David Baxter PhD
Late Founder
Xmarks Shuts Down After Failing To Sell Its Search Engine
Sep 28, 2010
by Matt McGee
Xmarks, the popular browser bookmark synchronization service, is going to shut down on January 10, 2011. Xmarks is a free service that saves your bookmarks across different browsers and different computers, and currently boasts about two million users. I?m a longtime user and fan of the service, going back to when it was called Foxmarks; but personal attachments aside, the story behind why Xmarks is shutting down makes for an interesting read.
In his blog post announcing the decision, co-founder Todd Agulnick explains how, inspired by the crowd-sourced success of Wikipedia, Xmarks was inspired in 2006 to aggregate its users? vast database of bookmarked web pages into something useful ? ?maybe even a spam-free search engine based entirely on what users had bookmarked.?
Later, as the service neared 100 million bookmarks, the company did exactly that.
Xmarks is, to a large degree, more like a Yahoo Directory or a DMOZ than like a true search engine; it?s a huge database of web sites and web pages bookmarked by its users. And the current ?bookmark search? tool it offers is quite good. These results for U2 are astonishingly accurate in terms of showing the most well-known, authoritative sites ? official and independent ? about the rock band.
Sep 28, 2010
by Matt McGee
Xmarks, the popular browser bookmark synchronization service, is going to shut down on January 10, 2011. Xmarks is a free service that saves your bookmarks across different browsers and different computers, and currently boasts about two million users. I?m a longtime user and fan of the service, going back to when it was called Foxmarks; but personal attachments aside, the story behind why Xmarks is shutting down makes for an interesting read.
In his blog post announcing the decision, co-founder Todd Agulnick explains how, inspired by the crowd-sourced success of Wikipedia, Xmarks was inspired in 2006 to aggregate its users? vast database of bookmarked web pages into something useful ? ?maybe even a spam-free search engine based entirely on what users had bookmarked.?
Later, as the service neared 100 million bookmarks, the company did exactly that.
The first thing we built was a search engine. It turned out amazing results, but only for certain types of queries. It was terrible at finding facts. But if you were looking for the websites in a particular category, the results were shockingly complete and entirely spam-free. Looking for the list of all auto manufacturers? Or presidential libraries? Or art supply sites? A casual comparison of our results with those of the major search engines would convince you that we were on to something. We recruited a group of non-technical subjects to do a usability test, and it flopped. Sit people in front of a search box and ask them to test it, and their first query is their own name. #FAIL. It turns out that with the exception of people doing market research, consumers using search are not typically looking for an authoritative list of sites within a category; they?re looking for an answer to a specific question.
If you?ve been in SEO long enough, you can probably identify with the final sentence there. The best-known directories, like DMOZ.org or the Yahoo Directory, have always been valued more for the (assumed) benefit of their links than for any actual traffic they generate.
Xmarks is, to a large degree, more like a Yahoo Directory or a DMOZ than like a true search engine; it?s a huge database of web sites and web pages bookmarked by its users. And the current ?bookmark search? tool it offers is quite good. These results for U2 are astonishingly accurate in terms of showing the most well-known, authoritative sites ? official and independent ? about the rock band.