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For Sale: Lycos.com

prostoalex writes "Terra Lycos is planning to sell Lycos.com. The price, quoted by News.com.com.com, is in the $200 mln range, while the original acquisition amounted to $12.5 bln. Lycos is currently re-inventing itself as a portal for the new generation with the link to Playboy affiliate placed right on the front page (click on "Adults 18+ only")."

66 of 215 comments (clear)

  1. Crashing back to Terra, er, Earth... by LostCluster · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Terra's aquisition of Lycos was an exercise in stupdity. See, Terra's a pretty big company with plenty of successful Spanish-language sites... but there's absoultely no synergy to be found in merging a group of English-langauge sites with Spanish-language sites. You can't share content accross the langages unless you have a ton of people doing translations.

    One of the original webcrawling search engines ended up getting bought up by somebody who didn't know what to do with it. So, it got shuffled asside into a "network" of poorly defined brand, and faded into obscurity. Lycos as a search engine is now worthless. Maybe there's some value left in the brand name for somebody who wants to do a relaunch, but this dog has been relauched so many times I don't think you can teach it any new tricks anymore.

    The market scorecard shows it exactly... $200 billion going in, $12.5 billion going out. They misplaced 15/16th of the value that they started with.

    1. Re:Crashing back to Terra, er, Earth... by LostCluster · · Score: 4, Funny

      ...$200 billion going in, $12.5 billion going out...

      What are you smoking?


      Sorry... 90s era accounting. Can I restate those numbers to be in the millions instead?

    2. Re:Crashing back to Terra, er, Earth... by Nerd+With+Nalgene · · Score: 5, Informative

      $200 billion going in, $12.5 billion going out.

      That should be "$12.5 billion going in, $200 million going out" :-).

      --


      "as if nothing were solid...and that would be the end of the world, not fire and brimstone, but goo."--Rand
    3. Re:Crashing back to Terra, er, Earth... by DebianRcksLindowsLie · · Score: 4, Funny

      Sounds like Lindows. $63,000 in sales in 2002. $6,700,000 spent in 2002. More than $100 spent for every dollar brought in! At least you know what happened to the money you spent on mp3.com stock.

      This is why you use OGG.

    4. Re:Crashing back to Terra, er, Earth... by rishistar · · Score: 2, Funny

      Who let Dr Evil in????

      --
      Professor Karmadillo Songs of Science
  2. Can't fool me... by hamisht · · Score: 5, Funny
    (click on "Adults 18+ only")

    You won't catch me that easily goatse boy

    1. Re:Can't fool me... by h0tblack · · Score: 5, Funny

      I didn't see the "18+" link, but was intrigued by "The Lycos 50:Most Searched Bush".

    2. Re:Can't fool me... by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Their adult search engine is useless. I am just not satisfied with semi-clothed women showing a nipple at most, so I searched on some of my favorite things:

      -cream pie
      -zoo
      -gagging
      -scat
      -hentai
      -tentacle rape

      All of these gave the following answer:

      We're sorry -- either we did not understand your query or we do not yet have matching results. We have served results for "sex."


      And searching for "bukkake" gave me this:

      You have entered a search term or phrase that may relate to unlawful content or material. Rouze only indexes and lists the best in legal adult content. Results have not been provided for your search term, but are for the search term "sex". Feel free to take advantage of these listings, revise your search, or check out the other features on Rouze. Now go get what you came here for!

      This is useless. It's not a porn search engine. It's more like John Ashcroft.
      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
  3. Why pay for it now by Psykechan · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'll just wait until they fail to renew the domain and just pay the 35 bucks.

    1. Re:Why pay for it now by LostCluster · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'll just wait until they fail to renew the domain and just pay the 35 bucks.

      Who's stupid enough to pay $35 a year to register a domain anymore?

    2. Re:Why pay for it now by useosx · · Score: 4, Funny

      No big company would ever forget to re-register their domain names.

    3. Re:Why pay for it now by Penguinshit · · Score: 3, Funny


      I'll buy it. Will they take my VALinux stock certificates in trade?

    4. Re:Why pay for it now by LostCluster · · Score: 4, Funny
  4. GRRRR by ErichTheWebGuy · · Score: 4, Funny

    That means Tripod might not be around anymore. WTF are the phishers supposed to use now?

    *sigh*

    Oh well, there's always geocities...

    --
    bash: rtfm: command not found
    1. Re:GRRRR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      Indeed, tough times.

      Who wants to host my www.paypal.com@josh24.tripod.com and www.wellsfargo.com@josh27.tripod.com?

    2. Re:GRRRR by LostCluster · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That means Tripod might not be around anymore. WTF are the phishers supposed to use now?

      Xoom got shut down when General Electric gave up on their failed NBCi project. Angelfire is also a part of Lycos so they'll likely get the same fate as Tripod.

      And then there was one... GeoCities is the last of the "free web hosting" companies left standing as an offshoot of Yahoo!.

    3. Re:GRRRR by Grakun · · Score: 4, Informative

      Xoom got shut down when General Electric gave up on their failed NBCi project. Angelfire is also a part of Lycos so they'll likely get the same fate as Tripod.

      And then there was one... GeoCities is the last of the "free web hosting" companies left standing as an offshoot of Yahoo!


      There are tons of free web hosting companies.

      When searching google for "free web hosting", notice how Xoom.com shows up on the first page. Although now they're "the smarter way to send money".

    4. Re:GRRRR by ErichTheWebGuy · · Score: 4, Informative

      Although now they're "the smarter way to send money".

      People oughtta update their links. Most of us know that Google bases result rankings largely on how people link to that site with the relevant keywords (that is why Google Bombing is possible).

      Apparently many sites still link to xoom.com with 'free web hosting' or similar. Just Google www.xoom.com then click the "Find web pages that link to www.xoom.com/" link.

      --
      bash: rtfm: command not found
    5. Re:GRRRR by Bill_Royle · · Score: 2, Funny

      The sooner the free hosts go out of business, the faster Googlebots will crawl.

  5. Downhill from here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Ok so I go there, great a link for adult content, how convenient...to get your company banned from most schools, libraries, and company networks.

    And on top of that, I can't even hit the back button (just keeps you on the front page) in firefox .8

    Is this really the right direction?

  6. Put this on eBay by devilspgd · · Score: 4, Funny

    Hell, I'll give at least $50. It's a bit high for an opening offer given the current lack of reputation, but I think it's fair.

    --
    Give a man a fish, he'll eat for a day, but teach a man to phish...
    1. Re:Put this on eBay by TechnologyX · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'll see your wager, and I'll raise you a quarter!

      oh you meant 50 dollars

      --
      Slashdot sucks
  7. Awrigght! by tunabomber · · Score: 4, Funny

    A campy, old-school web portal for sale! I hope they accept COD. It'd look great mounted on the wall above my wet bar with all the vintage neon beer signs. Maybe when I can afford it, I'll get an Altavista to put up next to it. That would rock.

    --

    pi = 3.141592653589793helpimtrappedinauniversefactory71 ...
    1. Re:Awrigght! by i+love+pineapples · · Score: 2, Funny

      A campy, old-school web portal for sale! I hope they accept COD.

      How about Beenz?

    2. Re:Awrigght! by LostCluster · · Score: 4, Funny

      How about Beenz?

      What about Flooz? I've got an eCard with Whoopi Goldberg's picture on it... how can that have become worthless?

    3. Re:Awrigght! by generationxyu · · Score: 2, Funny

      At least AltaVista has Babel Fish, which just added something like 20 new translators. Lycos has the "image hosted by tripod" thing, and that's about it.

      --
      I mod down pyramid schemes in sigs.
    4. Re:Awrigght! by Ralph+Wiggam · · Score: 2, Funny

      It would make a great gift for one of the remaining dotcom billionaires to buy for an out of work friend.

      "Happy birthday, buddy. How would you like to move your blog to Lycos.com?"

      -B

  8. Horray: First non-linux story in 6 hours by aardwolf204 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Horray! Its been 6 hours of reloading slashdot and finally we get a non-linux story.

    Sure, Sun's Java Desktop System was insightful.
    And Fedora Core 2 Test 3 was um, interesting.
    The Linux Desktop Summit 2004 article was informative (wish I got some maple syrup and a t-shirt)
    And the conspiricy theorys in the Turbolinux Licenses Windows Media 9 article were something to wrap my tinfoil hat around

    But thank god, slashdot has returned to normal. A sexy search engine story to wet my apatite. Wait, is it how great Google is for running on Linux?! (/me reads TFA). Ok, were safe. Hopefully in a few hours a fud-filled gmail article will come up, or even better cmdrtaco will post this one again for double the pleasure, double the fun.

    but seriously, about the maple syrup, hook me up.

    --
    Im dreaming ofa big bndwdth, That can resist the /.crowd.May ur days b merry & bright & may al
    1. Re:Horray: First non-linux story in 6 hours by cperciva · · Score: 3, Funny

      But thank god, slashdot has returned to normal. A sexy search engine story to wet my apatite.

      Just what you need... some wet calcium fluoride phosphate.

      Just the thing to whet one's appetite.

    2. Re:Horray: First non-linux story in 6 hours by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
      sounds like a song coming on...

      Sure, Sun's Java Desktop System was insightful.
      And Fedora Core 2 Test 3 was delightful.
      But there's no more Linux to show...
      Google IPO, IPO, IPO!

  9. Playboy by i+love+pineapples · · Score: 5, Funny

    Lycos is currently re-inventing itself as a portal for the new generation with the link to Playboy affiliate placed right on the front page (click on "Adults 18+ only").

    While I'm familiar with many a washed-out pop musician turning to Playboy to boost an aching career, I'd never imagine this trend to extend to websites...

  10. Largest domain selling amount? by PurifyTheMind · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I read once that business.com got the largest amount of money for being sold at something like eight million US dollars. If lycos.com came anywhere close to the 200,000,000 mark, that would be some kind of crazy record.

    1. Re:Largest domain selling amount? by LostCluster · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This won't exactly count as a pure-domain transaction because there's actually some remnants of a company attached to the domain name.

    2. Re:Largest domain selling amount? by dmehus · · Score: 5, Interesting

      No. Terra Networks wants to sell its entire Lycos, Inc. subsidiary for approximately $200 million -- not just the domain name.

      Lycos, Inc. includes: Angelfire, HTML Gear, Lycos Mail, Matchmaker, Quote.com, Raging Bull, Sonique, Tripod, Webmonkey/Hotwired, and Wired News. It also has partnerships to create several co-branded Web sites. So, there are very valuable assets here.

      My prediction: Ask Jeeves is likely thinking very heavily about acquiring Lycos to expand its distribution further. (It recently acquired Interactive Search Holdings for $343 million in cash and stock. ISH assets include Excite, iWon, My Search, and My Way, to name a few.) The more distribution Ask Jeeves has, the more money it can demand from Google -- which accounts for 70% of Ask Jeeves revenue. It currently takes 80 cents on the dollar, with Google taking 20 cents. With the purchase of ISH, Jeeves can probably demand 85. With Lycos too, it could quite easily get 90 cents. So, financially and strategically, Lycos would make sense for Jeeves.

      Other possible candidates who might be interested in Lycos include InfoSpace, Primedia subsidiary About, Inc., or possibly even Google itself.

      Lycos won't die -- it'll just change hands and be restructured. I guarantee it.

      Cheers,
      Doug

  11. What else can you do with a failed site? by LostCluster · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Got a failed domain that still has a few hundred thousand people a day typing it in forgetting that you bit the dust long ago? Turn it into a porn site and get some cash out of those otherwise useless hits... I can't even count the number of gone-under sites that have pulled that stunt.

    1. Re:What else can you do with a failed site? by CAIMLAS · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Absolutely.

      I can't even recall half of them anymore. There's just too many. It seems that there's more porn online now than anything else, let alone "ever before". Between p2p, broadband, and all the other 'traditional' means for aquiring the stuff, it's everywhere.

      Now, being someone that isn't a terribly big fan of the stuff (it's goofy), and being a fairly big fan of the material that was there beforehand (educational, interesting things, largely), I'm a bit disappointed. All the good stuff is getting crouded out by stuff that is decidedly lower brow. There just doesn't seen to be much of the "free culture" left from what the Internet was originally. Sure, there's a slew of IT-related stuff - slashdot, sf.net, freshmeat, tldp, et al - but what about traditional sciences? They're getting crouded out.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
  12. Lycos was awesome by xintegerx · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I only know the company only by their English web site - Lycos.com, having never spoken Spanish ever as far as I can remember.

    Lycos was very important to the world.

    They had:

    1) A web search engine. Who else had a web search engine besides Yahoo and AltaVista?

    2) A web hosting service. Who else had a web hosting service besides GeoCities and AngelFire?

    3) An e-mail service. Who else had an e-mail service besides Yahoo and Hotmail?

    4) Web games. Who else had web games besides Yahoo and MPlayer?

    5) News stories. Wait, no they didn't. I know Yahoo had those.

    All of the above was sarcastic.

    As you can see, in all five important areas, Lycos was not in the top of each one. Sure, you knew they had each of those, but they weren't leaders at all in ANYTHING. Their idea seemed to be to JUST EXIST and the millions of people on the Internet couldn't just all flock to Yahoo or AltaVista, right? There would always be room for Lycos, right? Even without R&D? A portion of the Internet would use Lycos regardless of competition, and as Internet use grows, Lycos would grow in popularity, right?

    Uh, no. They thought, if there are 5 stores in a mall and they are one of them, passerbys, who were in the mall for one of the other stores, many of htem would still visit Lycos, right? Or at least look in. Makes a lot of sense.

    However, the Internet is not like that. You could place a store next door to a competitor and steal his visitors. You can place a phonebook ad and steal your competitors visitors as their clients check the phonebook for your competitor's phone number but see your ad next to it. With the internet, an analogy is links connecting the dots. HOWEVER, the problem is, THERE ARE NO LINKS TO COMPETITORS. In other words, if you visit one guy's site, HE WILL NOT HAVE ANY LINKS POINTING TO HIS COMPETITOR'S SITE. Furthermore, all links will be designed to keep you INSIDE HIS OWN SITE. Therefore, actually LIMITING your awareness of other sites.

    So, Lycos thought (apparently by their lack of R & D) that they would just advertise and exist and as people flock to Yahoo and Google, they would get a share. Uh.. NO?

    The one major remaining portal is Yahoo. They are still leaders in e-mail, games, bought GeoCities, searching, and they had news on their site as long as I can remember. All of Yahoo!'s competitors just 'existed'. Just like hundreds of businesses 'exist' but nobody cares about them. Yahoo made you involved in their life. Yahoo is still kicking, having bought Overture, GeoCities, WebRing, Inktomi, HotJobs: God knows what else.

    Even now, with Google doing what they do, Yahoo! is still the overall winner and success story.

    1. Re:Lycos was awesome by OldMiner · · Score: 4, Informative

      I'm going to be short on details because I'm a tad tired right now. But Lycos had a decent media search, back in the day. I clearly recall using it to find MIDIs because it kindly listed the sizes of the media with a link directly to the MIDI file. As such, it was normally pretty easy to pick out all of the different versions of a song there were out there. This was back when the advanced/media search was at lycospro.lycos.com, IIRC.

      Not having had a very impressive machine at the time, I can't state whether it was a decent enough MP3 search engine. Listening to them using whatever version of WinAmp existed at that time pretty much locked the machine to all other uses. But this did predate Napster, and people had to get their MP3s somehow.

      --
      You like splinters in your crotch? -Jon Caldara
    2. Re:Lycos was awesome by AzureLunatic · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Now, they've got "helpful" tools that try to install themselves without asking, and Wired News.

      When their obnoxious little programs ended up on my box for the second time (despite countermeasures) I decided that Wired News wasn't worth dealing with the aftermath of visiting.

    3. Re:Lycos was awesome by jesterzog · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Uh, no. They thought, if there are 5 stores in a mall and they are one of them, passerbys, who were in the mall for one of the other stores, many of htem would still visit Lycos, right? Or at least look in. Makes a lot of sense.

      I find this analogy quite interesting. It's similar in a way to one of the interesting things that General Motors apparently does, which I hadn't realised until someone pointed it out to me. Presumably it works for General Motors, though.

      The theory is that if there are five brands of car on the market, then people who are shopping for a new car will pick one of those five, based on which one they prefer out of the available choices. If there are fifteen brands of car on the market, people will do the same. They have more choice, of course.

      On the other hand, if ten of those brands happen to be owned by General Motors, then the chances are much higher that someone will choose a General Motors brand. It might not be completely even -- they might only get half of the custom instead of two thirds of it -- but the illusion of extra choice will prevent people from realising that a lot of those options are actually very similar to each other.

      It's not entirely comparable, but the strategy seems to imply that sometimes just being there may be enough to get a significant amount of attention. As long as you're good enough to be considered. (That said, I agree that it clearly didn't work for Lycos.)

  13. Where aren't they now... by LostCluster · · Score: 5, Informative

    Here's a quick field guide to some of the other pre-Google search engines...

    AltaVista: Since it was born as Digital Equipment Corp.'s reasearch project rather than an attempt to make money, Compaq didn't exactly know what they had aquired. AltaVista suffered from an outdated ranking system and stale crawl data as it got passed from investment group to investment group. They ended up as a small fish in the Yahoo food chain at the end.

    Excite: After merging with original cable-modem ISP @home, it all went down hill. An unprofitable website merged with a cable modem ISP who hadn't quite yet figured out that throtling user's bandwidth is a requirement to stay alive. In the end, they ended up selling a service for a price than less than it cost... and into the dot-bomb recycle bin they went. The Excite.com site is still up, but it's really just a less ad-intrusive version of iWon, and shares a lot in common with MyWay.com who is also from the same people. iWon, is of course known as a spreader of semi-spyware.

    Inktomi/"HotBot": Inktomi got bought up by Yahoo!, and now powers the web results once again after being deposed by Google for a time.
    HotBot.com was always just a licensee of Inktomi's data. It started as a spinoff to Wired Magazine, and ended up getting included in the sale of Wired News to Lycos. It's still ticking now as a unified interface for three of the web crawlers left standing... Inktomi, Google, and Ask Jeeves. They most likely will be part of this spinoff of what's left of Lycos.

    Infoseek: Infoseek sold out at the height of the market to the mouse ears. Disney had the bright idea of uniting all of their web content under the Go.com brand, which also would allow all of the Disney-owned sites to share Go.com cookies so that a registered user's cookie from abc.go.com could also be read by espn.go.com. Infoseek would become the search engine portal that'd power the www.go.com portal at the center of the Go Network. A few years later, Disney realized their mistake. Nobody cared about the search engine portal... so they gutted the Go Network brand and turned www.go.com into nothing but a bare-bones portal with a Google-powered search. Inktomi as a search engine is no more. However, they did keep go.com domain in use in order to keep that cookie-sharing going.

    GoTo.com: They were never really a search engine, they just licensed Inktomi's results. However, they invented the pay-per-click-search-placement model years before Google came on the scene. When Disney launched the Go Network, they sued saying that the Disney logo and branding was too close to their own, and won forcing the Go Network to change its logo. Shortly after that, they changed their name to Overture and got out of the direct search portal business. They've since been snapped up by Yahoo. Overture technically owns AltaVista just to show where they are in the pecking order over there.

    1. Re:Where aren't they now... by LostCluster · · Score: 4, Informative

      Is that why CNet is using that *.com.com thing?

      Yep. Same concept... it's easier to share cookies when all the sites are subdomains of the same actual domain name. CNET's idea of buying up cool-sounding domain names like news.com and radio.com seems to have totally backfired...

    2. Re:Where aren't they now... by dmehus · · Score: 3, Informative

      Verity, Inc. bought the enterprise Web search assets of Inktomi and Infoseek and is commonly used as the enterprise search appliance of choice at many large corporations. It renamed the product Verity Ultraseek.

      Excite is now owned by Interactive Search Holdings, along with iWon and My Way. ISH is now a wholly owned subsidiary of Ask Jeeves, which Jeeves paid $343 million for in March.

      Cheers,
      Doug

  14. Microsoft by Tablizer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    My bet is that Microsoft will buy it. They have to do something with all that cash, and they want a search engine and more (redirected) traffic for MSN, which they are having trouble growing. If you cannot earn eyeballs, buy 'em.

    1. Re:Microsoft by CAIMLAS · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hrmmmmm I doubt it. not with that "18+ only" on their front page. MS is too conservative and mainstream for that - they'd get a huge "exploitation" hit from feminists, conservatives, and what have you. Granted ,they could change that, but we'll see.

      As a search technology, lycos offers little. As a portal, even less (as MS likely already gets thousands of hits at their home page).

      I imagine that MS's search engine attempts might start off as licensing Google's technology and 'enhancing' it. The enhancement would be, I suspect, something along the lines of the slashdot 'section' boxes that you can add to your site.

      Want an RSS feed? search.microsoft.com would have it... I suspect they'd have an RSS for damned near anything you'd want, with a minimalistic/google-like initial setup.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
  15. Google Cache by brucmack · · Score: 4, Informative

    Google cache of lycos.com.

    The "reinvention" mentioned in the original posting seems to only apply to the US site, and other countries appear to be automatically redirected. So here's the link for anyone who can't see the site.

    The sites are completely different, it isn't just the adults 18+ link.

  16. For Canadians by Ctrl-Z · · Score: 4, Interesting

    For any Canadians out there, the only way I can figure out to view the lycos.com page is through the Google cache. It seems that you get redirected to lycos.ca otherwise.

    --
    www.timcoleman.com is a total waste of your time. Never go there.
  17. Smart Move by Sardak · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Lycos is currently re-inventing itself as a portal for the new generation with the link to Playboy affiliate placed right on the front page (click on "Adults 18+ only").

    They've obviously realized like so many others that porn is the real gold mine of the internet.

  18. http://models.lycos.com by flyingace · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I hope this is not the end of http://models.lycos.com/

    1. Re:http://models.lycos.com by adamofgreyskull · · Score: 2, Informative

      There's always Page 3 ..

  19. Darl should snap it up by Magickcat · · Score: 4, Funny

    Maybe SCO should buy it. Both companies have a similar client base and future.

    None whatsoever.

    --

    Si tacuisses philosophus mansisses. If you had kept quiet, you would have remained a philosopher.

  20. Clever Ploy by FrankDrebin · · Score: 4, Funny

    1. Put lame website up for sale.
    2. Place story on Slashdot.
    3. Show buyers the wicked hit counts.
    4. Profit!
    --
    Anybody want a peanut?
  21. Check those numbers, please by Baumi · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The market scorecard shows it exactly... $200 billion going in, $12.5 billion going out. They misplaced 15/16th of the value that they started with.

    It's $12.5 billion going in, $200 million going out. Which means they've wasted more than 59/60th of the value.

    As an aside: I don' think there ever was a $200 billion Dot-Com-Merger, was there? (How much was AOL-TimeWarner again?)

    Jens

    1. Re:Check those numbers, please by the+sabster · · Score: 4, Informative

      The AOL-TW merger was proposed at $124 Billion.

      It ended up going through at either $106 or $109 Billion.

    2. Re:Check those numbers, please by Baumi · · Score: 2, Informative

      That's right - poor wording on my part. They didn't diminsh the value - they just wasted money in the first place by buying Lycos for way too much.

      I remember wondering about that amount even back then: I mean, in 2000, Lycos was on its way down already. Perhaps it was different in the US, but over here, people were using Yahoo or Altavista, nobody I knew used for searching or news. (And yes, there is a German Lycos site.)

      Interesting aside: Some time ago, Lycos launched a huge media campaign to regain popularity - apparently without much success. Google OTOH managed to become the most popular search engine mainly by woord of mouth. (I know Lycos is a portal, but their ad campaign - the one with the dog - focused on the searching part of things.)

  22. Lycos... by k4_pacific · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Lycos is the eighth largest web portal, with over three hundred subscribers. Their site features time and weather, email, search, an "About Us" page and a Terms of Service page.

    Definitely a bargain at $200 million.

    Maybe someone could turn it into a sort of "living museum" so future generations can experience an actual late 20th century web portal. Little footnotes* indicating areas of historical interest could be added.

    *Like this one. Footnotes are used to convey additional information without interrupting the flow of the text.

    --
    Unknown host pong.
  23. Uh, k. by jcuervo · · Score: 5, Funny
    Fun Search:
    The Lycos 50 Muppet Characters

    1. Elmo
    2. Kermit the Frog
    3. Cookie Monster
    4. Big Bird
    5. Grover

    6. Gonzo
    7. Miss Piggy
    8. Ernie
    9. Oscar the Grouch
    10. Bert
    Unless the hardcore pr0n is Bert and Ernie in a three-way with Miss Piggy...
    --
    Assume I was drunk when I posted this.
  24. Partying like it's 1999 by NewtonsLaw · · Score: 3, Funny

    I guess the beancounters over at Lycos are still partying like it's 1999.

    Can someone go over and tell them about the dot-com bust please?

    $200m indeed -- bah!

  25. Re:Say that again? by dmehus · · Score: 3, Informative

    Ask Jeeves distributes paid advertising (both in search results and contextually targeted ads on content pages) from the Google AdWords program. Ask Jeeves takes 80 cents per click on a text ad from the AdWords program, with Google taking a 20 cent cut.

    Hope this helps,
    Doug

  26. 18+ White Noise by DakotaSandstone · · Score: 4, Funny
    Pr0n is the background noise of the Internet. Where there is no signal, there is pr0n. Radio has static, we have pr0n.

    If this is true, what does this mean for lycos.com?

    --
    Nothing is so smiple that it can't get screwed up.
  27. Special News Report by NIN1385 · · Score: 5, Funny

    In other news this evening, the Lycos dog was killed when someone typed in the words "1986 Chevrolet Caprice Front Bumper" into the search field and hit the "Go Get It" button. Services will be held at the fire hydrant outside of Arlington National Cemetary at noon.

    --

    If carrots got you drunk, rabbits would be fucked up. - Comedian Mitch Hedberg R.I.P. 03/30/68-2/24/05
  28. Lycos re-invention by Vexware · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I do not know if only I feel this way about the look of the new Lycos website design, but do you not think it looks somewhat cheap and unprofessional, in the style of "search engines" which are in fact just advertisement whores appearing in various pastly infamous domains? The front page looks hideous as the preponderant yellow does not look nice at all. As for the links of 'top searches', it could be "helpful", but at the same time, what that section mostly does is clutter up my screen with links I mostly do not care about. The links to Lycos' other services are existant albeit the general layout and design makes the page look amateurish and cheap.

    The search results page is not too bad, and the news search results page bearing the same design, then that aspect is alright in a sufficient way; but the image search results page definitly loses out to Google 's in my opinion -- the system warned me that the files I was about to view contain adult material, when in fact they didn't, and the search results' layout itself was idiotic. As for the shopping section, I believe Google's Froogle does a good stab at this section, and even more impressively so since it is more recent than Lycos'. I also forget to mention the ridiculous web hosting service, which is just truly unsatisfying in terms of space and service itself.

    All in all, I think Lycos is just relying on its reputation now, just as MSN Search is relying on users utilizing Internet Explorer's search function. The problem is, it is already beaten by far by Yahoo! and probably Google will progressively transform into a web portal itself, albeit a much less cluttered one than the currently existing platforms. If you ask me, Lycos' death will not be anytime soon though, because there are still thousands of people relying on its services for now; still, it is just a matter of time I would say.

    --
    "Really, I'm not out to destroy Microsoft. That will just be a completely unintentional side effect" -- Linus Torval
  29. Lycos... by Good+Sumerian · · Score: 3, Funny

    Come get some.

  30. explains the spam then by martin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    from lycos.com. All I get is junk advertising services etc.

    Sigh what a sad world - the only that's known to make money is pr0n....

  31. 18+ by adamofgreyskull · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm the least prudish of anyone I know, my first graduate paycheck may well be spent on a terabyte SCSI array for my porn collection.

    However, 2 links from the lycos home-page are naked boobs, and 3 links away are 5meg hardcore porn clips. I think this is a bit much. If I want to see "Hot Moms" getting banged I'm quite capable of finding them myself using Google. This involves an active step on my part.

    Is it just me, or is this a bad thing?

  32. Remember those old Lycos ads... by abernathy · · Score: 2, Funny
    Imperious nerd: Lycos!

    Big dog: Wwwooof!

    Imperious nerd: Fetch me a business model!

    Big dog: Wwwooof! [Whooshing noise as faithful LYCOS rushes off into the jungles of cyberspace (oooooh!) to fetch his master a business model.]

    [Dead air]

    Imperious nerd: Lycos? LYCOS?