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[8] [9] [10] The beta version Yahoo! Answers was launched to the general public on December 8, 2005 [11] [12] and was available until May 14, 2006. Yahoo! Answers was finally made available for general availability on May 15, 2006. [13] Yahoo! Answers was created to replace Ask Yahoo!, Yahoo!'s former Q&A platform which was discontinued in ...
Yahoo! Next was an incubation ground for future Yahoo! technologies in their beta testing phase, similar to Google Labs. It contained forums for Yahoo! users to give feedback to assist in the development of these future Yahoo! technologies. In early 2006, Yahoo! offered to users the opportunity to beta test a new version of the Yahoo! homepage.
Yahoo! Tech – Offered reviews and advice for buying and using electronics; integrated into Yahoo News in 2016. [70] Yahoo! Transliteration – An online translator. [71] Yahoo! Travel – A travel-booking website; shut down in February 2016. [72] Upcoming – A social event calendar acquired in October 2005; shut down in April 2013. [73] Yahoo!
Users were able to link to Yahoo! Answers. [9] Provided the option to link Yahoo Local. Enabled local search capabilities. [10] In 2011, they created a mobile app. [11] In 2024, Yahoo! announced that My Yahoo! will be shut down and will be replaced with a new service without RSS feeds. The shutdown appears to have taken effect as of December 11 ...
The YUI Library project at Yahoo! was founded by Thomas Sha and sponsored internally by Yahoo! co-founder Jerry Yang; its principal architects have been Sha, Adam Moore, and Matt Sweeney. The library's developers maintain the YUIBlog; the YUI community discusses the library and its implementations in its community forum.
February 5, 2007: Yahoo launches a new search advertising system, Panama. [64] March 1, 2007: Localised New Zealand internet portal Yahoo!Xtra launches. [65] March 2007: Yahoo! acquires Taiwan blogging site wretch.cc. [66] April 30, 2007: Yahoo! announces acquisition of Right Media. [67] June 16, 2007: Yahoo! officially retires the Yahoo!
Yahoo! Pipes was released to the public in beta on 7 February 2007. It was built by Pasha Sadri, Ed Ho, Jonathan Trevor, Ido Green, and Daniel Raffel of Yahoo! It is described by its creators as: …a hosted service that lets you remix feeds and create new data mashups in a visual programming environment.
In October 2008 Yahoo launched Yahoo Calendar Beta to the public. [4] It featured a completely redesigned interface similar to the All-New Yahoo Mail. It also includes support for open standards, support for subscriptions to any iCalendar-based public calendar, Flickr integration, drag & drop functionality and Outlook auto-sync. [5]