It turns out the mystery eBay buyer for Kiko was Tucows Inc. and my friend, Elliot Noss. Noss explains the Toronto-based company's rational in a lengthy post. Essentially, it boils down to Tucows' need for a calendar application within its e-mail system, and buying Kiko for $258,100 on eBay provided Tucows with good technology much faster than developing it internally. "We all believe that a calendar is a very important function in the messaging suite for small businesses," Noss said. "Given that people don't want to maintain separate services for personal and business use, and because the line between personal and business services is getting blurrier, we felt this functionality was a big hole for us." For people unfamilar with Tucows, it provides more than 6,000 ISPs, hosting companies and service providers with wholesale tools such as blogging publishers (Blogware), software, e-mail and domain name registration. The company also operates a software download site with more than 40,000 titles.
Update: For more check, out Mathew Ingram and Don Dodge. TechCrunch has done a podcast with Noss about the Kiko deal.
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Well, Well: Tucows Bought Kiko
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