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Deadpool: Five Stupidest Startups of the SummerAugust 21st, 2007 at 10:46 pmSource:Valleywag Get paid fifty cents to use our social network! Put speech bubbles on photos! The latest dot-coms to raise their ugly heads from the dirt have jankier value propositions than a hooker named Ethel. Thanks to the bloggers’ occupational hazard of unsolicited site invitations, Valleywag has seen the web’s dumbest dot-com startups of the summer. Let us commence to mock.
The tool actually works well. I searched a Flickr tag (my name, natch), picked a photo, picked a bubble, and typed in my caption; the words auto-sized. But this is like saying “Wow, this camera’s ’sepia’ feature really brings out a rich tone of sepia!” In fact, it’s like a janky version of the photo notes on Flickr, which also has, like, sharing actual pictures. Thank god it looks like a weekend project.
The “about us” page says, “We like to think of it as the world’s only Global Wish Exchange.”
Even if this site builds a healthy community (and yes, people are granting each other’s wishes, which they could do using plenty of other sites like Craigslist, Ask Metafilter, or 43 Things — or by stepping outside and volunteering), it has no business potential outside some possible lame-ass corporate-sponsored wish-making initiative. After the few available opportunities there dry up (what exactly would Wishood be bringing to the partnership?), the site will have no income. Hopefully someone can keep it running as a non-profit. The site has one promising feature: a karmic version of eBay seller ratings, showing how much someone helped to grant wishes. This karma rating would mean something if it were cross-referenced with other online reputation systems. What the world needs now is a universal format for karma. Also love, sweet love.
The creator told a space blog, “The really cool part is that species can meet each other, so writers have to make sure that theirs stories remain consistent as a whole when creating an entirely fictional world.” So the whole creative point of having a galaxy to play in, gets wiped out when everyone’s poorly planned sci-fi clashes. Because get this: SCIENCE FICTION IS BASED ON TWISTING REALITY. And if I’ve twisted my reality to make ten-foot bugs that violate the laws of physics, and you’ve twisted your reality to create a peaceful planet of dwarves, the story’s gonna end real quick as my bugs wipe out your dwarves. Geez, it’s like these guys never sat down for a night of D&D.
Yuwie (or its spokesdouche) says it’s a social network that pays you when people look at your content. It does look like a duller version of MySpace. But it’s really a small-time ad network, but with all the useful traffic siphoned out.
Doostang: It’s chugly! Nick Douglas writes at Valleywag, Too Much Nick, and Look Shiny. He’s writing a sitcom about an astoundingly useful startup.
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