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Dave visits Microsoft. Dave Winer visited Microsoft today. We presented to the .NET Developer's Association and gave a quick run-through of RSS. Got lots of questions. Hopefully some people blog the meeting. Tim Jarrett blogged a bit about Dave's 3 p.m. meeting at MS Research. So did Korby Parnell and Joshua Allen. [The Scobleizer -- Celebrating the Geek lifestyle]11:04:51 PM |
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Technorati Ups the Ante. Dave Sifry and his crew at Technorati have greatly improved their blog text search feature. A work in progress, but quite useful already. [Dan Gillmor's eJournal] 6:49:26 AM |
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Weblog Tools Collection. Weblog Tools Blogging Tools Blog [Recently approved feeds from Syndic8.com] 6:47:39 AM |
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Tim Jarrett blogged my talk today at Microsoft Research. [Scripting News] 6:46:58 AM |
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online donation platforms. Wired has an investigative piece on donation platform& software providers: "2003 was a watershed year," said Convio CEO Gene Austin. "More and more people are getting online and that's enabling nonprofits to make more money to give to their causes." Convio, which provides software and services to nonprofit and educational organizations, announced Thursday that it had processed $40 million in online donations for its clients in 2003 -- a tenfold increase over its 2002 figures. Earlier in the week, San Diego-based competitor Kintera said it had processed $53 million in 2003, a sixfold increase from the year before. Convio and Kintera serve some of America's most prominent nonprofits, including Mothers Against Drunk Driving on Convio's side, and the American Red Cross on Kintera's. " [TJ's Weblog "Technology, Venture Capital and Entrepreneurship"]6:46:20 AM |
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social software business model. This (last for today) NYT article carefully argues that there might be a revenue model for social software sites soon. As stated earlier social software is nice new piece in the landscape. Sure you can easily burn all the money without making any revenues with social software as you can with any other business model. But sites like Friendster (or the German variant Friendity) have close to 0 costs to acquire new users. These users produce page views (at least). Say Friendster will never have a single converted customer (ie paying a fee directly) 1 mio users produce minimum 12 million page views (one per month) a year. Multiply it with revenue per 1000 page views of $7 you already have a basis revenue which could help the site to keep afloat without major investments besides new servers. On the other hand it should not be too difficult to get 1-2% conversion of paying customers for platforms such as LinkedIn or OpenBC. They offer enough value to justify this amount. A membership of 1-2 social software tools will become an utility in 5 years from now I guess. So let's see what the NYT says: "I'm having a real problem finding a business model here," said Nate Elliott, an analyst with Jupiter Research. "It feels like the early days of the Internet, with sites like Globe.com saying they'll aggregate tens of millions of users, then find a way to monetize them. That's not the way to run a business." The creators of such services strenuously disagree, arguing that in contrast to the hundreds of dot-coms that bombed, they have clear plans for generating revenue. But those plans could be short-circuited by Internet giants like Yahoo and Google, as well as by established players in the online jobs and dating categories, whose turf most social networking sites seek to occupy. Among other services, Match.com allows users to view lists of their friends' friends without charge, then charges users $11 to $25 monthly, based on the length of commitment, for the ability to contact prospective friends and dates. The new Internet sites say they believe that their services will command similar, if not higher, fees. LinkedIn's co-founder and marketing vice president, Konstantin Guericke, said he expected users to pay in the range of $10 to $15 for each meeting, or an annual fee of $100 to $200 when the site starts charging for subscriptions later this year. " 6:45:53 AM |