Who remembers 2012? Those were the days, my friend! Linkedin just bought the homegrown SlideShare to much fanfare and $119 Million – six years after it was born – in the by lanes of outer Delhi.
Slideshare was a Disneyland for students and employees. Just register and enjoy the unlimited free ride. No paywall, pop-ups, restrictions, conditional premium features, or email spams. Nothing. A true, open platform without any small print where individuals and agencies shared the best they got.
It was a union of diverse people. A beautiful, bright, colorful world-fair where Fortune 10 lived together with the roof-less entrepreneurs; where top-notch UX blended with the eyesores, where STEM met A to gather the STEAM, I remember it all.
God, what all the content people shared! The deepest, the widest; unheard, unimaginable otherwise from science, culture, technology, emerging domains, you name it, it’s all there! Ready to be consumed. I wonder, what impact this culture of giving collectively meant to its consumers, especially in a tightly competitive society like ours.
Now, that Slideshare has a new home, hope things get brighter once again after the brief lull, mainly on the product front to script a new history. And, a new breed of Turks flocks to it as we did once.
SlideShare is dead. Long live SlideShare!
Who remembers 2012? Those were the days, my friend! Linkedin just bought the homegrown SlideShare to much fanfare and $119 Million – six years after it was born – in the by lanes of outer Delhi.
Slideshare was a Disneyland for students and employees. Just register and enjoy the unlimited free ride. No paywall, pop-ups, restrictions, conditional premium features, or email spams. Nothing. A true, open platform without any small print where individuals and agencies shared the best they got.
It was a union of diverse people. A beautiful, bright, colorful world-fair where Fortune 10 lived together with the roof-less entrepreneurs; where top-notch UX blended with the eyesores, where STEM met A to gather the STEAM, I remember it all.
God, what all the content people shared! The deepest, the widest; unheard, unimaginable otherwise from science, culture, technology, emerging domains, you name it, it’s all there! Ready to be consumed. I wonder, what impact this culture of giving collectively meant to its consumers, especially in a tightly competitive society like ours.
Now, that Slideshare has a new home, hope things get brighter once again after the brief lull, mainly on the product front to script a new history. And, a new breed of Turks flocks to it as we did once.