The Next Web

» rainmakers

   

Archive of TheNextWeb.org

Ep2: Companies Who Make Money: Armin Heinrich

steven Written on September 7, 2008 – 10:12 am
Steven Carrol, Next Web WebTipr France

Recent buzz and hysteria surrounding overnight success stories of applications built for the iPhone seem to have been garnering almost more hype than that which surrounded those early Facebook applications (though those stories, were and still are about numbers of users not numbers of dollars).

Of all the ‘iPhone apps’ one stands out as a particularly interesting case. This app cost 1K USD did nothing and is probably the simplest and most elegant ‘app’ “ever” developed designed. It made the owner 5K in pure profit before Apple decided to pull it. Reasons for it being pulled amount to 2 pissed off buyers complaints who pressed ‘buy it’ by mistake ‘apparently’. I’d personally quote a saying me old man taught me ‘a deals a deal’.

This ‘app’ will gain no respect from the hardcore hackers who are proud of their ability to make the world dance from their command line, nor from those who have invested millions into developing complex offerings that flop at the box office. But why not? Why does something so simple and elegant not deserve respect in this field?

I am also guilty of “once” believing that if an application was built for a ‘fiver’ and over the weekend it was not worthy of any acclaim, but come on, isn’t that simply jealousy by an overzealous developer? What counts at the end of the day is what the market makes of it and in this case six rich bastards and two retards liked it enough to press that dangerous buy it button.

If this teaches us anything, it’s that what counts at the end of the day is not the technology used, nor the effort surmounted, but rather the idea and the idea alone.

I hope you like that post!

The Next Web Blog covers start-up news from all over the world (not just the Valley), exciting new technologies and inspiring entrepreneurs. If you're new here, you may want to read our 'About' page and subscribe to our RSS feed.

Do you have a start-up that we should write about? Contact us! Thanks for visiting and hope you come back again!
Add to Google Add to netvibes Subscribe in Bloglines

EP1: Companies Who Make Money: Virtualmin

steven Written on September 1, 2008 – 1:12 pm
Steven Carrol, Next Web WebTipr France

All too often we hear that so and so has secured x.000,000.00 of financing in round (x). What we don’t hear much about are quiet little companies who make niche products that people are actually willing to pay for, built by small teams and who are actually profitable and largely grow organically.

A new weekly series

Therefor I am starting a series of weekly articles covering companies ‘who actually make money’. Given I’m an application developer, the companies I like will be nerdy techie types. If you have some tips for companies you particularly like (in other sectors maybe), please let me know in the comments.

Expensive web control panels

One such company that I am in love with is called Virtualmin. Virtualmin is a web control panel on Apache for system admins. Built on top of the Webmin platform, Virtualmin allows complete control over (and the creation of) virtual servers.

If your asking ‘what is he going on about’, let me tell you the problem. Every web app / site sits on a server, but configuring servers is very complicated. Knowledge of Linux is needed along with an army of tools which are utilized through the command line. Control panels like Virtualmin help to sanitize the process by offering friendly user interfaces and doing much of the donkey work for you.

There are a few companies offering control panels (Cpanel, Plesk etc.) they can be expensive and while looking pretty, cost is very important to bootstrapped start ups (especially me) and this where the Virtualmin GPL (free) version excels.

When I had to move my own app up to a larger server, I found this wonderful company called Linode offering great deals for high quality / capacity services. Being a bargain hunter I signed up for a basic account then soon realized the catch. There was no control panel like on other virtual servers, in a nut shell, you had to know Linux. eerk.

Did I really need to learn how to use Linux?

The first response I had was to run, did I need the headache of learning all this when all I wanted was a bigger server? Hanging around for the duration turns out to have been one of the better decisions I have made along this windy unlit road.

Having control over every aspect of your own set up is overwhelmingly powerful, there are too many benefits to list but the breadth of tools I now have available make all the difference between a site that fly’s and one that grinds to a halt.

Companies who are looking for scalable and cost effective solutions to hosting their apps with 1 million visitors per month etc. would do very well to sign up for a Linode and install Virtualmin. The support on Linode has been exceptional and coupled with Virtualmin I think the combination is the best hosting solution on the market today.

Subscribe to:

 RSS feed   Comments  Email update Email

Add to Google   Add to netvibes   Subscribe in Bloglines
Sign up for The Next Web Update (example) & get invited to ALL our events!





Accenture Innovation Awards MailChimp
advertise! ZayPay


This blog is currently sponsored by Accenture, Netlog, eBuddy and Wakoopa. Interested in becoming a sponsor too? Check our advertising opportunities for more information.



Mega Sponsors:

myMailMarket email marketing ZayPay
Organizers United Linkedin Group Fleck

Copyright 2006-2008 © TheNextWeb.com - Entries (RSS) / Comments (RSS)