Kids Crafting Tips?
Whatever happened to chess.about.com? As my page linked on the sidebar, 'Chess for All Ages (site)', explains,
From September 2002 to August 2008, I was privileged to serve as the Chess Guide for About.com. During that time, I produced one feature article per week. Although About.com has an exclusive, perpetual license to use my material, it's unlikely that they will ever use it again. After I left, the company gave me permission to reuse the material: 'It would be fine to use your content as you please.' Here are copies of those articles.
First let's have a recap of the site's history, as tracked on this blog. In my last months at the company, when it was still a subsidiary of the New York Times (NYT), I noted a couple of changes at the top:-
- 2008-03-08: About.com's CEO Exits 'departure of Scott B. Meyer'
- 2008-06-14: New CEO at About.com 'appointment of Cella M. Irvine'
In the month that I left, I wrote two posts giving my own perspective from within the company:-
- 2008-08-05: Bye, Bye, About.com!
- 2008-08-30: On Blogs and Business Models
Four years later, the NYT sold the operation to IAC (aka Answers.com, aka Ask.com):-
- 2012-08-12: It's All About Answers
- 2012-08-30: Answers About Ask
After that I stopped paying attention to the company, except to check on its content from time to time. I do the same for many chess sites. Wikipedia's page on About.com now goes to Dotdash, with the mention 'Redirected from About.com'. The last paragraph currently informs,
2017–present: Closure of About.com, rebranding to multiple publications under Dotdash On May 2, 2017, IAC announced that they had renamed About.com to Dotdash, after about a year of transition. CEO Neil Vogel said that the company had lost mind share, and needed to change their marketing strategy. The company elected to refocus on vertical markets through its niche websites: The Balance (personal finance), Lifewire (consumer electronics), The Spruce (home and food), VeryWell (health), TripSavvy (travel), and ThoughtCo (education).
It turns out that chess is now included under 'The Spruce (home and food)', and its current address is thespruce.com/chess-4127460.
The breadcrumb trail for the chess articles shows:-
Thespruce.com > Crafts & Hobbies > Kids Crafting Tips > ChessKids crafting tips? Talk about clueless! For more about the most recent transition, see About.com launches The Spruce, a standalone site for Home Decor and Food (techcrunch.com; February 2017).
No comments:
Post a Comment