couple of years."
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VCs have changed? (Score:5, Interesting)
This is "only" 10x. Does that mean that VCs have come to their senses? Anyone have any insight into this?
Re:VCs have changed? (Score:5, Funny)
No shit. This is way worse than the 0X that most VC companies reaped back in the days of web 1.0.
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Sequoia Capital is one of the best in the business and they have had 5 exits, m
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Not only that, but they did it for free. And if anyone beat their price, the next pickup was 50% off plus they'd mow your lawn and wash your dog all while delivering 50 cents worth of groceries (20% off) on a
Re:VCs have changed? (Score:5, Informative)
I was at a startup for 4 years that just sold last year for 165M... w/ 60M in VC money. The early investors got 3X the late got 1.5X but at a better pricepoint (they could buy more). First round was 15M, second was 30M, 3rd was 15M. I made 8.5K via options exercised as a lowly employee on a 1.5k pricepoint (0.15 per share, 9650 shares approx) but VCs got 3x that on average with several million shares each at different prices.
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This is "only" 10x. Does that mean that VCs have come to their senses? Anyone have any insight into this?
The difference is more in the scale than in the multiple. 10x is a respectable rate of return for a VC investment; the ending number is "small" bec
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It explains the 10M in VC investment.
So what if they are locked in? (Score:5, Funny)
Why bother? (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't see what good it does Google to own this company.
Re:Why bother? (Score:5, Insightful)
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The procedure worked for Microsoft time and time again, why not Google? :)
Yeah, like Microsoft dominated search and online advertising, right? Oh wait.
No company is invincible. Microsoft was in the same boat 10 years ago and they managed to screw it
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Google's brand alone does it (Score:3, Informative)
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Eat my dirt, techcrunch! (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.techdirt.com/search.php?q=feedburner [techdirt.com]
So I'm betting scuttlemonkey typo'ed it, and it's actualy techcrunch, as the link says.
Please correct the summary.
--
Eat my dirt.
Benefits (Score:3, Interesting)
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All style, little substance (Score:4, Interesting)
For all of the macho recruiting process that Google is known for, and for all of the accompanying swagger, the reality is that Google's employees are unable to deliver beyond the patented PageRank search algorithm produced by Brin and Page and the patented Overture advertising system that Google licenses from Yahoo. That is why in the space of just a couple of years, Google has been rapidly buying up companies, from Keyhole (the original creators of Google Earth) to YouTube to DoubleClick. There is nothing technologically shattering or innovative about YouTube, so it speaks to volumes that Google paid such a large amount of money to acquire it. Every dollar spent on an acquisitions is a public admission of the incompetence of its internal employees.
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It's a slight exaggeration, but there's a lot of truth in there. Google has 2 dozen people working on a powerpoint webapp. The Paul Graham/YCombinator article a couple weeks back mentioned someone who was working on something similar in his spare time.
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It serves ads well (Score:2)
"Locked in for a couple of years?" (Score:5, Funny)
what exactly does feedburner do? (Score:5, Interesting)
Beats the fuck outta me (Score:2)
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Pretty much the same thing CompuGlobalHyperMegaNet does, but with RSS.
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Google buying traffic again. But why? (Score:4, Interesting)
What's so weird is that, as with YouTube, Google is buying traffic. Not revenue. Not technology. Traffic. One wouldn't think that Google needed more traffic. More revenue from its traffic, maybe, but more traffic from free services?
Google, according to Alexa, is #2 in traffic, and Yahoo is #1. But Google isn't far behind. These buys look like a desperate attempt to displace Yahoo as #1. Whether this make economic sense isn't clear.
Interestingly, Google traffic takes a dive every weekend, as does Feedburner, but Yahoo traffic does not. Look at the Alexa graphs. That gives a sense of how much work-related use the site gets. Slashdot, incidentally, has a strong weekly cycle, much stronger than Google.
It's still not clear if Google's expansion beyond search will be seen a few years hence as a good move or as corporate megalomania.
Traffic = Data? (Score:4, Insightful)
Not Good (Score:3, Insightful)
But since then I've seen too many half-assed Google projects (especially around rss feeds: the Google reader for example is terrible compared to a competitor like Bloglines). Google recently redid the presentation of the statistics service they aquired (Google Analytics), making it worse. Feedburner is currently a great service that is intuitive, innovative and easy to use. But when Google gets through with it, I fear it too be half-assed.
As it has no doubt been said by others, Google is shaping up to be another Microsoft: using its dominance in one area (search), to force consumers into using inferior products. Google is doing it though by "killing with kindness" -- buying up the innovators and strangling them, rather then Microsoft's heavy tactics.
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The new analytics interface is FAR superior to the prior. I can get more information out it very quickly compared to the original. I can als
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Sorry, I disagree. While I don't care for online RSS readers at all (and don't us
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am I the only one (Score:3, Insightful)
Usually when I am *online* and want to look at the news from a site... I don't grab their RSS feed, I just go to their site...
It seems like an okay way of exchanging information between different sites in a very limited fashion, but that doesn't make it important or worth spending a lot of money on. It's just one more xml schema for doing something really simple... I don't understand the hype.
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RSS for quick summaries and checking updates (Score:5, Informative)
Another way of thinking about it is for sites that don't change much. Imagine I have 50 friends who have websites that I want to check. Most of my friends only update their pages a couple times a month, but that means that on average, two sites are updated a day. I don't want to load them all every day, only when they change and RSS gives me the ability to know when they have changed.
5 years ago, I could surf for hours at a time. Now, I have read all the aritcles I want in about 30 minutes a day and still keep up with stuff just as much.
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I don't know. I go to their site and it looks like buzzword jibberish to me. I am so confused and angry right now that I might throw a freaki
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What is a feedburner? (Score:4, Funny)
You can have it, with no strings attached for 200 mil. (US $ naturally)
RSS Advertising (Score:2)
All your accounts are belong to us (Score:5, Interesting)