A wise man told me “The success stories of today are the failure stories of 
tomorrow”, so yes Yahoo was successful what made it tick is worth writing about 
and what killed it (and is still killing it) is also worth writing about

 

Stephen 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
[email protected]
Sent: Friday, January 11, 2013 1:42 PM
To: Uganda Linux User Group
Subject: Re: [LUG] [OT] Yahoo was killed by ...

 

That's not necessarily true, though. There are plenty of examples where a 
company manages to change speciality completely, to great benefit. IBM 
originally produced things like meat slicers and scales. Nintendo was 
originally a lot of things, including a hotel chain and a taxi service. Nokia 
started its life as a manufacturer of paper, before expanding to rubber boots 
and tyres, and later... You know.

What made you famous doesn't have to become your fall, as long as you are 
progressive enough to reinvent yourself in the eyes of your customers.

Paul Bagyenda <[email protected]> wrote:

Finally read the original article. Very interesting, thanks for sharing. 

The lessons it contains seem to me to be universal. At the risk of (initially) 
sounding fatalistic, the story of Yahoo! once again confirms that in the rise 
to power and fame are the seeds sown for one's fall. I like that the author 
doesn't pretend that Yahoo! could have had a different fate. No, their eventual 
failure  came packaged with their initial success. It's the cycle. Also of 
course there are things that inevitably change with age. For instance, I don't 
think an old stodgy software firm is going to keep attracting star talent. It 
just doesn't happen like that. 

 

So, the most one can do (software company or otherwise) is try as much as 
possible to check one's tendency to hubris, particularly when one is doing 
well. I suspect that softens the dusk when it comes. 

 

P.

  

On Jan 07, 2 013, at 10:23, Reinier Battenberg 
<[email protected]> wrote:





 

I think it is more interesting to talk about things we can change (like Uganda) 
than to moan about the demise of a US corporation

 

 

On Monday 07 January 2013 08:06:03 [email protected] wrote:

An interesting comparison, Reinier. Yahoo! is a jack of all trades, but king of 
none.

That still leaves me with the question "why aren't they already dead?", though.

Reinier Battenberg <[email protected]> wrote:

HI Joseph,

 

You bring up a very interesting point, that is very valid in the Ugandan con 
text as well.

 

There are a lot of FLOSS users in Uganda, especially in the website building 
business: joomla, wordpress, drupal, ushahidi. A lot of people can offer you a 
site for a very reasonable price because they use free software.

 

Unfortunately there seem to be very few people that become active members of 
the community that comes with the tools they apply.

 

I think there are 2 reasons for this:

 

- "Why would you? It's free, I use is, and that's it." Very valid statement, 
but as you wont learn more about the internals of the tool you use, others will 
come on to the market and do exactly the same as you: download and install. 
This will make it harder for anyone who gets stuck at this level to compete.

 

- Very few people tend to specialise. On the average CV that we receive, if 
they were all true, most people in ICT in Uganda can do anything: >From Oracle, 
to PHP, from C++ to Networking all on 1 CV. If you know so many subjects, its 
pretty clear you can not be extremely good in any of them. And that is what a 
lot of employers are looking for: extremely good people.

 

So, point of the email: a lot of IT people in Uganda could compare themselves 
to Yahoo. (And btw, reading John Graham's posts is a very good idea when you 
are in IT.) And it would be great if in 2013 we can see more Ugandan names pop 
up in the forums on drupal.org (for example)!

 

rgds,

 

Reinier

 

 

On Sunday 06 January 2 013 21:37:38 Joseph Mutumi wrote:

Hello,

This is a bit off topic but wanted to share it anyway. Think about Yahoo before 
you
plan for this year.

Started the year by doing an audit on some of my accumulated login credentials.
I realized a lot of them use my yahoo email which I noticed I actually no 
longer use!
Yahoo in the news for all the wrong reasons; layoffs, product discontinuations, 
CEO
woos etc. What happened to all those profit speculations? So what killed Yahoo?

I did a search and came across this  <http://www.paulgraham.com/yahoo.html> 
http://www.paulgraham.com/yahoo.html
I think this post albeit a bit old, nails it, with one interesting insight 
being:
*Yahoo was killed because they didn't have a hacker-centric culture*

Ya hoo which used OSS failed to adopt OSS. OSS and the Linux stack is more than
downloading packages for free, its a culture. A proven successful business 
model and
work paradigm. If you believe your organization is using OSS but not adopted it 
watch
out 2013 may be just another bad year for you.

That said I hope a lot of the IT corps come to their senses and start backing 
community.
I hope LUG flourishes this year.

Happy New Year

 

-- 

rgds,

 

Reinier Battenberg

Director 

Mountbatten Ltd.

www.mountbatten.net

tel: +256 758 801749

twitter: @batje

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-- 

rgds,

 

Reinier Battenberg

Director 

Mountbatten Ltd.

www.mountbatten.net

tel: +256 758 801749

twitter: @batje

_______________________________________________
The Uganda Linux User Group: http://linux.or.ug

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 : http://kym.net/mailman/listinfo/lug
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The above comments and data are owned by whoever posted them (including 
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way.
_______________________________________________
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Send messages to this mailing list by addressing e-mails to: [email protected]
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The Uganda LUG mailing list is generously hosted by INFOCOM: 
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