cloud

Google Reader dies in 10 days, but Feedly triples users, announces new cloud API

by John Koetsier on June 19, 2013

rss-iconsIn the three months since Google announced it was shutting down Reader, Feedly has tripled its userbase from four million to 12 million. In other words, Google killing its RSS platform has been a truly wonderful thing for Feedly.

But only because the company was ready for hyper-growth.

Feedly very quickly built a simple one-click migration from Google Reader after Google decided to shut down Reader. That one-click migration helped it capture a significant fraction of the passionate users that Google was abandoning — 47,000 of whom signed a Change.org petition to keep Google Reader alive.

google reader shutting downBut a new plugin-free web version, and a new cloud-based API for third-party developers and applications, could be the key to making Feedly the new default RSS partner for applications such as news readers and social magazines.

The new Feedly is now processing over 25 million feeds a day, the company announced today, and billions of articles. It’s built on a new cloud architecture which delivers services to the web, apps, and a new platform which includes developer partners IFTTT (If this then that), Sprout Social, gReader, Press, and Newsify.

Over 200 developers have signed up to get access to the Feedly API, the company says, and it anticipates announcing more “innovative reading experiences” soon.

feedly-cloud-appsOn a personal note, I used Feedly’s migration process — if you can call a couple of clicks a process — a couple of months ago, and I’ve been using Feedly ever since. (I put it first on my list of Google Reader alternatives for a reason.)

The migration was simple and complete, included my folder organization as well as my feeds, and the web experience of Feedly can be easily configured to closely match a slightly-better-designed Google Reader: text-heavy, compact, and easy to quickly scan.

Google is shutting down Reader on July 1st.

If you have RSS feeds still active there, Google recommends that you export them before that data, or risk losing your data.

photo credit: mattgalligan via photopin cc

Filed under: Business, Cloud, Dev, Media

    



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Cloudera cofounder Mike Olson steps down as CEO, former ArcSight head steps up

by Sean Ludwig on June 18, 2013

CloudBeat 2013
Sept. 9 – 10, 2013 San Francisco, CA

Early Bird Tickets on Sale

Cloudera

Big data startup Cloudera has announced a shakeup of its executive team, with cofounder Mike Olson stepping down as CEO and former ArcSight CEO Tom Reilly stepping in to take his place.

Olson will stay on as chairman and chief strategy officer. Olson welcomed Reilly into his old job with this canned statement:

With over 30 years of enterprise software experience, I am pleased to welcome Tom to the Cloudera family. We have long set the pace for the commercial adoption of Hadoop and with Tom’s leadership and focus Cloudera will accelerate the pace of innovation, continue to deliver growth and extend our market leadership. Today’s announcement reinforces Cloudera’s commitment and investment in the Hadoop open source community and the continued success of open source initiatives.

Cloudera is a well-known player in the big data space, and it has raised a staggering $140 million in venture capital to date. It is best known for selling a version of Apache Hadoop that is packed with more features and support.

Now the company’s fate will line up with Reilly, who has a lot experience but a lot of work ahead of him. Cloudera’s announcement hints that Reilly will help position the company for its next steps, whether that be an IPO or an acquisition. Cloudera writes (emphasis ours):

Reilly joins Cloudera from HP, the world’s largest technology company, where he served as the vice president and general manager of enterprise security. Prior to HP, Reilly served as CEO of enterprise security company ArcSight, an early innovator in SIEM technology. Under Reilly’s leadership ArcSight became the market-leading platform for enterprise security intelligence adopted by the largest public and private organizations globally. He led ArcSight through a successful initial public offering and subsequent sale to HP in 2010.

Filed under: Cloud

    



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