tr.im goes belly up?

trim app logoi’ve really appreciated the use of tr.im as a “URL-shortening” service. Great when you want to email a very long web address (eg those elluminate sessions).. tr.im was definitely my favourite. But then they joined the ranks of the web2 dead. Because there was no way to “monetise” their service, and twitter wouldn’t buy them, and twitter wouldn’t refer to them.. that was it, they’d had enough.

So here’s a lesson for people who upload their data to all those web2 services: when they shut down, they decided not to let anyone in to get a backup of all the URL’s we’ve sent out. Within a couple of days they had opened their doors again, “overwhelmed by messages of support”. Guess they were feeling lonely and unappreciated as well as insufficiently remunerated.

light end tunnel b -The lesson remains however.. web2 and cloud computing shares some qualities with our cumulus and cirrus weather friends.. they can dissolve into thin air. You need to back everything up. Keep copies of all your social computing on your own machine as well (if it’s worth keeping that is).

On the other hand, while free hosted web apps (such as flickr, youtube, tr.im, blogger etc) can give you indefinite free access, open source projects leave you more in charge over the long term.. if you have the source code running on your own server, you can keep going even if the company goes down. If the community is strong enough, someone else can take over the code.

i’d be interested to hear what you think about the difference between free hosted web apps and their open source counterparts. Maybe this makes no sense and you’d rather i write about something different? Tell me. Drop me a line here in the comment box  ;-]

Alan Levine started a list of Dearly Departed web2 apps (was it the web2 graveyard?).. but i can’t find it right now.

Relevant Links:

photo credit: (creative commons at flickr) Thanks: Hiking Artist.


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Comments (1)

Jill KoppelSeptember 17th, 2009 at 19:15

What a trap for young (and older) players. I’m still hand wringing over the sudden demise of Bubbleshare. It was the most user-friendly of all the Web2 apps that I’ve used in the last year. And I’ve splashed bubble slide shows and Bubble “sliders” over every page of our wiki CNLCTalks. The students love them. Now what? Can’t seem to download my albums as they advise. So I’ll have to go through all the original photos and edit, cull, export and upload to flickr (which I’m not immediately impressed with). What next?! I get this feeling of forboding about the ephemeral nature of the cloud…

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