NatchiQ

December 18, 2007

Cautiously optimistic about Hulu

Filed under: Internet, Startups, TV — Noah W. Smith @ 10:47 am

About two weeks ago when everyone and their brother was going on and on about how Hulu had added HD videos, I decided to sign up for their beta and check it out for myself. My invitation rolled in last night, and I was pleasantly surprised to find that I could watch a few recent episodes of The Simpsons. The video quality is very good for TVOIP, but to describe it as “HD” is absurd. I propose that we label it HDTYT: “Higher Definition than YouTube.”

All kidding aside, what Hulu promises (TV episodes on demand, in good quality, with limited commercial breaks) is what I have always wanted. Two things need to improve before this will be widely accepted, I think. First, more episodes, and more shows. Of the admittedly small number of TV shows I enjoy, there were 6 full episodes of The Simpsons, and about 30 short clips of both The Simpsons and Futurama. Second, there are three advertising breaks as you watch a given episode, and Hulu runs the same ad all three times. Cats and laser pointers are funny strictly in intervals greater than 30 minutes, but wax lame when viewed more frequently. Actually, watching that commercial again on YouTube makes me appreciate the video quality at Hulu a bit more.

June 1, 2007

StartupSearch.org: a new buzz engine

Filed under: Startups — Noah W. Smith @ 8:09 am

Valleywag (and others) have commented on the launch of StartupSearch, a new directory site tracking people, money, and traffic in relation to Web 2.0 startups. Interestingly the site has been “sponsored” by a VC firm through June (its future unknown after that), so it does not need to index itself yet.

Their definition of “startup” seems to include just professionally funded companies, although it seems advantageous to get your company on their ASAP for the exposure. When we have a logo and a better “coming soon” homepage I will put Common Kitchen in there and see what happens.

May 28, 2007

Zooomr: a lesson in initial funding

Filed under: Startups — Noah W. Smith @ 10:51 pm

Robert Scoble has written a nice piece about the coming of age of Zooomr, an as-yet unfunded startup run by a single 20-year old. The site has been down due to upgrade woes primarily because they only have one set of servers, and Scoble points out that spending their first cash on insuring smooth upgrades would go a long way toward exuding professionalism. If graduate school has taught me anything, its just that: expect the unexpected, and spend the majority of your available resources preparing for smooth transitions. The rest is just writing code, and that’s easy.

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