Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by Mutinix 4938 days ago
I'm genuinely curious to know when and where the trend of naming companies or products by removing the vowels or random letters from a word started from. I've seen it in a number of places. Why? Is it because if they use the full word, it becomes too general and difficult to associate?
2 comments

I believe the success of flickr.com (registered in 2003, launched in 2004) kicked off the current vogue for these names, though there are earlier examples too:

http://www.branddialogue.com/diablogue/2006/06/names-that-hu...

Misspelled words -- especially shortened ones -- have certain persistent advantages as names for web companies. It's easier to find available domains; it's a unique word for search engines; it's short and therefore quick to type.

Of course there are disadvantages too... Twitter was originally called "Twttr" when it launched in 2006, but later restored the vowels:

http://techcrunch.com/2006/07/15/is-twttr-interesting/

Or the domain name they were interested in is being squatted upon.