Humans tend to act as organic sorting machines, especially when it comes to cultural items. We love to label, tag, classify and analyse all sorts of artistic trends… the form, the sounds, the poses, the content.. judge, formulate …
somehow related
Intermediary who?
posted: 18/07/2011
The music market is, from all the art industries, the one which has probably suffered more changes and (forced) evolutions in the distribution and PR models over the last decade. Bleeding labels, piracy issues, market monopoles, streaming services …
Open photo
posted: 30/06/2011

Not that long ago we were talking about 500px, a new Flickr competitor with a great user interface who’s grabbing quite a lot of attention. And because Flickr hate seems to ever grow exponentially one of Yahoo’s ex-engineers, …














↓ Baitr
“Can a Startup Launcher Launch Itself?” A great rhetorical question that the guys @ LaunchRock asked themselves via their blog last January.
Everything started (although not really, but reached its climax) with the big buzz created around the start-up launch page of Hipster (usehipster.com). Something as simple as a sing-up page with a catchy name, a short URL and an amazing background.
Hipster hasn’t been the only startup using this basic viral loop to attract thousands of users before the launch.. others like Forkly, Socialcam.. and pretty much many start-ups mentioned on Techcrunch on a daily basis are currently using this system. We don’t really know what their services are about… they’re all social, easy to share, with location-based features… and that’s about it; but we sign-up don’t we?
Then with a bit of a laugh the guys @ Launchrock showed us all earlier this year how easy is to launch your own start-up. Because start-ups can certainly launch themselves.
How does it work? It’s actually fairly simple: after you sign up, we provide a custom, unique short URL that we encourage you to share out via email, social networks, etc. When somebody visits that URL and signs up, we can track it back to you and give you credit for it. After 3 people sign up with your link, you make our “priority access list” and we let you know via email.
…
If you’ve got a startup, a blog or really any website that you’re working on and you still haven’t put up a “launching soon” page, sign up so that you can start collecting users and encourage them to share your site. The sooner you sign up and get at least three friends to sign up, the sooner you’ll be able to use LaunchRock for yourself.
Baitr.co is the latest example of subtle irony towards the start-up 2.0 world, like Alexia Tsotsis puts it herself Baitr is another “viral launch page that does nothing but visualize your email falling into the abyss, isn’t at all useful. But it is funny“.
God knows how many pre-launch apps & pages we’ve signed-up for from Betali.st or MomB, will we ever get any answers back?