paul kedrosky

Congrats Vancouver Innovation: Avi and Andrew's DabbleDB gets funded

Congrats to Avi and Andrew for getting funded. I'm saying congrats to Vancouver's innovation with this post as well, and it's great to see that local Vancouver VC firm Ventures West did this deal.

Paul Kedrosky points to Om's scoop, and calls DabbleDB the first Enterprise 2.0 company. I suspect Paul's position at VenturesWest had a thing or two with making this deal happen.

I planned to post on this tomorrow, but I see the news is already breaking, and Om has the scoop: the venture firm Ventures West in Vancouver has closed a Series A financing round of Dabble DB. He has it mostly right, including the huge opportunity for Andrew Catton's and Avi Bryant's startup. Let's call this the first truly "Enterprise 2.0" company.

One small correction/comment: The investment size is only Om's guess, and the actual dollars will not be announced -- whether larger or smaller. 

Can the local venture and innovation communities continue to churn out winners? I hope so :P

Lots of domains...because it's cheap and easy

Paul Kedrosky ran a domain ownership survey, and concludes:

It is a tri-modal distribution, however, with there being a subset who own no domains, another cluster with 2 to 5 domains, and yet another cluster of people who own 10 or more domains. For the sake of argument, I'll characterize the three groups as people who don't care about domains, pragmatists who have a couple for their own reasons, and pros & speculators who own many domains for investment purposes. Infectious Greed: And the Survey Says .... You Like Domains

Purely on anecdotal evidence, I agree with the three groups (I fit squarely into the the pragmatist group), but disagree with the cut-off points. Kedrosky put 10 or more as the number which made someone a pro/speculator. I have more than 10 domains, based solely on the fact that it's cheap ($9US for full-featured domain management, somewhere around $3US for just registering) and easy (use Blogger or a myriad of other easy to use services and get a site up very quickly).

And in part, it's about topical focus and brand. I was discussing with Troy how he wants to structure a new site, which is actually more like 5 or 6 sites. Each site becomes a filter/tag/container for topically related content. Much like a Technorati tag (or other aggregation URL) shows content slices from everywhere, people are using domains to indicate the same thing.

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