Anonymous ID: 4dde05 June 24, 2020, 9:27 a.m. No.9730441   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>9730356

>Broadcast.com

>>9730420

The company was founded in 1989 as Cameron Audio Networks, named after its founder Cameron Christopher Jaeb, who received an initial investment from his father.[2] Jaeb wanted a method for people to be able to listen to out of town sports games. The original idea, a shortwave radio that would receive broadcasts inside a sports venue, morphed into a hand-held device that would receive customized satellite broadcasts.[2] With the support of his father Tom Jaeb, he incorporated.[2]

 

Jaeb then began soliciting the rights to broadcast radio and professional sports games live on the Internet, making 80-100 calls per day.[2]

 

In 1994, through a class that his girlfriend was taking, Jaeb was introduced to Todd Wagner, an attorney at Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld.[2] Wagner introduced Jaeb to Mark Cuban, who invested $10,000 in exchange for 2% of the company.[2] Cuban wanted to listen to the basketball games of his alma mater, Indiana University.[3] Cuban and Wagner worked out a deal whereby Jaeb would keep 10% of the company and would get a monthly salary of $2,500 but Cuban would take control of the company.[2] The company was renamed AudioNet.com in September 1995 in conjunction with the reorganization. At first Cuban picked up signals from KLIF (AM) in his bedroom and then streamed them on the internet.[3] The company grew from mainly broadcasting sporting events to broadcasting U.S. presidential nominating conventions and many other events.[3]

 

In 1998, AudioNet was renamed to Broadcast.com and in July 1998, the company became a public company via an initial public offering.[4] The stock price soared 250% on its first day of trading, a record for a newly issued public stock.[4][5] After the IPO, the company was worth $1 billion, Mark Cuban was worth $300 million, and Todd Wagner was worth $170 million.[5]

 

On April 1, 1999, less than 9 months after the IPO, Yahoo! announced the acquisition of broadcast.com for $5.7 billion in stock.[6] At the time, broadcast.com had 570,000 users, and the purchase price was $10,000 per user. Cuban sold most of his Yahoo stock that same year, netting over $1 billion.[7] Founder Chris Jaeb, whose stake was diluted to less than 1% of the company, received approximately $50 million from the sale.[2]

 

The service became a part of Yahoo! Broadcast Services.[8]

 

Yahoo shut down much of its broadcast services in 2002[9] and broadcast.com has since been discontinued. Yahoo's high-profile purchase of broadcast.com has since been called one of the worst internet acquisitions.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broadcast.com

Anonymous ID: 4dde05 June 24, 2020, 9:50 a.m. No.9730831   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0834

Lockheed U-2 Dragon Lady, tail number 80-1070, up out of Beale AFB and cruising in rarified air at 60,000 feet over central Nevada.

 

https://youtu.be/eamnTyfkUBY