There Must be a Bunch of Yahoos Running That Company.
Do you remember not so long ago (around the turn of the last century) when Web Portals were all the rage? Starting mostly as web browsers
 in the mid-1990s, an all-out fight developed among old media companies 
to capture a “sticky space” on the internet.  Newbies to the Web needed a
 place to call “Home”, and for awhile, portals seemed to be that place.
As the Web matured Netscape became a part of America Online, the Walt 
Disney Company bought Go.com, and Excite and @Home became a part of AT&T.  Lycos, another early entrant sold out to Network Solutions.  Other portals started out as web directories (Yahoo!) or search engines (Excite, Lycos, AltaVista, Infoseek, and Hotbot). 
Disney Company bought Go.com, and Excite and @Home became a part of AT&T.  Lycos, another early entrant sold out to Network Solutions.  Other portals started out as web directories (Yahoo!) or search engines (Excite, Lycos, AltaVista, Infoseek, and Hotbot). There was a rush to expand services 
to portal users, including free email, customization features for news, 
weather and sports, chatrooms and instant messaging.  All of these 
features were designed to make users stay longer, thus exposing them to 
more paid advertising.
The
 portal craze, with "old media" companies racing to outbid each other 
for Internet properties, flamed out in 2000 and 2001. Disney pulled the 
plug on Go.com, Excite went bankrupt and its remains were sold to 
iWon.com.  Yahoo and MSN remained successful portals until the 
simplicity of Google’s interface and its unmatched page-loading speed 
took millions of users away, apparently for good.
Currently,
 Yahoo! Has a My Yahoo! Beta available, but when I tried it, a bog box 
popped up with a swirly thing that said “Loading”.  I am sad to say that
 it never fully loaded and I never got to customize my own page.  
Contrast this with iGoogle, which allows a limited portal offering, but 
loads in seconds and is customized and ready to go in 30 seconds.  Good 
luck to Yahoo and their attempt to “turn back time”.  It didn’t work for
 Cher and it hasn’t worked for the military planners of our world, who 
are always planning to “fight the last war”.
While researching this article, I did have fun visiting old portal sites.  When I 
got
 to Excite and jiggled it enough to cough up My Excite from before the 
dot-com meltdown, I was thrilled to see my old stock list still there.  
The only problem was that half the stocks I had invested in back then 
are no longer in business today.  Yahoo is still there, but will it 
still be an independent corporation when I go back to My Stocks in 
another seven years?
got
 to Excite and jiggled it enough to cough up My Excite from before the 
dot-com meltdown, I was thrilled to see my old stock list still there.  
The only problem was that half the stocks I had invested in back then 
are no longer in business today.  Yahoo is still there, but will it 
still be an independent corporation when I go back to My Stocks in 
another seven years?Although Excite itself is not much 
more than a feeder site for iWon’s ridiculous “money giveaway site”, it 
has some great features.  In less than five minutes I had My Excite 
customized to show “My” Weather (in three different cities), 
“My”
 Sunrise/Sunset, “My” Tides (in Santa Monica Bay), “My” Moon 
(Phase/Rise/Set), “My” (beleaguered) Stocks and “My” Columnists.  Wow! 
Or should I say, “Yahoo!?”  That information was so “sticky”; I 
bookmarked it and plan to go back often.
“My”
 Sunrise/Sunset, “My” Tides (in Santa Monica Bay), “My” Moon 
(Phase/Rise/Set), “My” (beleaguered) Stocks and “My” Columnists.  Wow! 
Or should I say, “Yahoo!?”  That information was so “sticky”; I 
bookmarked it and plan to go back often.Google maintains that their 
“motivation isn’t to provide sticky services”.  Isn’t it great when “old
 energy” (Yahoo!) challenges “new energy” (Google).  Gee, I wonder who 
is going to win this one.  
By James McGillis at 12:17 PM | Technology | Comments (0) | Link
