When GeoCities Grabbed the Web's Golden Ticket–A Trip Down Silicon-Valley-Has-No-Memory Lane

In Web years, BoomTown is now officially 143 years old. Why? Well, I was the one who got to write the big Page One piece in The Wall Street Journal after GeoCities was sold to Yahoo in January of 1999 for $5 billion in stock. GeoCities was, in its way, the Facebook of its time. But, instead of “friends,” its users were “homesteaders.” As Cher so eloquently sings: Those were the days my friend, we thought they’d never end. Except they did. Yahoo announced yesterday that it was closing the GeoCities unit down, part of new CEO Carol Bartz’s war against useless assets at the troubled company. But let’s take a stroll down memory lane, shall we?
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Pay For News Online? Really? Yes, Says U.S. News.

U.S. News & World Report, which used to be a weekly news magazine, then a biweekly one and is now a monthly publication, is going to try producing a weekly magazine once again. Online. And it wants you to pay up to read it. I appreciate the effort, but I don’t see how this one pans out.

U.S. News & World Report Leaves the News Race to Time, Newsweek

Once upon a time, U.S. News & World Report tried positioning itself as a competitor to Newsweek and Time. But those days are long gone: Now the publication is best known as a publisher of lists. And it’s acknowledging that fact by moving to a monthly publishing schedule.