scoopler - ReadWriteWeb http://www.readwriteweb.com/feeds/tag/scoopler en Copyright 2012 Richard MacManus readwriteweb@gmail.com Wed, 15 Feb 2012 09:15:00 -0800 http://www.sixapart.com/movabletype/?v=4.35-en http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss Google Plus is Eating Startups Google Plus, the ambitious company-wide social network launched late last month, was reportedly built in secret over an extended period of time by scores of engineers and social software designers brought into the company through a campaign of heavy hiring.

The scope of Plus's ambition is far from fully realized, though, and apparently the expansion of the team isn't complete yet either. This morning a well-backed little startup called The Fridge announced that it has been acquired by Google and will close its group sharing app up to work on something similar at Plus. It was the second little startup like it to be acquired by Google in the last two days: yesterday YCombinator alum Scoopler/Just Spotted announced the same thing.

Did these little startups show promise and get multi-million dollar signing bonuses, effectively, as acquisition/hires? Or did they see the successful launch of Google Plus as writing on the wall: that the real time and group sharing market has now matured enough that it's time for anyone small to team up with a giant if they are going to survive? Maybe they began building a year ago with insiders' knowledge that flipping to Google would become an increasingly viable strategy.

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Liz Gannes at AllThingsD reports that Fridge focused on collaboratively edited groups, a feature which, by all indications, is coming to Google Plus soon. Internally, she says, Google employees refer to the feature as "shared circles." Those are going to be a whole lot of fun to build and share. Hopefully they won't have limits like Twitter's limits to 20 Lists per account and 500 members per List.

"Right now, Google Plus is asymmetric," Fridge founder Austin Chang told Business Insider. "We're going to help them create shared spaces." Business Insider's Alyson Shontell points out that none of this is entirely new, either. "This isn't Chang's first exit. In 2005 he sold a social game, Popularity High, to MTV/Viacom for an undisclosed amount." Apparently Chang is unusually in touch with what it's like to think like a teenager, in a popularity/MTV/friend freshness kind of way.

Perhaps purely neither build nor buy, Google's strategy could be called "buy, eat, build upon."
Whatever the magic is, glamorous investors bit, that's for sure. Liz Gannes says The Fridge had raised $800,000 from investors, including Mitch Kapor (creator of Lotus 1-2-3), Naval Ravikant (Venturehacks and Angel List), Keith Rabois (PayPal, now Square), Jim Young (co-founded HotOrNot), Jeremy Stoppelman (Yelp co-founder), Jameson Hsu (Mochi Media advertising), Geoff Ralston (built Yahoo Mail, sold Lala to Apple), Jason Sander and Joshua Schachter (founder of Delicious).

With backers like that, the four person Fridge team may have been invited to the Google Plus Christmas Party whether they had been acquired or not. Yesterday's acquisition/hire, Scoopler, was backed by Silicon Valley investment leader Ron Conway, among others.

It's hard to imagine such well-backed startups, with silly names like The Fridge: Keeping Your Friends Fresher, were ever intended to have any other fate. Maybe that's not fair, maybe there was a time a year ago when Valley insiders thought a new social network like The Fridge could become the Yelp of the future. It seems just as likely, though, that these insiders knew Google was preparing for a major push in social software (it had to, lest Facebook eat its lunch) and thought that an outsider's best strategy was to build to flip. I don't know.

Features

What's more interesting, perhaps, is where this points to for future features of Google Plus. It's also very interesting that these startups are being acquired now, weeks after Plus's launch, instead of before the launch.

One startup that did get acquired to work on social at Google almost a year ago was Angstro, an experimental social-graph and news-crunching startup lead by technical heavyweight Dr. Rohit Khare. As we wrote at the time of that deal:

"What does it mean to see someone like Khare join people like Joseph Smarr, Bradley Horowitz, Chris Messina, Brad Fitzpatrick and most recently Slide's Max Levchin? It means that Google's entry into social networking is going to be big, ambitious and probably engage heavily with the data-portability paradigm that has positioned itself as the strategic antithesis of Facebook."

We haven't seen a lot of that data portability stuff yet, but it's still a safe bet that it's coming, and leading with User Experience is a wise move. This week's two newest acquisitions appear consistent with that strategy.

If you were my Plusbuddy, we would have already been discussing this article before it was posted here.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/google_plus_is_eating_startups.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/google_plus_is_eating_startups.php Google Thu, 21 Jul 2011 09:21:52 -0800 Marshall Kirkpatrick
Scoopler: Real-Time Meta-Search for Twitter, Digg, Delicious, and Flickr scoopler_logo.pngCurrent real-time search engines generally focus on just searching a single service - and typically, that service is Twitter. Scoopler, however, a Y Combinater-funded startup which launched today after a short private beta, goes far beyond that. Scoopler is a real-time meta-search tool for Twitter, Flickr, Digg, and Delicious, with support for more services to follow in the future. As one would expect, search results from Twitter dominate the real-time stream, though, depending on the topic, the most interesting links often come from delicious or digg.

]]> Like most of its competitors, Scoopler splits its screen between a stream of real-time results and a list of popular links, videos, and images. As the real-time stream tends to feature a lot of content from Twitter, the 'popular images' section is where you will find most of the content from Flickr. Though, it would be nice if you could filter the real-time stream by service.

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Scoopler also has some interesting features beyond its search functions. When you hover over a link, for example, you can 'peek' at the results without leaving the site, for example, and you can easily share any link right from the results page as well.

Real-time search is clearly where a lot of the action is right now. We have seen specialized services that just search forum posts, for example, and more comprehensive search engines that include real-time features like Yauba. With Twazzup, Tweetmi, Tweetmeme, DailyRt, OneRiot, and many others, the Twitter real-time search market is almost starting to feel over-saturated already.

We'll have to wait and see if Scoopler can come up with enough additional functions to set itself apart from its competition. As it stands today, it is already an interesting competitor in this market, and one of the few real-time meta-search engines that are currently available (though we have heard from a number of other companies that are working on similar products).

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/scoopler_real-time_meta-search_for_twitter_digg_de.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/scoopler_real-time_meta-search_for_twitter_digg_de.php Search Fri, 08 May 2009 10:02:24 -0800 Frederic Lardinois