First off, there's Pollground, a site in which users submit multiple-choice questions, and the crowd answers. As of this post, one poll on the site thinks Pollground is more likely to succeed than fail, and another says that it's the Y startup that's least likely to succeed. Oh, and of course, the site has been reddited.
An anonymous reader pointed me to a Flagr map for Y Combinator Team Headquarters. On this map are four companies you know about, but one you may not: Thinkature. There's just a stub page there now, but it promises "online collaborative thinking" and the end of "do not erase." It also, apparently, "puts the keke on the face." I don't know what that means.
I got word that Pairwise is another Y Company. This was "confirmed" on Wikipedia but has since been deleted. Take this with a grain of salt, because that same link presents Litepost as a Y Company, which it is not. Pairwise seems to run two sites, likebetter and hatemore.
Update: Pairwise is confirmed as a Y company (referred to as "LikeBetter" in the FAQ).
Thursday, July 27, 2006
Monday, July 10, 2006
Mystery Abounds! The Next Y Company: Clustrix
Zak Wilson (owner of doomed startup) pointed out to me that Clustrix is the next Y Company to surface. Judging from the dates on their blog, they are probably a member of the Y Combinator Winter Founders Program. Their website is essentially empty, at least to the public. They do, however, have a help wanted page.
News of this company started on the reddit-sphere when dooka made a comment implying that Clustrix was a good company that was started by business types and not hackers. Paul Graham then responded, "Clustrix at this point is 100% hackers." Who are (or were) these business types and where'd they go?
It also seems that the first post on their blog, titled "Coming to Mountain View," which I saw last night, has vanished. This was the post that mentioned Y Combinator. (There are some pictures which were a part of the post that are still online.) I can only assume it was deleted. But why?
So what does Clustrix do? I don't know. I've dropped the company an email, but heard no response yet.
News of this company started on the reddit-sphere when dooka made a comment implying that Clustrix was a good company that was started by business types and not hackers. Paul Graham then responded, "Clustrix at this point is 100% hackers." Who are (or were) these business types and where'd they go?
It also seems that the first post on their blog, titled "Coming to Mountain View," which I saw last night, has vanished. This was the post that mentioned Y Combinator. (There are some pictures which were a part of the post that are still online.) I can only assume it was deleted. But why?
So what does Clustrix do? I don't know. I've dropped the company an email, but heard no response yet.
Wednesday, July 05, 2006
Wufoo Likely Received $100,000 in Angel Round
According to Marshall Kirkpatrick of TechCrunch, "Wufoo is funded by two angel investors and the VC firm Y Combinator. That funding added up to $118,000." I assume the $18K is from Y Combinator ($6000 times three founders). That leaves $100K from the two angels.
I brought up the possibility of Wufoo receiving funding in an earlier post.
I brought up the possibility of Wufoo receiving funding in an earlier post.
Wufoo Launches
Today Ininifty Box Inc. announced the launch of their form building application, Wufoo. "After moving to Silicon Valley, 6 months of development, and many many caffeinated beverages, we’re proud to announce that Wufoo has launched and is open to the public," says the new Wufoo blog.
The company is offering a range of plans priced from free to $199 per month. Wufoo is currently the only Y company actually selling a service directly from their website. (TextPayMe does charge users a small fee if the user requests a paper check payment.)
The company is offering a range of plans priced from free to $199 per month. Wufoo is currently the only Y company actually selling a service directly from their website. (TextPayMe does charge users a small fee if the user requests a paper check payment.)
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