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It is unclear whether
Computer.com ever turned a profit or delivered any kind of actual service to consumers. Viewers visiting the site in response to the Super Bowl commercial would have found only a small dictionary of terms such as "MP3" and links to buy basic home computer products from other
62:, Computer.com partnered with an advertising agency to create three Super Bowl advertisements six weeks before the game started. Initially, they were dismayed, as due to their late entry, their time slot was located at the end of the game, at the two-minute warning. However, thanks to the
86:. Computer.com became a notorious example of the extreme of the "dot-com bubble," in that it appeared to have gone through its entire lifecycle, including the $ 7 million Super Bowl ad, without ever articulating what it offered as a company or making a sale of any kind.
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After Super Bowl XXXIV, the company secured "an additional $ 2 million in a second round of funding." In late 2000, the company was sold to
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founded
Computer.com as a general-purpose website to teach people about various aspects of computing. After raising $ 7 million in
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Prior to March 30, 2024 the domain was being used as a front end for a supposedly modified version of
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As of March 30, 2024, the domain is currently being used as a cloud AI infrastructure platform.
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founded in 1999. After spending half of its $ 7 million in venture capital on
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CNet.com gives the company's initial capital as $ 5.8 million.
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308:"Revisiting the Ads From 2000's 'Dot-Com Super Bowl'"
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for business historians and others interested in the
54:, who sold it for $ 500,000. In 1999, Mike Ford and
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Prior to 1999, the domain computer.com was owned by
223:"Gary Kremen | The Brutal Battle for Sex.com"
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291:: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (
255:.com\\, 14 June 2000. Accessed February 28 2014.
361:Defunct computer companies of the United States
273:. Archived from the original on 15 August 2000
248:"Start-up with pricey Super Bowl ad goes bust"
187:, 2 February 2008. Accessed February 26 2014.
120:List of commercials during Super Bowl XXXIV
115:Dot-com commercials during Super Bowl XXXIV
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172:"The Dot-Com Super Bowl"
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198:"Computer.com Homepage"
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52:Gary Kremen
335:Categories
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208:2017-01-17
151:References
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319:1 October
277:1 October
100:Bing Chat
77:Operation
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175:Archived
109:See also
96:ChatGPT
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