Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q5167340> ?p ?o }
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- Q5167340 subject Q449971.
- Q5167340 subject Q6287279.
- Q5167340 subject Q6983514.
- Q5167340 subject Q7197350.
- Q5167340 subject Q8408061.
- Q5167340 subject Q8551696.
- Q5167340 abstract "Cool Site of the Day is an early website created in August 1994 and originally maintained by Glenn Davis. Linking to one single recommended site off its homepage each day, it soon became an arbiter of taste on the Internet.Within a few months of its launch, Cool Site of the Day attracted "around 10,000 visitors" each day; within a year of its launch, more than 20,000 people were visiting each day, and the award became a coveted prize among Silicon Alley start-ups. Cool Site of the Day also sparked a great number of similar coolness awards.The site's founder, Glenn Davis, became a celebrity, giving interviews to magazines and radio networks such as NPR while fending off gifts from site maintainers who sought his recommendation of their sites. Newsweek celebrated Davis as one of the fifty most influential people on the Internet, dubbing him the "King of Cool." In time for the first anniversary of Cool Site of the Day Davis inaugurated the Cool Site Of The Year award, also known as the Webby, which was first produced by Kay Dangaard and presented at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel as a nod to the first site of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (Oscars) Hollywood, California, in August 1995. As part of the proceedings, Davis held an email poll on a shortlist of five websites that had previously been distinguished as a cool site. The award was won by The Spot. On October 3, 1996, the second Cool Site of the Year awards ceremony was held at Webster Hall, a nightclub in the East Village, Manhattan.Davis left the site in November 1995, but it continued to thrive. By the end of 1997, Cool Site of the Day had spawned thousands of imitators, grown into an "eight-person mini-e-publishing empire," and attracted millions of page-views a month. Davis' former employer decided to sell the site at this point.".
- Q5167340 language Q1860.
- Q5167340 wikiPageExternalLink www.coolsiteoftheday.com.
- Q5167340 wikiPageWikiLink Q1043326.
- Q5167340 wikiPageWikiLink Q1075711.
- Q5167340 wikiPageWikiLink Q1411891.
- Q5167340 wikiPageWikiLink Q1860.
- Q5167340 wikiPageWikiLink Q188413.
- Q5167340 wikiPageWikiLink Q34006.
- Q5167340 wikiPageWikiLink Q449971.
- Q5167340 wikiPageWikiLink Q5568763.
- Q5167340 wikiPageWikiLink Q6287279.
- Q5167340 wikiPageWikiLink Q671510.
- Q5167340 wikiPageWikiLink Q6983514.
- Q5167340 wikiPageWikiLink Q7197350.
- Q5167340 wikiPageWikiLink Q7766050.
- Q5167340 wikiPageWikiLink Q7978928.
- Q5167340 wikiPageWikiLink Q8408061.
- Q5167340 wikiPageWikiLink Q8551696.
- Q5167340 wikiPageWikiLink Q99.
- Q5167340 language Q1860.
- Q5167340 name "coolsiteoftheday.com".
- Q5167340 url www.coolsiteoftheday.com.
- Q5167340 type CreativeWork.
- Q5167340 type WebPage.
- Q5167340 type Website.
- Q5167340 type Work.
- Q5167340 type Thing.
- Q5167340 type Q386724.
- Q5167340 comment "Cool Site of the Day is an early website created in August 1994 and originally maintained by Glenn Davis. Linking to one single recommended site off its homepage each day, it soon became an arbiter of taste on the Internet.Within a few months of its launch, Cool Site of the Day attracted "around 10,000 visitors" each day; within a year of its launch, more than 20,000 people were visiting each day, and the award became a coveted prize among Silicon Alley start-ups.".
- Q5167340 label "Cool Site of the Day".
- Q5167340 homepage www.coolsiteoftheday.com.
- Q5167340 name "coolsiteoftheday.com".