The Daily Chao

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March 21, 2012
My friend Dwight published a piece on his new car search startup, Carsabi, on the Atlantic!
theatlantic:

‘Everything Is Automated’: How Web Start-Ups Attack the Offline Economy

It’s no secret that most information is now internet accessible, including scientific facts, movie schedules, even the shape of personal networks. The degree to which the offline has online representation may have reached a tipping point, however, and a wave of startups are reacting to take advantage of it.
AirBnb’s documentation and brokerage of spare bedroom capacity is worth one billion dollars. ZocDoc allows the research and reservation of physician services. And any eatery from Michelin cuisine to the lowly taco truck has not only a digital footprint with hundreds of reviews, but increasingly delivery and ordering integration with startups such as OpenTable and ZeroCater. In short, the ecosystem of real world objects that can be tracked and manipulated electronically has reached the critical mass to allow totally new methods of product selection and purchase. I run a used car search engine, Carsabi, and in getting the company off the ground, I’ve learned three lessons about the new online economy. […]
With the physical world increasingly visible online, software can replace large teams to creating scalable business. Autotrader took decades to assemble the relationships required to list 1.6 million vehicles (about 64% of the market) in its web catalog — presenting dealership inventory involved individual outreach to each franchise. However, because most dealerships and classifieds are now online, Carsabi can crawl them directly and automatically, resulting in more than 1.8 million vehicles per month from the effort of two engineers and a few computers.
Read more.

My friend Dwight published a piece on his new car search startup, Carsabi, on the Atlantic!

theatlantic:

‘Everything Is Automated’: How Web Start-Ups Attack the Offline Economy

It’s no secret that most information is now internet accessible, including scientific facts, movie schedules, even the shape of personal networks. The degree to which the offline has online representation may have reached a tipping point, however, and a wave of startups are reacting to take advantage of it.

AirBnb’s documentation and brokerage of spare bedroom capacity is worth one billion dollars. ZocDoc allows the research and reservation of physician services. And any eatery from Michelin cuisine to the lowly taco truck has not only a digital footprint with hundreds of reviews, but increasingly delivery and ordering integration with startups such as OpenTable and ZeroCater. In short, the ecosystem of real world objects that can be tracked and manipulated electronically has reached the critical mass to allow totally new methods of product selection and purchase. I run a used car search engine, Carsabi, and in getting the company off the ground, I’ve learned three lessons about the new online economy. […]

With the physical world increasingly visible online, software can replace large teams to creating scalable business. Autotrader took decades to assemble the relationships required to list 1.6 million vehicles (about 64% of the market) in its web catalog — presenting dealership inventory involved individual outreach to each franchise. However, because most dealerships and classifieds are now online, Carsabi can crawl them directly and automatically, resulting in more than 1.8 million vehicles per month from the effort of two engineers and a few computers.

Read more.

 
  1. gazetaoriental reblogged this from theatlantic and added:
    About Atlantic Magazine:
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    “The degree to which the offline has online representation may have reached a tipping point (…)”Dit soort zinnen...
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    My friend Dwight published a piece on his new car search startup, Carsabi, on
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