What I find even more interesting that these shutdowns is that an entry from the Yahoo corp blog has made it to the front page of Hacker News. This may be a sign that people are starting to find Yahoo related news interesting again.
I probably titled it poorly, but my earlier post[1] about Yahoo's new mobile weather app (Yahoo doing mobile right?!?) didn't get past a single point. :P
Sorry, I just can't get excited about yet another weather app, even one done well. In practice, I use the Notification Center weather on my iPhone, and Dark Sky for rain alerts.
Have you checked forecast.io? It is even more interesting because it is a website which looks like a mobile app. Besides, the weather data it provides is awesomely simple.
Like the sibling commenter here, I find that I almost exclusively check the weather on my phone, but I'll keep this at the back of my mind for more thought-out planning. :)
>Deals, Yahoo Upcoming (and its API), Yahoo Kids, Yahoo SMS Alerts, and the J2ME feature phone versions of Yahoo Mail and Yahoo Messenger, all on April 30th.
I don't understand why Yahoo! never properly promoted Upcoming.org. In fact, I don't understand why companies like Yahoo! go out of their way to acquire nice things only to abandon them when the next new, shiny thing comes along.
It's probably a good call to shut down these services. Yahoo has to change to survive.
What's not good is the amount of notice. 3 months should be the absolute minimum notice for shutting down a service. Otherwise you lose users' trust and that closes doors on future opportunities.
Not pertinent to the discussion, but why does some of the links use http://google.com/url?q= prefix for redirecting URLs? Any advantage of doing so instead of directly linking to the posts?
Because whomever wrote this article was Googling the results (yes, the irony is palpable) and simply copied the URL, which is prefixed in Google's SERP.
Whatever happened to Upcoming as a concept? It took quite a while for Lanyrd to fill the gap for tech conference goers, but that's basically just "us".
I just wonder why this turned out not to be a viable service. I would think there would have been a market for a global event calendar, and Upcoming at one time seemed well on it's way to being that until it got "Flickr-ed" by Yahoo.
I wish it had gotten Flickr-ed. Flickr grew 2-3 orders of magnitude under Yahoo and is still the dominant site for photos you might want to look at again.
If Mayer's playbook is to make Yahoo like Google, and to do what Page does from quarter-to-quarter, I don't think that's a bad plan actually.
Yahoo exists strictly on momentum at this point, so it's not a matter of re-org to fix - it's a matter or org. Might as well clone Google for the seed and go from there.
Agreed. For one, it seems that Yahoo mail app on my Android syncs and works much faster than GMail. Maybe GMail has nailed the top spot for webmail, but it looks like Yahoo is ahead on Android. Don't know about iOS apps though, anyone?
Thankfully I don't use these products so the shutdown doesn't personally affect me. The only issue that jumps out is the post went up 4/19 Friday afternoon and the shutdown date is 4/30, including the API. Anyone relying on these services has 7 business days to respond.
If you click through, that post announces a different set of services which have now been shut down. "Last Month" was avatars, Yahoo on Blackberry, Clues, App Search, Sports IQ, boards, and Updates API.
That blog post was March 1st and the services shutdown April 1st with the Updates API shutting down April 16th.
This is an important point. Not only should your online services have an easy way for you to get data out of them, but you probably should have a reasonably sane backup schedule, just like you would for hard drives/physical media/etc.
That being said this is a very short amount of time, and hopefully future shutdowns like this at yahoo and other places give more of a warning.
Yahoo engineers may have verified that none of the users of these products have a vacation scheduled in Yahoo Calendar, which will presumably be the last property to shut down, for this reason.
Upcoming and Yahoo Deals seem like good product ideas for improving personalization for users' local news. Does Yahoo have replacements for these services?
I regret that I have but one up-arrow to click on for this comment.
Google does this annually and they get criticized for it every time. Yahoo does it at the behest of their new ex-Googler CEO and now it's a great idea.
If you say so. The difference is between a company removing something that was actually useful to a lot of people versus a company removing something not that useful to a few people.
Google has lost the trust of plenty of users and because we still don't like their fucking decision, in your words, that makes us idiots. Right...