Does Anyone Care About Their Broadband Portal?
from the there's-a-world-wide-web-out-there... dept
How many people really care about the "portal" offering their broadband provider gives them? Admittedly, it's probably a much lower number among more techie aware people, but the whole idea of the broadband portal seems a bit pointless. Having broadband means you have an entire web out there to go to. I had Comcast service for many years and the only time I went to their "portal" was when service was down and I was using dialup to try to find out what the problem was. So, finding out that Comcast has "upgraded" their portal makes you wonder who really cares? In the meantime, while both SBC and Verizon have done deals with Yahoo to provide a portal for them, you have to wonder how much those kinds of deals are really worth. All you're really doing is giving people an initial homepage to use when they set up their browsers. While it's true that plenty of people are lazy enough not to change it, it's still not at all clear what the real value is of a broadband provider having a portal. Part of the reason people get broadband in the first place is so that they can go out and surf anywhere. The whole portal concept seems almost... claustrophobic.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Broadband portals
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David P is right on target
I don't think the main "portal" sites will grow too much once tools like Capango continue to evolve. We package together the plug-and-play tools (that simply require a web browser) that you use to make your own view of the world. We are not interested in the content or advertising. And that is exactly why our membership has grown by more than 1,000% in the past year.
So, media-centric portals are dead. Long live person-centric portals.
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Broadband portals
My browser is the first thing I open when I boot up my machine in the morning. Outlook used to be that app, but during my last machine upgrade I never bothered to setup Outlook, and I haven't missed it at all.
I suspect Outlook (or similar office application) users probably wouldn't be heavy users of portals.
- Hersh
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Re: Broadband portals
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Re: Broadband portals
For the "provider", the advantage is to keep users on their sites for longer. For the "subscriber", less ads than the free alternatives (at least for SBC/Yahoo's) and better integration into my account with them. For example, if I chose to used MSN's portal, I wouldn't be able to bring up my SBC mail or calendar (at least not easily).
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Portals
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