Remove 2003 Remove Aggregator Remove Hosting Remove Naming
article thumbnail

29 Seriously Inspiring Interviews For Aspiring Entrepreneurs

YoungUpstarts

21, 1991: Even Oprah Winfrey’s detractors should give her credit for forging a career now worth billions after starting out as a less-than-popular local morning talk show host from a traumatic background. Oprah Winfrey at Academy of Achievement , Feb. Sheila Johnson at Prendismo Collection , Dec. Chuck Feeney at RTE Radio 1 , Jan.

article thumbnail

Lessons Learned: Sharding for startups

Startup Lessons Learned

Imagine you want to store data about customers, each of whom has "last name" field in your database. The problem should be familiar to anyone who plays Scrabble: not all letter are equally likely to be used as the first letter of someones name. Give each entity a name. For example, consider this simple scheme.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

5 Content Marketing Strategies for Niche B2B Industries

ConversionXL

They took a host of seemingly fragmented industry changes—customers demanding more from their vendors, customer relationships lasting years instead of days, competing businesses appearing virtually every day—and found the common thread that tied them together: more companies and customers were switching to subscriptions. Conclusion.

B2B 133
article thumbnail

Special: The 56 Israeli Companies Exhibiting in Mobile World Congress 2011

VC Cafe

Founded in 2003, ASOCS develops and markets MultiComms.processors that provide seamless connectivity over diverse wireless networks. Established back in 2003, Comarcom Ltd. Established back in 2003, Comarcom Ltd. Logia has the unique combination of being both a content aggregator and a billing aggregator.

Mobile 103
article thumbnail

The Series A crunch is hitting now. Have we even noticed?

pandodaily.com

A name like 500 Startups says it all. But the angels who’ve staked their funds on spreading bits of money all over the Valley are increasingly anxious that only 20 percent of their deals — in aggregate — will get the chance to keep going. More cash equals more entrepreneurs who get to start companies.