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More Year-End ComScore Numbers

TechCrunch has an overload of charts showing the end-of-the-year numbers for Yahoo and Ask.com.

For Ask, Ask.com’s unique visitors increased for the year by 54%, from 29.8 million in November 2006 to 46 million last month. Ask may still be having market share troubles, but more users means a healthier company that isn’t going away anytime soon.

Ask’s other properties mostly enjoyed decent growth, with search results pages going up from about 20 million to about 30 million, Image Search up 91%, Spain and German up 2063% and 844%, respectively, AskCity up 548%, and the only down properties are Maps (really replaced by AskCity) and Weather (replaced by the same functionality in Ask’s 3D search results). Ask’s new search results are pushing traffic to its search verticals, growing them in a disproportinate way that Google wishes it had.

For Yahoo, TechCrunch had to run two seperate charts, showing the top growing properties and top declining ones, since there are so many. Yahoo’s U.S. properties are mostly on neither list, with small percentage raises (and a few small drops) leaving them stagnant. Yahoo Answers is one major exception, more than doubling its traffic. Yahoo’s biggest success was in Taiwan and Hong Kong, where search was up 7,452% and 6,763%, respectively.

Finally, TechCrunch ran this chart, showing the stagnation of Yahoo Mail and the rise of Gmail:

gmail-vs-yahoo-mail.png

As you can see, Yahoo Mail went slightly up and down, and finished 3.21% up for the year. On that same page, projections show Gmail topping Yahoo Mail at current growth rates by November 2010. However, that projection assumes you are an idiot, because it also shows Yahoo Mail with the same amount of growth.

Yes, growth is common, but Gmail can’t take over the market completely without Yahoo losing users. Plus, growth never continues forever, especially at rates like this. More likely, Gmail will take some users from Yahoo and Microsoft, both of its competitors will grow slightly, and this war will still be going on well past 2010.

December 27th, 2007 Posted by Nathan Weinberg | Services, Ask, Yahoo, Microsoft, Email, Gmail, General | no comments



Backwards Song - Next YouTube Hit

Here’s another video that is rocketing up the charts on YouTube, assisted by a link from Boing Boing. In this video, a guy sings a song backwards while performing some very specifically choreographed movements, then plays the video backwards so you can hear the original song while watching the actions performed in reverse.

Just watch it, dammit:

What an amazing amount of work probably went into this, learning how to sing in a way that would work when reversing the audio, then planning it out and executing it flawlessly. Great job.

December 27th, 2007 Posted by Nathan Weinberg | YouTube, Services | 2 comments

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links for 2007-12-27

December 27th, 2007 Posted by Nathan Weinberg | Bookmarks | no comments