WebChat Broadcasting System

WebChat Broadcasting System (or WBS for short) was a virtual community that existed during the 1990s. Supported by online advertising, it was one of few services at the time to offer free integrated community services including chat, homesteading, messaging, and user profiles. Extremely popular in the era before the Dot-com bust, WBS was at one time the largest interactive and event network on the Internet.[1] In 1998 it was acquired by the search engine Infoseek, which was in turn acquired by Disney/ABC. The original WebChat Broadcasting System closed in September 1999 after its chatrooms were integrated into Disney's existing Go Network chatrooms. A revival of WBS was launched in 2009 and is virtually identical to the original community. [2]

Features

WBS featured browser-based chat, real-time discussion, with moderated chat rooms in addition to user-created private chat rooms. Common to webchat, its chat rooms required no software download to use.[3] It allowed users to upload their own images into chat sessions and had three chat modes: streaming, frames, and no frames.[4][5] In addition to images users could add audio, video, and hotlinks to conversations. WBS also featured other services, such as email, and allowed users to create and maintain personal web pages. Membership was free.[3]

History

Founding

WBS was founded, originally as the Internet Roundtable Society, in 1990 by Michael J. Fremont and Wendie Bernstein Lash in Menlo Park, California.[6] It began as an "edutainment" company featuring such content as live Internet broadcasts of interviews with prominent individuals in science, technology, and pop culture, but began focusing on chat in 1993, whereupon the name was changed to WBS.[5]

Growth

IRC had existed as a dedicated chatting network but was mostly used by seasoned Internet users. Chat websites capitalized on the growing base of Internet general users by providing a simpler, more attractive chatting interface. Chatting became focused on community and socialization.[5]

In August 1996 WBS had 500,000 users and was growing by 3,000 users a day.

In February 1997, WBS reached a milestone of 1 million registered users, accruing 4,000 new registered users and 5.5 million page views every day.[7] Registrations were not confirmed. At this point, it was featuring 200 individual affinity groups. Within a week of the launch of a new feature to allow members to create their own home pages, over 15,000 members had begun using it.[7]

In May 1997 WBS had 1.4 million registered users. The other large web chat company as this time was WebGenesis Inc.'s The Globe. Also internet service provider AOL had over 14,000 chat rooms available to their customers through their non-web interface.[8]

In June 1997 WBS hit 1.5 million registered users and had 7 million daily page views with over 200 rooms.[3]

WBS frequently hosted real-time multimedia programming events, which only increased as its popularity grew. Such events attracted celebrities such as Tom Clancy, the celebrity cast of Star Trek, bands Soundgarden and Metallica, the former president of PBS, Lawrence Grossman from NBC News, United States Senator Arlen Specter, Intel CEO Andy Grove and feminist Gloria Steinem.[7][9]

Rise of instant messaging

Web-based chatting in general became less popular as instant messaging systems were developed in the late 1990s. ICQ was first released in November 1996. AOL Instant Messenger was released in May 1997. Yahoo! Pager (later renamed Yahoo! Messenger) launched on March 9, 1998. AOL acquired ICQ's parent company Mirabilis on June 8, 1998.

Infoseek buyout and demise

Infoseek bought out WBS for approximately $6.7 million, or about 350,000 shares of Infoseek stock in April 1998. At the time WBS had 2.7 million users.[10]

WBS daily page views were down to 5 million in April, 1998.[11]

When Infoseek acquired WBS there had been several web portals that added chat as a service. Lycos had bought the Tripod community in February 1998 and Yahoo had added a deal with GeoCities in January 1998. There was strong competition between the web portals to match each other's services. WBS, at the time of the Infoseek acquisition, had 2.7 million registered users. This total was more than the membership of Tripod and GeoCities combined. WBS had only 350,000 personal homepages at the time. Infoseek's three main competitors at the time were Lycos, Yahoo, and Excite.[12]

In 1998, Infoseek was bought out by the Go Network. WBS was shut down on September 15, 1999, and many of the more popular rooms were transferred to Go's Java-based chat system. All that was left for the members at that time was a simple message saying, "Go.Com has decided to close down WBS and move its most popular rooms to the chat rooms at Go.Com. Your home pages will still be viewable for an undetermined amount of time. Thank you for supporting WBS during its existence." Six months later, all home pages were completely erased. Go.com abandoned chat entirely in 2001.

Migration

Many patrons of WBS migrated to other chat sites where some of the general topic rooms were recreated. It is suspected that many users moved to instant messaging software, the popularity of which was increasing substantially at that time.

Martin Foster developed software that offered several of the features of the original WBS and IFC that had gained popularity. This code has been used in developing numerous chat sites which have attracted many former patrons of the original WBS, especially those who frequented the roleplaying rooms. It was originally developed to power Ethereal Realms, but the site now merely hosts the software for use on other sites.

Audience

WBS offered a wide array of chat rooms categorized into hubs. Many rooms were dedicated to affinity groups based on age, race/ethnicity, religion, and sexuality. Others were specific to topics such as dating, entertainment, computers and the internet, travel, video games, roleplaying games, and the arts. The site would eventually host around 260 different chat rooms.

Notable Users

United States Congressman Frank Guinta created and hosted the "Inn of the Weary Traveler" WBS room (also known as Role_Playing_Games), one of the internet's first chat-based roleplaying locations. [13]

Executives

President and CEO Bayard Winthrop was a frequent spokesperson for the company.[14] After its buyout, he subsequently went on to become CEO of Freeboard, a San Francisco-based sporting goods manufacturer.

See also

References

  1. French, Deanie (1999). Internet Based Learning: An Introduction and Framework for Higher Education. Stylus Publishing, LLC. p. 214. ISBN 9781579220075.
  2. WebChat Broadcasting System (Beta) - WBS.NET. Retrieved on 2013-09-25.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Fernandes, Lorna (June 20, 1997). "Techweek - WebChat serves 1.5 million". Silicon Valley/San Jose Business Journal. Retrieved August 19, 2009.
  4. McConnell, David (2000). Implementing Computer Supported Cooperative Learning. Routledge. pp. 59, 60. ISBN 9780749431358.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 "Yahoo adds voice to chat". CNET News. January 7, 2009. Retrieved August 19, 2009.
  6. "Corporate Backgrounder." WebChat Broadcasting System. December 10, 1997. Retrieved on May 6, 2009.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 "WebChat Broadcasting System hits 1 million registered users". Business Wire. February 3, 1997. Retrieved August 14, 2009.
  8. Hof, Robert (May 5, 1997). "Breaking out of the yak pack". Business Week. McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. Retrieved August 19, 2009.
  9. "Internet Users Flock to WebChat Broadcasting System; Site Now the Largest Chatting Hub on the World Wide Web". Business Wire. November 20, 1995. Retrieved August 17, 2009.
  10. "Infoseek to Buy WebChat Broadcasting". LA Times. April 15, 1998. Retrieved August 14, 2009.
  11. "Infoseek Pares Its Losses". Wired.com. April 23, 1998. Retrieved August 19, 2009.
  12. Nickell, Joe (April 17, 1998). "Web Portals Play Leapfrog". Wired.com. Retrieved August 19, 2009.
  13. Jon, Asbjorn, A. (2010). "The Development of MMORPG Culture and The Guild". Australian Folklore (Australia) (25): 97–112.A. Asbjorn Jon, The Development of MMORPG Culture and The Guild, Australian Folklore (25, 2010), pp. 97–112.
  14. Internet Communities article from BusinessWeek with a quote from Winthrop

Further reading

External links