Gigaom Closes Shop 101
Presto Vivace writes "What a loss for the tech community," linking to this announcement at Gigaom that the site is shutting down: Gigaom recently became unable to pay its creditors in full at this time. As a result, the company is working with its creditors that have rights to all of the company's assets as their collateral. All operations have ceased. We do not know at this time what the lenders intend to do with the assets or if there will be any future operations using those assets. The company does not currently intend to file bankruptcy. We would like to take a moment and thank our readers and our community for supporting us all along. — Gigaom management
Reader bizwriter adds a link to this story on the shutdown.
The tech site of my dreams (Score:3, Interesting)
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Views that are worth having are worth defending against opposing ones.
Re:The tech site of my dreams (Score:4, Insightful)
Views that are worth having are worth defending against opposing ones.
Why exactly? They are your views. Why do you need to defend them? Either they hold up on their own, or they don't.
In fact, I would argue that the exact opposite is true. The only views worth having are those that need no defense. They are well-supported by established evidence. All views should be treated with a commensurate level of skepticism based on the evidence available to support them.
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They are well-supported by established evidence
You might have a point, if the internet ^Wworld didn't have an abundant supply of nitwits willing to ignore any and all evidence that might conflict with their "individual" world view.
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You don't have to defend them. But they better be worth defending...
Opinions don't — can not — "hold up on their own". They need to be expressed — verbally, in writing, or in some form of art...
Would care to defend this view? How about a Periklynian dialog [dlma.com]?
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Would care to defend this view? How about a Periklynian dialog [dlma.com]?
Nope. I have no need to. And certainly not in public, on the internet, with a stranger. That sort of activity is, like sex, best done in private and with people I know and trust.
There is a subtle difference between expressing ones views and defending them that you (and others) may have missed.
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I'd argue, that the difference is merely quantitative — as in, how much you are willing to say (or do) in support of your opinion before shrugging and walking away. As opposite to qualitative — as in whether you are willing to say (or do) anything at all.
Though we all have some threshold, that quantity for each individual depends more on each personality and priorities (both lifetime and minute) than any kind of princ
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I'd argue, that the difference is merely quantitative — as in, how much you are willing to say (or do) in support of your opinion before shrugging and walking away. As opposite to qualitative — as in whether you are willing to say (or do) anything at all.
Defending one's view presupposes that the view has come under attack. Expressing one's view does not.
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An "attack" can be subtle — like what I managed in this very subthread. You've now responded twice to defend your view from it...
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Why exactly? They are your views. Why do you need to defend them? Either they hold up on their own, or they don't.
Why are you arguing with him about whether views worth having are worth defending? Clearly you don't need to respond. Either his view on that subject holds up or it doesn't. Right?
They are well-supported by established evidence. All views should be treated with a commensurate level of skepticism based on the evidence available to support them.
Presenting evidence to support a view is defending that view. So we shouldn't defend point of view; because the evidence (that nobody would now be gathering and presenting) should speak for itself?
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well then certainly you will not miss gigaom that would write about any startup with an app that has 10 downloads.
Never heard of it (Score:5, Interesting)
Can someone summarize what it's value was to the tech community?
Re:Never heard of it (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Never heard of it (Score:4, Interesting)
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True, but when your commenter community is microscopic, it's unlikely that your audience is large.
Slashdot gets a lot of comments because you don't even have to go through the trouble of signing up.
Slashdot gets a lot of comments mainly because they have massive reader base. I haven't made a study of it, but my impression is that Anonymous Coward comments are only about half the comments, if that (though I note that you're one), though I will admit t
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The only reason I even knew it existed was because of This Week In Tech podcast that I've listened to for years. They often had Om Malik (the founder) on the show and he was entertaining enough to listen to. However, I didn't go to the site more than two or three times because they offered me nothing new. I get all my tech news from Slashdot (though less and less these days), ArsTechnica and Reddit. I don't need another news site... in fact I often think I need to trim down that list. Oh, you can probably a
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most likely they wrote the truth instead of the click bait crap of BGR, Ars and The Verge
Re:Never heard of it (Score:4, Informative)
Can someone summarize what it's value was to the tech community?
The proprietor was a self-styled tech elite asshat. He impressed some people, but not enough apparently. He always struck me as a phony. Gigaom as a site had enough insider scoops that they were useful for breaking news in the actual tech industry (not the consumer tech industry that gets hashed and rehashed by Engadget, Slashdot, and a dozen others) so it had a little value, but it was never the tech thought leadership paragon that it pretended to be.
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they were useful for breaking news in the actual tech industry
This. If you cared more about big transit than trends in cellphone style, Gigaom was worth having in your Google News feed. I'm not sure what the alternative is right now. Back in the day ComputerWorld (in print) used to carry this kind of stuff.
Hopefully the writers (what, the content doesn't auto-generate?) will find a home at other outlets.
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The proprietor was a self-styled tech elite asshat. He impressed some people, but not enough apparently. He always struck me as a phony. Gigaom as a site had enough insider scoops that they were useful for breaking news in the actual tech industry (not the consumer tech industry that gets hashed and rehashed by Engadget, Slashdot, and a dozen others) so it had a little value, but it was never the tech thought leadership paragon that it pretended to be.
If you are referring to Om, he's sold out a year ago. So it could be said he did have enough, and his successors did not. (I don't know / don't care which .... I've read some of their stuff but not enough to have an opinion on the quality).
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The proprietor was a self-styled tech elite asshat.
This summary deserves some sort of internet fame.
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Aside from Gigaom, my knowledge of Om comes from watching him many times on Twit, and he seemed like a very genial, knowledgeable individual.
Now if AC has personal experience with Om, that's another story.
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The proprietor was a self-styled tech elite asshat. He impressed some people, but not enough apparently.
He actually left the site over a year ago, which, according to at least one other site, was about the time that it seemed to began its decline.
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Typo-squating GigaCom best I can tell.
Next we'll hear that Slashsot.org (Mews for Berds, Dtuff that Katterz) and Dixe.com (Hobs Search for Technolgh) are closing shop.
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I'm as much "in the tech community" as anybody I know and I'd never heard of them. Browsing their web site and reading about the apple watch, well, I don't know. I still don't know what they were doing.
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Om Malik is a first-rate tech writer/reporter. Though I'm sure he'll land somewhere.
Re:Never heard of it (Score:4, Informative)
Though I'm sure he'll land somewhere.
I'm sure he landed somewhere else about a year ago.
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Before today, I have never heard of Gigaom.
Looking at the content on their frontpage, I doubt I will ever hear of them again.
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> what it's value was
what its* value was
it's = it is
Learn this.
Blind Headlines (Score:2)
Who or what is Gigaom? (Score:5, Insightful)
Until this story, I'd never heard of them. Would it have hurt to included a brief sentence or two in the summary as to why it's "a loss for the tech community"?
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Yes. I am waxing and waning on this news.
On the one hand I am at a loss because something is no longer available to me as a resource and on the other, I never used them as a resource because I was never exposed to them.
Damn life's bitchery and stuff.
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Re:Who or what is Gigaom? (Score:4, Informative)
Until this story, I'd never heard of them. Would it have hurt to included a brief sentence or two in the summary as to why it's "a loss for the tech community"?
Gigaom is a media company (mostly news aggregation and blogging) founded by writer/journalist Om Malik, who turned out to be the company's only asset. After he left for greener pastures in 2014, the site slid quickly into obscurity.
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Gigaom is a media company (mostly news aggregation and blogging) founded by writer/journalist Om Malik, who turned out to be the company's only asset. After he left for greener pastures in 2014, the site slid quickly into obscurity.
Mr. Malik followed the typical Internet business model, in other words. I feel bad for anyone working for the site; however I'm not going to shed tears for the foolish investors who bought it.
But remember - this isn't a bubble.
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I feel dumb... (Score:2)
I've never heard of the site...and I don't feel like RTFAing. What the heck was Gigaom and why should I care?
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I had a look at their home page and it looks like some sort of technical blogging and news site. The fact that nobody who has commented on this story seems to know who they are (or were) is probably a clue as to why they have gone tits up.
Probably because no one has heard of them... (Score:2)
They appear to be a news site of some sort, nothing much on there I would read though (how many articles can be there about HBOGo before saturation?).
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They appear to be a news site of some sort
Folks used ta say that about Slashdot, back in the day... *cackle* *spit* *ding*
Oh no! (Score:1)
Wait, what in the fuck is Gigaom?
Great story, Slashdot (Score:5, Insightful)
Thanks very much for this story about a website no-one has heard of shutting down. Bonus points for not even telling us what the website's raison d'etre was in the first place, or why we should care that's it closing.
As you can see it has stimulated much discussion, all of which is so far on the topic of "what the fuck was Gigaom?"
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One wonders how this 'story' made it through the firehose.
Re:Great story, Slashdot (Score:5, Funny)
Clearly the entire community of Gigaom upvoted the news piece.
Apparently, on slow news days you can bypass the firehose with about 15 votes.
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I couldn't even tell from TFS that it was a website, and not some other manner of site.
I only knew of them... (Score:3)
...because of NoScript. I don't think I ever went to see who they were, I just knew I never needed to allow them to have a page work right.
Not Enough Apple! (Score:5, Funny)
Clearly they didn't post enough Apple news, Apple reviews, Apple opinions or other Apple-related articles, since no-one here seems to have heard of them...
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No. He works for a VC firm. But to know that, you'd have to RTFA!
And nothing of value was lost... (Score:3)
I have an idea (Score:4, Funny)
Well there's your problem right there... (Score:5, Interesting)
Gigaom reaches over 6.5 million monthly unique readers and continues to be the leading independent voice that demystifies emerging technology through its news, events and research. We’re a new type of media company with a business model that leverages technology, transparency and access to information. The company’s growth has been propelled by great writers, journalistic integrity, industry depth and audience engagement.
We offer integrated advertising programs across all of our channels: Cloud, Data, Media, Mobile, Science & Energy, Social & Web, and Podcasts. With a strong mobile reach of over 2 million monthly readers, our mobile advertising on Flipboard is highly targeted. With an array of podcasts, newsletters and other custom campaigns, we have a campaign offering to fit any client’s budget and marketing goals.
I don't know who these "6.5 million monthly unique readers" are, but if the regular crowd at Slashdot has never even heard of their site, then they weren't really reaching 6.5 million people, or they were the wrong 6.5 million people. According to their careers page it looks like they had a lot of overhead and tried to run like an old fashioned news company with two offices in major cities. They certainly weren't lean-and-mean.
https://about.gigaom.com/caree... [gigaom.com]
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They also pay for VIP Wordpress, which costs $5000 a month starting with support starting over $1000 per month... to host wordpress. I guess their staff is all tech fluff writers and no actual tech. Figures
John Gruber sums it up. (Score:2)
Source [daringfireball.net]
Om Malik's a good writer. Looks like the site shit itself after he left to work for Apple
recently at this time (Score:2)
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I like Privacy Badger myself. Instead of having a blocklist it uses behavior-based heuristics.
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plus, badgers.
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Bullshit.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghostery [wikipedia.org]
Ghostery is a proprietary (but free of charge) privacy-related browser extension for Mozilla Firefox, Google Chrome, Internet Explorer, Opera, and Apple Safari owned by the advertising and privacy technology company Ghostery, Inc. (formerly Evidon).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gigaom [wikipedia.org]
Gigaom was a blog-related media company started by Om Malik in San Francisco, California. The blog offered news, analysis, and opinions on startups, emerging technologies, and othe
NOOOOO! (Score:2)
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A really big resistance.
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Agreed. It looked like shit and didn't feel legit.
The name (Score:2)
The name, Gigaom, just seemed like another bullshit made up name just so that they could play in the market. It seemed disingenuous and shady from the get go and nothing I saw on it gave links to substantial reputable information to give it legitimacy.
$22M Raised. (Score:2)