An Inside Look At eBay's Technology 84
endychavez writes with a CIO Insight profile giving a look inside eBay and its technology platform. The company has 40,000 outside developers working to increase its value and efficiency. From the article: "'They are way ahead of other companies' in terms of supporting developers, says one application builder... 'This a new wave of business,' says [another developer's marketing director]. 'eBay is a supplier, a marketing channel and a competitor. It's a weird arrangement.' ... 'If you can't split it, you can't scale it,' says Eric Billingsley, head of eBay Research Labs. 'We've made ourselves masters of virtualization.' ... eBay is able to publish a new version of its site every two weeks, adding 100,000 lines of code, all while in use."
The whole operation is fueled by... (Score:4, Funny)
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My time at eBay as a seller wasn't like that (Score:1, Redundant)
And Ebay never used to tell customers when it expected to correct
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Feedback: Negative - Has poor moderation skills.
100'000 lines of code every fortnight? (Score:5, Insightful)
Why would eBay need to add that quantity of code every fortnight? It doesn't strike me as an indicator of very efficient programming.
40,000 developers with 100,000 lines of new code.. (Score:5, Funny)
Fun and games aside, what's the big deal with upgrading a live site? I write software that builds and packages itself and then deploys it's own code to itself in production while it's running. No issues here...
Re:40,000 developers with 100,000 lines of new cod (Score:2, Interesting)
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That their phone number is a closely gaurded secret gives you an inkling to their thoughts on the whole thing.
And just try to get into their offices to speak to someone!!! I tried once in order to deliver papers I had picked up from the local court - they wouldn't even let me in the building or send someone to the door to take receipt of the papers!! (Richmond upon thames offices, fairly well hidden but I used to walk past them daily on the way t
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Disclaimer: Like all good
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The earlier poster is correct -- there isn't anyt
The 40,000 figure is for *independent* developers (Score:2)
It's part of a growing community of some 40,000 independent developers, all building products using eBay's own application programming interfaces, or APIs--the connection points that let a program share data and respond to requests from other software. These applications are tailor-made to work seamlessly with eBay's core computing platform. eBay provides its APIs to the developers for free; its cost is limited to maintaining the code and providing some support resources for the developers.
This would appear to suggest that these are developers independent of eBay and not employed by them. On the other hand:
The result: eBay is able to publish a new version of its site every two weeks, adding 100,000 lines of code, all while in use. The system is never taken off-line for upgrades or maintenance.
It doesn't sound as if the 100,000 lines of code are from the 40,000 independent developers. Creating an application to interface with the eBay API doesn't seem to equate to publishing "a new version of its site". Of course, it's possible that the article has made a mistake.
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Listing fees (Score:2)
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Just in time for the rate hikes that are going into effect on January 30th, 2007! Thanks Mr. Cobb!
An important part of any business strategy is the regular evaluation of pricing structure. From time to time, we make pricing changes to correct unhealthy dynamics in the
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A++++++++ (Score:4, Funny)
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eBay vs. WoW (Score:2, Funny)
Re:eBay vs. WoW (Score:5, Funny)
Nope, they have Patch-Every-Other Tuesdays instead.
A new site every 2 weeks? (Score:2, Insightful)
Can someone tell me why this is viewed as a good thing?
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40,000 developers?? (Score:4, Funny)
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Fourty THOUSAND Developers? (Score:4, Insightful)
Want to improve eBay's efficiency? Ditch 39,500 of those developers.
Or by developers do they mean "people who have downloaded the API docs"?
Re:Fourty THOUSAND Developers? (Score:4, Insightful)
They're outside developers, so I'm pretty sure thats what they mean.
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Some developers, like http://unwiredbuyer.com/ [unwiredbuyer.com], have even built useful buyer-oriented applications. There are a whole bunch of outside developers listed on the eBay website: http://solutions.ebay.com/ [ebay.com]
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Gee, I wonder why you singled out that particular developer in your post?
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re: unwiredbuyer, I have nothing to do with them. I just remember their name from the O'Reilly/eBay developer contest which was announced at ETech '06.
in other ebay news (Score:5, Insightful)
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If only eBay valued their customers - the sellers, more than they value a giant PR spin machine.
Re:in other ebay news (Score:4, Informative)
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Do you even know what a "natural monopoly" is? (Score:4, Insightful)
eBay is a natural monopoly because a dominant online auction has a self-reinforcing properties. It's not simple for a buyer to switch to another auction site, because it will not have many listings, so they won't find what they want to buy. And it's not simple for a seller to switch to another site, because no one goes there to buy things (because there are no sellers), so you don't sell anything.
It's a huge catch-22 situation. These kinds of monopolies usually take drastic change to break - some huge event that will cause a critical mass of buyers and sellers to move to another site. As long as eBays price increases stay small and incremental, it is unlikely this will occur.
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This does not apply to EBay. There are tons and tons and tons of auction sites on line, there are various stores and trading places and billboards.
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A small startup with the right idea at the right time can turn on a dime to react to innovation and new markets.
Google is an obvious example - who would have thought in 1996 that Altavista or Yahoo or Excite or... yeah, can't even remember the names
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for buyers - number of listings
for sellers - number of buyers
There are many other eBay knockoffs, some that have had enormous media advertising blitzes and some charge no fees at all, but eBay has continued to be by far the most popular, simply because it is the most popular.
I guess this breaks down to, eBay is will continue to be the most popular because it is the most popular. I don't see how that cycle will be broken, and I don't think eBay's p
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The only way to get off the ebay crack is to get everyone else off it too.
Yea its gonna hurt me, but its better than the alternative.
And yes I did cancel my account, though ebay has a 180 day wait... Blah.
Sadly it will cancel my half.com account too, which I actually like.
So they've got stacks of developers (Score:2, Informative)
Not 40K eBay-employed developers (Score:5, Informative)
In other words, that count represents the total number of people worldwide writing code that interfaces with eBay. That's very different than 40K developers working for eBay.
Poor EBay (Score:1)
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All your Bays are belo... Oh, never mind.
Poor priorities (Score:5, Insightful)
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Too bad... (Score:3, Insightful)
Too bad they didn't support the people who buy merchandise through the site that well.
40,000 developers? (Score:2)
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And Also... (Score:1)
I attended a meeting some time back... (Score:2)
Mis-Labelled (Score:4, Insightful)
Cottage Industry (Score:1)
Ebays in a win-win sitch as they get site & product expansion without really having to pay for it. I wonder if they own part of the IP at the end of the day.
I've noticed a similar Open API peripheral strategy with other sites - like FLICKR and even Myspace to a lessor extent. Flickr has a fe
I'll Never Forgive CIO Insight (Score:2)
Back at the office they made me new "Jon Athan" buisiness cards as a joke.
Bitches.
eBay in MY time zone? (Score:1)
I cry BS!!!, I scream FOUL. (Score:1)
Steve Ballmer...... sorry..... (Score:1)
2.5 lines a week of code per developer (Score:2)
Hmm... we should all work for Ebay, I can shell out that many lines, provided, those lines are not as long as a whole book.
Is it really adding new lines? (Score:1)