Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

In The News

Why Yahoo faded: The Internet changed, but it didn't

Yahoo said Wednesday that it plans to hollow itself out, spinning off its core business and leaving the company as little more than a way for shareholders to keep Yahoo's stake in Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group.

The move underscores the profound change in how we interact with the Internet and how Yahoo failed to adapt. The company's key approach has been to package online content into a convenient jumping-off point. But now people are more likely to go to email, social networks or apps on their smartphones. Somewhere along the way, Yahoo got lost in the shuffle.

"At one point, AOL and Yahoo seemed like they were the Internet," said Brett Sappington, director of research for Parks Associates.

From the article "Why Yahoo faded: The Internet changed, but it didn't" by Stephen Shankland.

Previously In The News

Welcome to Hulu vision: A new Web site enables TV fans to watch their favorite shows past and present on one 'network

"Americans watch lots of video on their computers. More than 12 million people paid for this kind of content last year, according to a study by Parks Associates, a research and analyst firm that stu...

Company aims to improve safety in online games

The effort comes as millions worldwide play such games every day. According to a recent study by Parks Associates of Dallas, revenue from online games is expected to grow from about $1.1 billion las...

Verizon to lay out fiber plans for Keller

For more than a decade, telecommunications companies have spent billions of dollars installing the fiber-optic lines that pave the so-called information superhighway. Kurt Scherf, a vice presiden...

Come Together

Here's the concept: Many people today have gobs of digital photos, digital music, even digital movies stored on their home computers. That's nice, but users are tied to computers to get at their goo...