'Web 2.0' Archive

Shortly Over

“No business we approached wanted to purchase tr.im for even a minor amount.”

I appreciate tr.im’s honesty.

From what I understand, tr.im’s business model was similar to bit.ly’s and – what increasingly feels like – Twitter’s business model: aggregate and sell statistics on how information is being shared on real-time basis.

Measuring word-of-mouse if you will.

Given how fleeting and how nascent the real-time stream is, it feels like trying to measure string pushing.

Sure there’s a result, but if value = effect - effort then the real value (relevance, importance, and significance) – doesn’t unfold until the pushing stops.

To that end – I don’t see tr.im’s (or any other URL shortener’s) breaking the internet for more than 5 minutes.

If anything this shutdown is a reminder that URL shorteners are cheap hacks apologizing for poor content-management-systems, network security risks, and that publishers should be shortening themselves.

Elsewhere, related:

“And when I return to the United States every three months or so and pick up a newspaper, I find I haven’t missed much at all.” – Pico Iyer

Failing to Scale

Prepare Your Pocketbooks

Blurring Identity to Clear It Up

More and Less, More or Less

Success Equals Being Acquired and Losing Control?

Garrick Speaking at Civic League’s Future of Policy Making in MN Series

What’s the Browser Matter?

Back to Basics 2.0