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Netbot was the first commercial Internet price comparison service.[1] Founded by University of Washington Computer Science professors Oren Etzioni and Daniel S. Weld the company was funded by ARCH Venture Partners, Alta Partners and the Madrona Venture Group, and the University of Washington was also a shareholder.[2] Netbot introduced the Jango comparison shopping “agent” first as a browser plug-in and later, as a server product.[3][4] In addition, the company operated MetaCrawler, a metasearch engine, before licensing it to Go2Net. In October 1997, Netbot was acquired by the Excite portal for $35M.[5]
^"Roboshop", The Economist, June 12, 1997.
^Sharon Baker, "Netbot shops the Internet's myriad malls", Puget Sound Business Journal, March 31, 1997.
^"Find It, Then Buy It on the Web", PC Magazine, May 27, 1997.
^James Coates, "Shopping Net Cast On The Web: Software Searches Sites For Products On Consumers' Lists", Chicago Tribune, July 25, 1997.
^
Excite to buy NetBot. CNET, 1997-10-16. Retrieved 2011-2-28"
Netbot was the first commercial Internet price comparison service. Founded by University of Washington Computer Science professors Oren Etzioni and Daniel...
the primary search engines. Some time after the search engine launched, NetBot, Inc., which was cofounded by Etzioni, was initiated to commercialize MetaCrawler...
was produced by Netbot, a Seattle startup company founded by University of Washington professors Oren Etzioni and Daniel S. Weld; Netbot was acquired by...
pioneering multiple technologies including MetaCrawler (bought by Infospace), Netbot (bought by Excite in 1997 for $35 million), and ClearForest (bought by Reuters)...
Computer (PC); known as "father of the IBM PC" Oren Etzioni – MetaCrawler, Netbot Christopher Riche Evans David C. Evans – computer graphics Shimon Even Scott...
October 3, 2012, a sister app featuring most of the features of Tweetbot, Netbot, was released by Tapbots for the paid Twitter competitor App.net. On November...