Once upon a time I decided to check out this thing called the World Wide Web. I bought a modem, signed up with a local Internet Service Provider and borrowed a disk from a friend with software to ‘browse’ the Web. That piece of software was called Netscape.
Since then a lot has happened. On February 1, 2008 AOL will stop supporting Netscape. It is the end of an era and I think everybody who got online before 1999 feels kind of sad (and old?) when they hear about it.
As a small tribute to an old friend I am proudly displaying this button, one last time:
Obviously this is big news so expect a lot of articles about it on- and offline in the following weeks. Here is a small selection:
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In september Fon, the free Wi-Fi initiative backed by Google, Sequoia Capital, and Index Ventures, launched a B2B program in an effort to get more coverage in densely populated areas. It promised 50% of all revenues to FONtrepreneurs willing to buy a marketing starter kit to promote and sell FON. This kit included 3 La Foneras, a Fontenna and flyers which people could use to persuade local cafés and bars to offer free Wi-Fi.
Fon has always been promoted as a community effort with hundreds of thousands of happy and cooperative members. So this should have worked. But the program has been terminated before it was launched. Here is why:
Fon originally invited 860 people from 5 countries: USA, Canada, Belgium, Holland and Germany.
Of those, 39 people replied and showed interest.
Of those, 13 people agreed to go through the legal loop holes that the laywers required.
Of those, 5 used the promo code
Of those, 2 immediately put the La Foneras for sale on eBay
Oops!
It is hard to estimate how successful Fon REALLY is. They have previously claimed 200.000 hotspots worldwide and Fon’s founder has a full-time job talking about the imminent success of Fon at every major conference in the world. But how many of those hotspots are connected, active and available for other people is anyones guess. Judging from Martin Varsavsky’s ever present smile all is fine and dandy in FonLand.
Here is an interview with Joanna Rees, the US representative for Fon including a few critical questions at the end of the interview.
After the whole Blognation story last week I was sort of expecting another thing to happen. Another post by Sam (’Scam’) Sethi or a new captain taking over or a lawsuit or, well, something. Anything!
But it seems that Blognation is now officially, seriously, definitively and permanently over. Blognation’s hosting company, Howard Baines, has updated the landing page for Blognation. And they seem to have a sense of humor about the whole thing too. The title of the page is now ‘one nation, no voices‘ where it used to be ‘one nation, many voices‘ and the new frontpage displays the following message:
Blognation.com: Will the last one out please turn off the light.
It is clear that for many people this story is far from over and I’m sure we will all remember and talk about it for years to come but at least Blognation, the website, has now ceased to exist.