Faves.com
Seattle, Washington (2004) | |
Headquarters | Seattle, Washington |
---|---|
Key people | Mohit Srivastava, Co-Founder |
Website | faves.com |
Faves was a
Features
While offering a service similar to the better-known
In addition to features shared with other bookmarking and social bookmarking services, Faves provided an in-page dialog for saving a Fave, thumbnails generated from the page, dynamic voting, and topic-based auto-generated favorites pages.
History
Blue Dot Inc. was co-founded in 2004 by Mohit Srivastava and Sumit Sen using $1.5 million from angel investors, and the website bluedot.us was launched in June 2006.[3] Blue Dot hoped to profit on of sales from "dotted" websites from its affiliate marketing program,[4] and was part of the technology resurgence in the Washington Puget Sound area.[5]
Early on, Blue Dot actively sought interaction with early adopters in "pizza and soft drink" focus groups on campus that have been criticized by some academics.[6]
In 2007, the service was renamed Faves. In December 2007, the web site still listed the company name as Blue dot, Inc.
In June 2011, Faves.com, the software, database, and email list was sold to SocialAdr, LLC.
In July 2011, only the domain Faves.com, was sold to Cut Media, LLC.
See also
References
- ^ Satoshi, Harmony (2006-07-21). "BlueDot「元祖」del.icio.us に挑むソーシャルブックマークの「進化系 (Blue Dot challenges the innovator del.icio.us in social networking)". CNET (Japan) (in Japanese). Retrieved 2006-12-18.
- Seattle, Washington: KOMO 4 News. 2006-09-27.
- ^ Kirkpatrick, Marshall (2006-07-06). "Blue Dot is not just another social bookmarking system". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2006-12-18.
- ^ Bermant, Charles (2006-11-13). "Blue Dot marks the spot for sharing best of Web". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 2006-12-18.
- ^ Peterson, Kim (2006-12-11). "2006 Year in Review: 10 developments that kept local tech companies in the news". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 2006-12-18.
- ^ Cook, John (2006-11-20). "Startup social networking sites find targeted, willing helpers on campus". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Retrieved 2006-12-18.