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Feedburner Sale to Google Confirmed

Techdirt is reporting that the rumored sale of Feedburner to Google has been confirmed. "Feedburner is in the closing stages of being acquired by Google for around $100 million. The deal is all cash and mostly upfront, according to our source, although the founders will be locked in for a couple of years."

3 of 117 comments (clear)

  1. Eat my dirt, techcrunch! by mfaras · · Score: 4, Informative

    I googled techdirt, and I searched their blog, and there's nothing about google and feedburner, take a look:
    http://www.techdirt.com/search.php?q=feedburner

    So I'm betting scuttlemonkey typo'ed it, and it's actualy techcrunch, as the link says.

    Please correct the summary.

    --
    Eat my dirt.

  2. Re:VCs have changed? by foniksonik · · Score: 4, Informative

    Definitely changed... looking for 3x plus on mid-terms.

    I was at a startup for 4 years that just sold last year for 165M... w/ 60M in VC money. The early investors got 3X the late got 1.5X but at a better pricepoint (they could buy more). First round was 15M, second was 30M, 3rd was 15M. I made 8.5K via options exercised as a lowly employee on a 1.5k pricepoint (0.15 per share, 9650 shares approx) but VCs got 3x that on average with several million shares each at different prices.

    --
    A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
  3. RSS for quick summaries and checking updates by Quevar · · Score: 5, Informative

    Usually when I am *online* and want to look at the news from a site... I don't grab their RSS feed, I just go to their site... You seem to be missing the idea of RSS feeds. You shouldn't be grabbing the RSS feed, your application should be and displaying the information to you so you don't have to go to their site to see what has changed. I have about 20 different sites that I pay attention to. It takes a noticeable amount of time to go to all twenty sites. So, I subscribe to their RSS feeds and when they change the content, I will see that I haven't looked at an article. Without even going to their site, I can can look at the headline and a brief summary to see if I want to read more. Many times, just a headline and a summary is all I want. I can glance through the summary in a small fraction of the time it takes to open up all the sites.

    Another way of thinking about it is for sites that don't change much. Imagine I have 50 friends who have websites that I want to check. Most of my friends only update their pages a couple times a month, but that means that on average, two sites are updated a day. I don't want to load them all every day, only when they change and RSS gives me the ability to know when they have changed.

    5 years ago, I could surf for hours at a time. Now, I have read all the aritcles I want in about 30 minutes a day and still keep up with stuff just as much.