Meta
-
Recent Posts
- Native apps are reigning on mobiles, but Jakob Nielsen strategically bets on web apps. — [LINK]
- Steven Krivit continues to trash Andrea Rossi and his LENR technology. — [LINK]
- Interview with Adam Lashinsky — [VIDEO]
- Why some people are more innovative — [VIDEO]
- Forbes editor deciphers Steve Jobs’s Apple. — [VIDEO]
- Jason Ruspini rebuts Eric Zitzewitz on the regulation of political prediction markets. — [COMMENT]
- Eric Zitzewitz petitions the CFTC in favor of real-money prediction markets about politics. — [TEXT]
- Global warming is a big scam. — [LINK]
- A Swarm of Nano Quadrotors — [VIDEO]
- The Tragedy of the Commons — [VIDEO]
- Guy Kawasaki on Steve Jobs — [VIDEO]
- Inside Apple — [VIDEO]
- Mitt Romney’s taxes — [LINKS]
- A critique of Apple’s multimedia iBooks. — [LINK]
- Does Apple lack “generosity”? — [LINKS]
- Apple Education Push — [LINKS]
- Water Crystals — [DOCUMENT]
- Apple’s e-book software will allow publishers to make textbooks more interactive. — [LINKS + VIDEO]
- Alain Soral is France’s most dangerous intellectual… (dangerous for the French plutocrats, that is). — [VIDEO]
- Computers thru time — [CHART]
Why HubDub won: Google loves HubDub, and the Google users love what HubDub produces.
This entry was posted in Analysis (Industry), Exchanges & Markets, Internet Marketing - Internet Commerce and tagged BetFair, Google, Google Search, Google Web Search, HubDub, InTrade, keywords, prediction markets, Search Engines. Bookmark the permalink.
2 Responses to Why HubDub won: Google loves HubDub, and the Google users love what HubDub produces.
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.

Even 308 seems a bit low. Especially with the amount of textual news on the site. Where did you get those numbers?
Barry, I got these numbers from the right sidebar of the Compete page I linked to.
Yes, the numbers might be under-assessed. However, the ranking of the 3 exchanges would be probably the same, had Compete got all the numbers.