Koprol

Koprol, since 25 May 2010 called Yahoo Koprol, is an Indonesian social networking service, allowing users to connect based on location.[1] Mobile users can use the site as a positioning service, without the need for a GPS receiver. Once logged in, users can see other members who were in nearby location.

In Indonesia, this application has been released in Jakarta, Bali, Bandung, Surabaya, Surakarta, Sidoarjo, Yogyakarta, Semarang, Surakarta, Bengkulu, Medan, Banda Aceh, Palembang, Makassar, Balikpapan, Cirebon, Papua, as well as foreign countries such as Singapore, and USA.

In late June 2012, Yahoo decided to close Koprol on August 28, 2012.[2] However, in late July 2012, Yahoo! reached an agreement with Satya Witoelar, Fajar Budiprasetyo, and Daniel Armanto – the founders of Koprol – to return all the rights associated with the trademark and domain names.[3]

Early establishment

Koprol development was started in July 2008 by PT SkyEight Indonesia. It was specifically created for mobile devices.[4] It was released in February 2009, allowing users to post their present location and short status updates, and see other members in the same location. At that point, the location data was limited to Jakarta, with plans to expand it to other Indonesian cities such as Bandung, Yogyakarta, and Denpasar. Founder Satya Witoelar states as he and co-developers Fajar Budiprasetyo, Leo Laksmana, and Daniel Armanto developed the site, they took inspiration from a variety of competing foreign social networks, including Plurk, Twitter, Lifestream, and Brightkite.[5]

Features

Koprol allows users to post a 200 character status message, and attach their current location to the message. Beta features allow users to post other content, such as videos and photos. Koprol features integration with cell phones, Twitter, Facebook, and also a native BlackBerry application. Since November 2009, users were able to log in using their Yahoo! account.[6]

On the back-end, Koprol uses the Ubuntu operating system, the Apache web server, Passenger, Ruby Enterprise Edition, Ruby on Rails, and MySQL 5.

Acquisition

On May 25, 2010, American company Yahoo announced that it had acquired Koprol for an undisclosed value. Yahoo had previously considered a US$100 million acquisition of Foursquare, a US-based location-based social network. Yahoo spokeswoman Rose Tsou stated that "Koprol was uniquely designed for mobile phones and within a year has already built a strong user base" and indicated that Yahoo plans to introduce the service in other markets.[1]

Koprol integrated Yahoo itself since before the Yahoo Open Hack Day event in 2009, Koprol became one of Yahoo's local partners using multiple technologies such as the Yahoo API: Yahoo Fire Eagle, Yahoo Login, and Yahoo Contacts.

Miscellaneous

Koprol means Somersault in Dutch. Indonesia is a former Dutch colony. Amongst Indonesian internet users, 'koprol' is slang for ‘an act of changing physical location or position’[7]

gollark: You nested it more?
gollark: Then you don't need an issue tracker ID.
gollark: Generally they're just incremented by one each time an issue happens.
gollark: So are you asking about... how issue tracker IDs are generated?
gollark: PotatOS issue IDs are randomly generated 8-digit hexadecimal numbers.

References

  1. Gonsalves, Antone (2010-05-26), "Yahoo Buys Location Based Mobile Services Provider", InformationWeek, retrieved 2010-10-07
  2. "Koprol Ditutup, Pengguna Diminta Ekspor Data". June 29, 2012.
  3. "Yahoo! resurrects Indonesia's Foursquare, Koprol. Sign of a more Mayer-ish approach to talent appreciation?". July 24, 2012.
  4. "Yahoo confident Koprol will catch rivals", Jakarta Post, 2010-08-11, retrieved 2010-10-07
  5. "Koprol.com, Pesaing Twitter Asli Indonesia", Tempo Interaktif, 2009-03-10, archived from the original on 2011-02-23, retrieved 2010-10-07
  6. Yuliastuti, Dian (2009-11-23), "Koprol Gandeng Yahoo!", Tempo Interaktiv, archived from the original on 2010-02-06, retrieved 2010-10-07
  7. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-09-22. Retrieved 2010-10-16.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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