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To: IceShark who wrote (67101)2/13/2001 9:53:48 PM
From: Ilaine  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 436258
 
Apparently what Deja did that was special was archive usenet.

>>Search Engine Google Buys Deja Unit

A.P. INDEXES: TOP STORIES | NEWS | SPORTS | BUSINESS | TECHNOLOGY | ENTERTAINMENT

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Filed at 5:55 p.m. ET

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Google Inc. took over Deja.com's online
discussion service Monday, adding more than 500 million wide-ranging
messages to one of the Web's most extensive search engines. Financial
terms between the privately held companies weren't disclosed.

In 1995, Deja -- originally known as Dejanews -- created a quick and
easy way to read and post messages on an online forum, known as
Usenet, which doesn't use the same computer code that powers the
World Wide Web.

While opening up Usenet's discussion boards to Web browsers, New
York-based Deja also created an archive of all the messages posted in
the newsgroups. Deja's technology allows Web surfers to perform
topical searches to focus on specific discussion threads.

The Usenet messages delve into diverse topics, ranging from discussions
on rocket science to popular culture.

Mountain View, Calif.-based Google views the addition of the Deja
archives as another significant step toward creating a one-stop source for
online information.

Since it started in 1998, Google has developed one of the world's most
popular search engines, using a method that sifts through more than 1.3
billion Web pages to list results based on the relevancy to the search
request.

Searching the Usenet message boards ``is a way to look up information
and see what people are saying about certain things without dealing with
all the commercial aspects of the Web,'' said Google President Sergey
Brin.

The Deja database is so large that only the past six months of messages
are now available through Google at groups.google.com.

By the end of May, the rest of the archives should be transferred to
Google's database and visitors should be able to post messages to the
discussions, Brin said.

The acquisition is a good public relations move for Google because many
Web surfers had worried that the Usenet message archives would
disappear if Deja went out of business, said Danny Sullivan, an analyst
with Searchenginewatch.com.

``Google can look like a hero here. But the big question will be whether it
can find a way to make money from this asset. Deja certainly couldn't,''
Sullivan said.

Deja has been on the ropes for months. The company laid off one-third
of its work force in September and in December sold its comparison
shopping site to Half.com, which is owned by eBay. In the process,
Deja's payroll shrank from about 140 employees in September to 20
today.

None of Deja's remaining workers are guaranteed jobs with Google,
which has slightly more than 100 employees. Google will close Deja's
technology hub in Austin, Texas by the end of this week.

Deja aborted a long-delayed initial public offering of stock last June. The
company had lost $19.5 million from its inception through March 1999,
the last time that it disclosed its financial results.

``We feel like we developed a tremendous asset that can't be duplicated.
Google is the ideal steward,'' said Richard Gorelick, Deja's chief strategic
officer.<<

nytimes.com