The guys at NMA are good… and have a lot of time on their hands… but mainly good: continue reading...
It was a matter of time, really. When The Guardian bought PaidContent.org, it was reasonable to assume that sooner than later, the talismanic founder Rafat Ali would leave. That was Rafat and the Guardian. continue reading...
Michael Arrington’s Tech Crunch apparently makes $10M a year according to a new article in Inc. magazine. continue reading...
Pretty amazing to see Michael Arrington evolve over the years. This past week he penned a post that basically took down a few questionable people and practices. Today we see this gem of a video:
Crazy to see what VCs back. No comment. continue reading...
With the announcement that GigaOm was hiring a COO, raising more money, I think it’s safe to say that 2007 will mark both the end and new beginning of blogs… as business.
Clearly, the number of blogs in high tech alone is numbing: Rafat Ali, Michael Arrington, Om Malik have clearly been joined by others in trying to usurp market share in tech reporting. continue reading...
Last week I asked if Web 2.0 was becoming a farce and today there’s a mighty strong argument to suggest that yes, indeed it is.
Bay Partners, a VC with too much money on their hands apparently, must have just gotten poked on Facebook, got excited and is now launching a “facebook-apps-only-fund”. I can barely contain myself from laughing. continue reading...
Michael Arrington and Fred Wilson have both blogged in depth about the value of their communities, and they’re right.
Tonight Tech Crunch posted a follow up on Scribd - the YouTube of documents (whatever that means) - mentioning that Scribd (who had secured $4M in VC) was facing competition in the form of Docstoc. continue reading...