Thursday 28 February 2013

Dot com company




A dot-com company, or simply a dot-com (alternatively rendered dot.com, dot com or .com), is a company that does
most of its business on the Internet, usually through a website that uses the popular top-level domain, ".com"
(in turn derived from the word "commercial").
While the term can refer to present-day companies, it is also used specifically to refer to companies with this
business model that came into being during the late 1990s. Many such startups were formed to take advantage of the
surplus of venture capital funding. Many were launched with very thin business plans, sometimes with nothing more
than an idea and a catchy name. The stated goal was often to "get big fast", i.e. to capture a majority share of
whatever market was being entered. The exit strategy usually included an IPO and a large payoff for the founders.
Others were existing companies that re-styled themselves as Internet companies, many of them legally changing their
names to incorporate a .com suffix. One of the biggest mistakes early dot com businesses made was that they were more
interested in attracting visitors to their website but not necessarily winning customers over. Early e-commerce
thought the most important factor was to have as many visitors as possible gather to their website and this would
eventually translate into profits for their business.

In the late 1990s (as well as today) many businesses were interested in investing in the Internet to expand their market. The Internet has the ability to reach out to consumers globally as well as providing more convenient shopping to the consumer. If planned and executed correctly, the Internet can greatly improve sales. However, there were many businesses in the early 2000s (decade) that did not plan correctly and that cost them their business.
One of the biggest mistakes early dot com businesses made was that they were more interested in attracting visitors to their website but not necessarily winning customers over. Early e-commerce thought the most important factor was to have as many visitors as possible gather to their website and this would eventually translate into profits for their business. This was not necessarily the case and businesses failed. Early dot com businesses also failed to take the time to properly research the situation before starting their businesses

Top 10 Dot Com Company

1. Amazon.com
Amazon.com, Inc. is an American electronic commerce company based in Seattle, Washington. It was one of the first
major companies to sell goods over the Internet and was one of the iconic stocks of the late 1990s dot-com bubble.
After the bubble burst Amazon faced skepticism about its business model, but it made its first annual profit in 2003.
Amazon also owns Alexa Internet, A9.com, and the Internet Movie Database (IMDb).Founded as Cadabra.com by Jeff Bezos
in 1994 and launched in 1995, Amazon.com began as an online bookstore, though it soon diversified its product lines,
adding DVDs, music CDs, computer software, video games, electronics, apparel, furniture, food, and more.

2. AOL.com ( America Online )
AOL LLC (formerly America Online, Inc) is an American online service provider, bulletin board system,
and media company operated by Time Warner.

3. eBay.com
eBay Inc. manages an online auction and shopping website, where people buy and sell goods and services worldwide.
The online auction site was founded in San Jose, California on September 3, 1995 by computer programmer Pierre
Omidyar as AuctionWeb,Millions of collectibles, appliances, computers, furniture, equipment, vehicles, and other
miscellaneous items are listed, bought, and sold daily.

4.Google.com
Google, Inc. is an American public corporation and search engine, first incorporated as a privately held company
on 7 September 1998. The company had 9,378 full-time employees as of September 30, 2006 and is based in Mountain
View, California. Eric Schmidt, former chief executive officer of Novell, is Google's CEO, after co-founder Larry
Page stepped down. The name "Google" originated from a misspelling of "googol," which refers to 10100
(the number represented by a 1 followed by one-hundred zeros).

5. Nertflix.com
Netflix is the largest online DVD rental service, offering flat rate rental-by-mail to customers in the United
States. Headquartered in Los Gatos, California, it has amassed a collection of more than 65,000 titles and has
about five million subscribers. Currently, Netflix spends about $300 million a year on postage to ship 1.4 million
DVDs a day.

6. Priceline.com
Priceline.com is a website devoted to helping users obtain discount rates for travel-related items such
as airline tickets and hotel stays. It is headquartered in Norwalk, Connecticut, United States. Priceline is
the brainchild of digital entrepreneur Jay Walker; thus its parent company is Walker Digital.

7.MSN.com
MSN (or The Microsoft Network) is a collection of Internet services provided by Microsoft. Initially released
on August 24, 1995, to coincide with the release of Windows 95, the range of services has since changed greatly.
The Hotmail webmail service was amongst the first, followed by the instant messenger service MSN Messenger, which
has recently been replaced by Windows Live Messenger. According to Alexa.com, MSN.com is currently ranked 2nd amongst
all websites for Traffic Rank.

8.Yahoo.com
Yahoo! Inc. is an American internet services company. It operates an Internet portal and provides a full range
of products and services including a search engine, the Yahoo! Directory and Yahoo! Mail. It was founded by Stanford
graduate students Jerry Yang and David Filo in January of 1994 and incorporated on March 2, 1995. The company is
headquartered in Sunnyvale, California.

9.IMDB.com
The Internet Movie Database (IMDb) is an online database of information about actors, films, television shows,
television stars, video games and production crew personnel. Owned by Amazon.com since 1998, the IMDb celebrated
its fifteenth anniversary on October 17, 2005. As of August 22, 2006 IMDb featured 825,865 titles and 2,179,165 people.

10. Geocities.com
Yahoo! GeoCities is a free webhosting service founded by David Bohnett and John Rezner in late 1994 as Beverly
Hills Internet. In its original form, site users selected a "city" in which to place their webpages; the "cities"
being named after cities or regions according to their content — for example, computer-related sites were placed in
"SiliconValley" and those dealing with entertainment were assigned to "Hollywood" — hence the name of the site; now,
however, this feature has since been abandoned.

Cloud Computing companies

The companies which make use of computing resources (hardware and software) and deliver as a service over
a network (typically the Internet). The name comes from the use of a cloud-shaped symbol as an abstraction for the
complex infrastructure it contains in system diagrams.
here are many types of public cloud computing

Infrastructure as a service (IaaS)
Platform as a service (PaaS)
Software as a service (SaaS)
Network as a service (NaaS)
Storage as a service (STaaS)
Security as a service (SECaaS)
Data as a service (DaaS)
Desktop as a service (DaaS - see above)
Database as a service (DBaaS)
Test environment as a service (TEaaS)
API as a service (APIaaS)
Backend as a service (BaaS)

Top 10 Cloud Computing Company

1. Company name: Amazon
Founded: 1994

Location: Seattle

Cloud offering: Amazon Web Services, a half-dozen services including the Elastic Compute Cloud, for computing capacity,
and the Simple Storage Service, for on-demand storage capacity

Why we're watching it: Amazon is one of the true innovators in Web-based computing, offering pay-as-you-go access to
virtual servers and data storage space. In addition to these core offerings, Amazon offers the SimpleDB
(a database Web service); the CloudFront (a Web service for content delivery); and the Simple Queue Service
CEO: Jeffrey Bezos, Amazon's founder, was previously a financial analyst.
(a hosted service for storing messages as they travel between computers).

2. Company name: AT&T
Founded: 1983

Location: Dallas

Cloud offering: Synaptic Hosting, an application hosting service that offers pay-as-you-go access to virtual servers
 and storage integrated with security and networking functions.
CEO: Randall Stephenson, appointed in 2007 after three years as AT&T's COO.

3. Company name: Enomaly
Founded: 2004

Location: Toronto

Cloud offering: Enomaly's Elastic Computing Platform (ECP) is software that integrates enterprise data centers
with commercial cloud computing offerings, letting IT pros manage and govern both internal and external resources
from a single console, while making it easy to move virtual machines from one data center to another.
CEO: Richard Reiner, called out of semi-retirement to become Enomaly CEO this year. Most recently, Reiner was
founder and CEO of Assurent, a software-as-a-service company acquired by Telus in 2006.
4. Company name: Google
Founded: 1998

Location: Mountain View, Calif.

Cloud offering: Google Apps, a set of online office productivity tools including e-mail, calendaring,
word processing and a simple Web site creation tool; Postini, a set of e-mail and Web security services; and the
Google App Engine, a platform-as-a-service offering that lets developers build applications and host them on Google's
infrastructure.
CEO: Eric Schmidt, former CTO of Sun and former CEO of Novell, took the helm in 2001

5. Company name: GoGrid (a division of ServePath)
Launched: March 2008 (ServePath was founded in 2001, GoGrid development began in 2006)

Location: San Francisco

Cloud offering: The GoGrid platform offers Web-based storage and the ability to quickly deploy Windows-
and Linux-based virtual servers onto the cloud, with preinstalled software including Apache, PHP, Microsoft SQL and
MySQL.
CEO: John Keagy, the CEO and founder of ServePath, built and sold several ISPs in the decade prior to starting ServePath.
6. Company name: Microsoft
Founded: 1975

Location: Redmond, Wash.

Cloud offering: Azure, a Windows-as-a-service platform consisting of the operating system and developer services
that can be used to build and enhance Web-hosted applications. Azure is in beta until the second half of 2009.
CEO: Steve Ballmer, appointed CEO in 2000 after 20 years with the company.

7. Company name: NetSuite
Founded: 1998

Location: San Mateo, Calif.
cloud offering: A business software suite including e-commerce, CRM, accounting and ERP tools.
CEO: Zach Nelson, appointed in 2002 after holding executive positions at companies such as Oracle and Sun.

8. Company name: Rackspace
Founded: 1998

Location: San Antonio

Cloud offering: The Rackspace Cloud, also known as "Mosso," consists of three major services: Cloud sites,
a platform for building Web sites; Cloud Files, a storage service; and Cloud Servers, an Amazon EC2-like service
that provides access to virtualized server instances.
CEO: Lanham Napier, joined Rackspace as CFO in 2000 and became CEO in 2006

9.Company name: RightScale
Founded: 2006

Location: Santa Barbara, Calif.

Cloud offering: The RightScale Platform, software-as-a-service that helps customers manage the IT processes they
have outsourced to cloud providers such as Amazon and GoGrid. RightScale helps customers build and clone virtual
servers for the cloud, performs load balancing in response to changing needs, automates storage backups, and offers
monitoring and error reporting.
CEO: Michael Crandell, RightScale co-founder who was held executive positions at software-as-a-service companies
including eFax and Celebros.

10. Company name: Salesforce.com
Founded: 1999

Location: San Francisco

Cloud offering: Salesforce.com's flagship is a set of CRM tools including salesforce automation, analytics,
marketing and social networking tools. A second major offering is Force.com, a platform for building Web applications
and hosting them on the Salesforce infrastructure.
CEO: Marc Benioff, also the founder and chairman of Salesforce.com, spent 13 years at Oracle in a variety of
executive, sales and product development roles.

Top 10 Cloud computing Companies in UK
NetSuite The #1 Cloud Computing

1. NetSuite - the #1 SaaS business management software with over 6,600 customers. Run your entire business better with one
complete web-based system, including accounting / ERP, order management, CRM, and Ecommerce.

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2. Lunacloud Cloud Server up 96GB RAM from 1p/hour

Flexible Cloud Servers, from 512MB RAM +1CPU +10GB DISK up to 96GB RAM +8CPU +2TB DISK, Linux/Windows. Pay-per-use,
no setup or other fees. Root access + control panel + API. Lunacloud outperforms competition!
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3. iomart Hosting The Natural Choice for Cloud Computing

Step up into the UK cloud! Managed, Hybrid, Private Clouds for the Enterprise. Highly Available, Secure, scalable,
flexible and fully delivered and supported 24 x 7 from our own UK Data Centres. Controlled with our award winning Cloud
Control Panel.

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Onyx Group Cloud Computing on demand

4. Onyx Group Cloud provides a portfolio of Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) products. All of our services are
hosted in our UK-based Data Centres, on enterprise-class infrastructure, using globally recognised software.

5. UKFast Award-winning cloud solution experts

For flexible storage and enhanced security, choose UKFast – our cost-effective cloud resources offer efficient,
high performance hosting whilst our award-winning MyCloudStack™ allows for complete customisation in line with your
business needs.
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6. ElasticHosts Flexible cloud servers in UK, US & Canada

Cloud hosting pioneers, ElasticHosts, offer flexible and easy-to-use cloud servers, ideal for scalable web hosting and
on-demand burst computing. You get full control of any OS and great support. Prices from 4p per hour. See for yourself -
try it free now!

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7.Fasthosts Up to 50% Off Cloud Servers

Scalable & Secure - Up to 16GB RAM, 1000GB HDD. 24/7 Onsite Support. 2011 Microsoft Partner of the Year. Customize your
own server!
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8. Virtual Internet Flexible hybrid cloud to meet changing needs

100% uptime guarantee, 24/7 VI-tal support, flexible service options and custom SLAs. Seamlessly move between cloud and
dedicated server resource with VMware’s vSphere. Handle bursts in traffic or heavy-duty workloads with ease and precision.

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9.Kualo Resilient UK Based Hosting

Self-Healing Cloud Infrastructure. Unlimited Space, Bandwidth, Databases & Email - from just £2.45! 60-Day Money Back
Guarantee & 1-Hour Support Response Guarantee Free Web Site Builder & Over 50 Easy-Install Web Apps (Blogs, Forums etc.)
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10. VMhosts Ltd Cloud Specialists

Technology focused company, 24/7/365 support with full SLA. Clustered Storage Array with hardware based SSD Auto Tier.
Automated High Availability inc as standard.

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CWCS Managed Hosting Flexible Cloud Hosting specialists


Aakanksha is brought up in Agra, (Uttar Pradesh) has done her B.Tech (Electrical Engineering) from IEC College of Engg. & Tech,Greater Noida. She has participated & organised many technical and Cultural Events as well as won many prizes at college level.

Aakanksha has keen interest in learning new things and posses positive and creative attitude towards things in life. Aakanksha is very much dedicated towards work and tries giving her best in it.

Now she is working with AeroSoft to provide services to Various aviation professionals.


Arpita Ghosh

Arpita Ghosh [ MBA from ICFAI ]
Works at Author & Free Lance Editor, Banker
Petals Publishers
Petals.Agv@gMail.com














































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