Author: meattle

  • With over 1 million monthly unique visitors, Compete.com races past Alexa

    On November 1st, 2006 we launched Compete.com

    Less than a year later, in September 2007 for the first time more people visited Compete.com than Alexa (a Amazon owned online audience measurement company). It’s been a closely fought (& monitored) battle for supremacy since then.

    In April 2008, 18 months after launch, Compete.com broke through, and is now clearly ahead of Alexa. It used to be a close battle. No longer. Compete.com continues to make me proud 🙂

    Watch out for more great stuff to come from the Compete team in the near future. I hear they have a pretty big release cookin’

    Compete.com races past Alexa with over 1 million monthly unique visitors


  • Lookery Boston gets an office

    The space is an incredible (huge) place complete with a swanky café, fully stocked fridge, multiple conference rooms, parking lot, etc. over in Davis Square in Cambridge: 1 Camp Street, Cambridge MA 02140.

    Lookery - Viximo

    A big thank you to our pals at Viximo for sharing their space with us 🙂

    Update: David just posted some more pictures here.


  • Support Firefox – help set a Guinness World Record!

    Download Day 2008

    Firefox is gearing up to set a Guinness World Record for the most software downloaded in 24 hours by encouraging all 175 million+ Firefox users to upgrade in a single day.

    Final shipping date is estimated for mid-June. Release Candidate 2 is currently expected to be available on Wednesday, June 4th.

    Are you in? Sign up now to get notified when Firefox 3 goes out the door.


  • POPSignal in Boston Business Journal

    Boston Business Journal

    Great article by Jackie Noblett of the Boston Business Journal on the changing tide of business networking in Boston. POPSignal on page 2.

    Friday, May 16, 2008
    Social Network
    Local techies take cue from West Coast to mix parties and business

    Greater Boston’s techies are bucking the label of the introvert and turning out to meet each other at a growing number of area get-togethers. At events ranging from small coffee talks to big bashes at nightclubs, they also are helping to defy a stereotype — that despite its large student population, Boston is cold, stodgy and lacks the socializing and networking opportunities that grease deals in places like Silicon Valley and Austin, Texas.

    The change, if it comes off, will be the work of a handful of visionary techies that have made it their mission to build buzz and raise the spirits of hundreds of geeks, entrepreneurs and investors.

    “In the last 18 months we have been blessed with a definite increase in the number of events taking place,” said Mark Doerschlag, founder of MarksGuide, a Web site that tracks local business networking events. “Boston’s doing the right thing by encouraging these types of events.”

    Two days later, the first POPSignal party was scheduled to take place at the Tequila Rain nightclub in Boston, bringing hundreds of techies together for music, dancing and free booze.

    Brian Balfour and Jay Meattle of POPSignal, a startup designing a Web platform for the local tech community, said the event came from a demand for even more social events for the younger crowd.

    “I really wanted to do something more social, just bring the tech community in and have fun,” Balfour said. “You make your best connections in social environments.”

    POPSignal’s 450 person RSVP list filled within 48 hours.

    Read the full article here.