Yahoo!
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Template:Infobox Company Yahoo! Inc. Template:Nasdaq is an American computer services company with a mission to "be the most essential global Internet service for consumers and businesses". It operates an Internet portal, a web directory and a host of other services including the popular Yahoo! Mail. It was founded by Stanford graduate students David Filo and Jerry Yang in January 1994 and incorporated on March 2, 1995. The company is headquartered in Sunnyvale, California.
According to Alexa Internet, a Web trends company, Yahoo is the most visited website on the Internet today. The global network of Yahoo websites received 3 billion page views per day as of October 2004.
History
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Yahoo started out as "Jerry's Guide to the World Wide Web" but eventually received a new moniker with the help of a dictionary. The name Yahoo is an acronym for "Yet Another Hierarchical Officious Oracle," but Filo and Yang insist they selected the name because they liked the general definition of a yahoo, as in Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift: "rude, unsophisticated, uncouth." Yahoo itself first resided on Yang's student workstation, "Akebono," while the software was lodged on Filo's computer, "Konishiki"—both named after legendary sumo wrestlers. The "yet another" phrasing goes back at least to the Unix utility yacc, whose name is an acronym for "yet another compiler compiler".
Yahoo had its initial public offering on April 12, 1996, selling 2.6 million shares at $13 each.
As Yahoo's popularity has increased, so has the range of features it offers, making it a kind of one-stop shop for all the popular activities of the Internet. These now include: Yahoo! Mail, a Web-based e-mail service, an instant messaging client, a very popular mailing list service (Yahoo! Groups), online gaming and chat, various news and information portals, online shopping and auction facilities. Many of these are based at least in part on previously independent services, which Yahoo has acquired - such as the popular GeoCities free Web-hosting service, Rocketmail, and various competing mailing list providers such as eGroups. Many of these take-overs were controversial and unpopular with users of the existing services, as Yahoo often changed the relevant terms of service. An example of this would be their claiming intellectual property over content on their servers, which the old companies had not.
Yahoo has now begun making partnerships with telecommunications and Internet providers - such as BT in the UK, Rogers in Canada and SBC in the US - to create content-rich broadband services to rival those offered by AOL. The company offers a branded credit card, Yahoo! Visa, through a partnership with First USA.
Beginning in late 2002, Yahoo quietly began to bolster its search services by acquiring competing technologies. In December 2002, it acquired Inktomi, and in July 2003, it acquired Overture Services, Inc., and through it, search sites AltaVista and AlltheWeb. On February 18, 2004, Yahoo dropped Google-powered results and returned to using its own technology to provide search results.
As of 2005 Yahoo!'s news message boards have gained somewhat of a cult following. Attached to every story is a discussion board, yet rarely are the posts pertinent to the story.
Important events
Please note that this list is merely partial.
- 1995: Ziff Davis Inc. launches the magazine Yahoo! Internet Life, initially as ZD Internet Life. The magazine was meant to accompany and complement the web site.
- February 7 2000: Yahoo.com brought to a halt for a few hours as it was being the victim of a distributed denial of service attack (DDoS). [1] (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/635444.stm) [2] (http://news.com.com/2100-1023-236621.html?legacy=cnet). On the next day, its shares rose about $16, or 4.5 percent as the failure was blamed on hackers rather than on an internal glitch, unlike what happened to eBay earlier.
- December 2002: Yahoo! Inc. starts acquisition of Inktomi Web search engine
- July 2003, Acquires Overture Services, Inc.
- January 19 2004: Yahoo! Inc. announces the formation of Yahoo! Research Labs (http://research.yahoo.com), a research organization focusing on the invention of new technologies and solutions for Yahoo. Yahoo's Head and Principal Scientist, Dr. Gary William Flake, leads the new organization.
- February 19 2004: Yahoo dropped Google-powered results, returning to its own results after a long time.
- March 2004: Yahoo launches its own search engine technology.
- March 1 2004: Yahoo announces (as cited in the New York Times article listed in the "References" section) that it will practice paid inclusion for its search service.
- March 25 2004: Yahoo acquires the European shopping search engine Kelkoo.
- December 15 2004: Yahoo launches beta version of its video search engine.
- February 9 2005 Yahoo!Launch is changed to Yahoo!Music, which still provides free music.
- February 15 2005 Yahoo establishes its European Headquarters in Dublin, Ireland with the creation of 400 new jobs. [3] (http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/Yahoo_chooses_Dublin_as_location_of_new_European_Headquarters)
- February 28 2005 Yahoo! launches a developer network (http://developer.yahoo.net/) giving an API to most of its search verticals.
- March 2 2005 Yahoo! completes 10 years of corporate existence. Gives out free ice cream coupons at Baskin Robbins to its users to celebrate its "birthday."
- March 20, 2005 Yahoo! acquires photo sharing service Flickr [4] (http://blog.flickr.com/flickrblog/2005/03/yahoo_actually_.html)
- April 7, 2005 Wikimedia Foundation announces Yahoo! support [5] (http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Press_releases/Wikimedia_announces_Yahoo_support)
- May 26, 2005 Yahoo! announces its new PhotoMail service
Yahoo-owned services
This is a partial list. For a complete listing of the services see List of Yahoo services (http://docs.yahoo.com/docs/family/more/).
Yahoo! Mail
Yahoo! Messenger
Yahoo! Search
Yahoo! Games
Yahoo! Finance
Yahoo! Groups
Yahoo! Maps
Yahoo! Music
Yahoo! Autos
Yahoo! Movies
Yahoo! Movies (http://movies.yahoo.com/) provides information on current movie theater releases, including showtimes, critical reviews and general popular opinion. It also offers information on a broad library of DVD/Video titles.
Yahoo! TV
Yahoo! TV (http://tv.yahoo.com/) is an online television listing service. It provides schedules, reviews, and information on television programs being shown throughout the United States and certain countries through the world. Local, cable, broadcast, and satellite listings are supplied, sorted by ZIP Code and provider. The website also serves as a portal for entertainment industry news.
Yahoo! 360º
Yahoo! Health
Yahoo! Personals
Yahoo! News
Yahoo! News (http://news.yahoo.com/) is an Internet-based news service. It features Top Stories, U.S. National, World, Business, Entertainment, Science, Health, Weather, Most Popular, News Photos, Op/Ed, and Local news. Most articles in Yahoo! News comes from Associated Press and Reuters, and numerous other news sources directly or via Yahoo! News.
Yahooligans!
- Yahooligans!, a kids' version of the web portal
- Link: http://www.yahooligans.com
GeoCities
Yahoo! Music / LAUNCH/LAUNCHCast
Yahoo! Musicis (http://music.yahoo.com/) a free music video website provided by Yahoo!. You must have a Yahoo! account to view many of the videos. The account is free, although it requires personal information.
In addition to music videos, Yahoo! Launch also provides a web radio service called Launchcast. This service is available for free with ads and limitation to listen to 600 songs per month; however a paid service with additional features is available, but currently only for U.S residents.
Yahoo! Hotjobs
Yahoo! Hotjobs is a leading internet employment listing site.
- Link: http://hotjobs.yahoo.com
Yahoo! Developer Network
- The Yahoo! Developer Network (http://developer.yahoo.net/) enables software developers to create applications that integrate with Yahoo through their XML-based APIs.
References
- "Yahoo to Charge for Guaranteeing a Spot on Its Index (http://www.nytimes.com/2004/03/02/business/02net.html)" The New York Times, March 2, 2004
See also
External links
- Official website (http://www.yahoo.com/)
- Yahoo! Directory (http://dir.yahoo.com/)
- Yahoo! Mail (http://mail.yahoo.com/)
- Yahoo! Mobile (http://mobile.yahoo.com/)
- Yahoo! Shopping (http://shopping.yahoo.com/)
- Yahoo! Visa (http://visa.yahoo.com/)
- Yahoo! Web Hosting (http://smallbusiness.yahoo.com/webhosting/)
- Yahoo! Music (http://music.yahoo.com/)
- Yahoo! Video Search (http://video.search.yahoo.com/)
- Yahoo! Search (http://search.yahoo.com/)
- Yahoo! 360° (http://360.yahoo.com/)
- Yahoo! News (http://news.yahoo.com/)
- Yahoo! News Beta (http://beta.news.yahoo.com/)
- Yahoo! - Yahoo! Inc. Company Profile (http://biz.yahoo.com/ic/48/48043.html)
- Yahoo! for Good (http://brand.yahoo.com/forgood/index.html)
- Data
- Yahoo! history (http://docs.yahoo.com/info/misc/history.html)
- Yahoo! Netrospective: 10 years, 100 moments of the Web (http://birthday.yahoo.com/netrospective/)
- Corporate milestones (http://docs.yahoo.com/info/pr/milestones.html)
- External timeline (http://www.robotwisdom.com/sites/yahoo.html)
- Yahoo! Facts, compendium of Yahoo! lore and get answers to traditions you’ve always wondered about (http://www.tempilang.org/news/index.php?p=350)
- The Search Engine Relevancy Challenge Results (http://www.rustybrick.com/rustysearch-results.php)Search engine trying to determine whether Google, Yahoo, MSN and Ask Jeeves is more relevant by whiting out out the name of the Search Engine returning the result. Instead it is possible to vote on a site's relevancy.da:Yahoo!
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