Despite the recent wave of big-name dotcom failures, or "dot bombs" as they have become known, some entrepreneurs are still prepared to take the risk and Hungary is still experiencing steady growth in the number of internet startups.
Published:
4 September 2000 y., Monday
With internet use in Hungary still way behind Western Europe and the US, the local e-business market remains relatively small. A new kind of internet enterprise is however emerging, which firmly targets the international market whilst using Hungary as a convenient and low-cost operating base.
Budapest-based Xenomusic.com is one of many sites offering downloadable music in the now ubiquitous MP3 file format. With the rise of such controversial sites as Napster.com which offer users a forum to swap music online for free, MP3 is becoming a hot topic not only in cyberspace but also for the mainstream music industry, which considers the continuing existence of the CD to be under grave threat.
Xenomusic.com is not however giving anything away for free - charging a dollar a download - nor is it offering legally questionable access to "every track ever recorded" as do many other MP3 sites. Instead, the site specializes in featuring lesser known and mostly unsigned Eastern European musicians, with a strong emphasis on Hungarian folk music.
According to founder and president Douglas Hoppe, a 25-year old Yale music graduate, there is a potentially massive market for Eastern European music, especially in the US where there are millions of Central and Eastern Europeans and their descendants.
Although Hoppe believes that his idea will ultimately be a big money spinner he admits that short-term success will depend on the site generating advertising revenue. MP3 is not however the only burgeoning sector on the internet. The Web is now a popular forum for professional and amateur traders of collectables, and the popular US-based collectors' trading forum eBay.com is one of the few big-name sites who are actually reporting profits.
CollectorNetwork.com is a Belgian-Russian venture run from offices in Budapest which hopes to capitalize on a market which according to their own estimations will have 38.5 million online collectors in the US and Europe alone by the end of next year.
Unlike most online trading sites which more often than not resemble virtual garage sales, CollectorNetwork.com allows collectors' items such as rare coins and banknotes to be traded online. An initial joining fee for dealers and a commission on each transaction are charged.
Šaltinis:
Central Europe Online
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Statistics Lithuania has calculated that, based on provisional data, FDI in Lithuania in 2009 amounted by 5.3 % more than in 2008. Also, direct investment of Lithuanian enterprises abroad grew by 13.9 % in 2009.
more »
Concerns about foreign fish being sold in Europe and what to do about the future of Europe's fisheries industry were aired in a hearing held by the Fisheries Committee on 8 April.
more »
EU opens public debate on its agricultural policy, the prelude to a major reform in 2013.
more »
The European Commission today launched a €35 million call for eco-innovation projects to be funded under the Competitiveness and Innovation Programme.
more »
Bank SNORAS group company Finasta Holding recruits all funds management and investment companies of the group in the Baltic States.
more »
The European Central Bank (ECB) and the European Commission are jointly holding a high-level conference on financial integration and stability at the ECB’s premises in Frankfurt am Main.
more »
Today, the European Central Bank (ECB) is publishing its fourth Report on Financial Integration in Europe, which notes the return towards integration in the European financial markets.
more »
World Bank Group financial commitments since July 2008, just before the full fury of the financial crisis hit, reached US$ 100 billion today as the institution helped countries respond to and recover from the global downturn.
more »
On March 31, 2010, the Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund concluded the Article IV consultation with Serbia.
more »
The International Monetary Fund and the United Kingdom’s Department for International Development have launched a new project to improve macroeconomic statistics in 23 African countries. DFID will provide US$7.5 million over the next five years to support the project.
more »