Propeller.com
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Propeller, previously known as Netscape.com, is a social news aggregator operated by AOL-Netscape. It is similar to Digg; users can vote for which stories are to be included on the front page and may comment on them as well.
The Chief Architect of the site was Brian Alvey[1] and the lead developer of the site was Alex Rudolff [2]. It was maintained by Weblogs, Inc. CEO Jason Calacanis until he left AOL in November of 2006. The current director is Tom Drapeau. Netscape's market share had been declining for over a year at the time of the change-over [3].
Propeller was hosted on the Netscape.com domain from June 2006 to September 2007 when it was replaced by the AOL Netscape generic portal.
The previous version of Propeller was released to mixed reactions. Some users liked that they had more participation ability while others found the pages to be harder to navigate and not as structured. Soon after the release of the new site, a story entitled "Netscape's Blunder" was the top rated story.[4]
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[edit] Anchors
Propeller has several "anchors", currently led by James Marcus, who work on maintaining the site and featuring stories in the "anchor picks" box on the home page. This creates a slightly different environment from Digg, as Digg's homepage rankings are based solely on user votes, where Propeller's are based on both. The rest of the team includes Eliot Phillips, Alexia Prichard, Dakota Smith and Ryan Budke.
[edit] Scouts
Propeller also pays a small number of power users called Scouts. This group is made up of Weblogs, Inc. bloggers, Netscape power users and celebrities, including Wil Wheaton. Other scouts include bloggers such as Fedquip Angry Ken, Henry Wang, Digidave TweekerChick and Corey Spring. These users were called Navigators until the relaunch of the Netscape Navigator browser, at which point the name was changed to avoid confusion.
[edit] References
- ^ Brian Alvey: Netscape, my Netscape
- ^ Brian Alvey: See you later, navigator
- ^ Alexa Internet- Netscape.com Traffic Retrieved on 09-20-2007
- ^ Netscape Community Backlash. Retrieved on 2006-07-14.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
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