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by grumpy8
2344 days ago
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> market (or technology) pivots into the startup I think Apple, Google, Twitch & Uber (I don't know enough of the others) were clearly building the right thing for an early market.. I wouldn't say the market "switched to them", it just became more mainstream. |
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When the Apple I came out, there wasn't much you could do with it. It was only the invention of Visicalc (which itself couldn't have happened until the Apple was out) that gave businesses a reason to buy one. The same dynamic applies to nearly all "platform" companies, which is why it's so hard to make a new platform.
When Google was first developed in 1995, the dominant way to find things on the web was Yahoo. That's because in 1995, the best way to find things on the web was a human-curated directory. The press reported Google's dominance as because of its proprietary algorithms, but what makes algorithms better than humans? I'd argue that there were two main forcing functions, both of which were a result of the web's scale continuing to grow: 1) as the web gets better, you physically cannot hire enough people to review and categorize it and 2) as the number of links gets higher, the effectiveness of counting links as a ranking factor improves. PageRank and PageRank-like algorithms are actually really ineffective on sparse datasets (trust me, I've tried, while at Google). So it was the growth of the web itself that led to algorithmic search engines becoming better than human-curated directories.
Game-streaming wasn't really a thing when Justin.TV came out in 2007. It required a number of other changes in the environment - better access to broadband, faster GPUs, a gaming populace that was thrown out of work by the Great Recession - before it got big, circa 2010/2011. Justin.TV, as a lifestreaming company, was well positioned to realize and capitalize on this trend, even though it didn't exist when they founded the company.
Uber started as a way to call a black cab via app. They tried it multiple times between the company's first prototype (in 2008) and the official product launch (in 2010). Mobile GPS wasn't good enough in 2008 to be on constantly: it would drain the phone's battery faster than the power adaptor could charge it. Additionally, they benefitted a lot from the Great Recession, which meant that a number of drivers were newly unemployed and seeking a way to make easy money. (The same applies to the rest of the sharing economy.)