TechCrunch has published thousands of blog posts over its nearly 5 and a half years. Many are good one-day stories, some we’d like to forget, but others are gems. These classics are just as interesting today as when they were first written.
Why Michael is a pirate. The age of process journalism. The best ways you can get blogged. Our first AOL official meeting. Plus, some of the major news we broke.
But try discovering them. It’s nearly impossible. That’s one of the downsides of a reverse chronology blog.
There is a solution. Presenting TechCrunch Classics. A page that will keep an updated list of memorable and favorite posts. The page will live at: techcrunch.com/classics.
Our new corporate overlords (er, AOL) are starting to bring us first-time TechCrunch readers. This should be a good introduction for our newbies. It should be a good resource for our long-time readers as well.
Below is a copy of the current page.
TechCrunch Classics
Some of the Stories We’ve Broken
Michael Arrington’s Favorites
Erick Schonfeld’s Favorites
MG Siegler’s Favorites
Jason Kincaid’s Favorites
Alexia Tsotsis’s Favorites
Paul Carr’s Favorite posts by Sarah Lacy
Sarah Lacy’s Favorite posts by Paul Carr
Leena Rao’s Favorites
Mike Butcher’s Favorites
Robin Wauters’s Favorites
Photo credit: Flickr/David Masters
TechCrunch, founded on June 11, 2005 by Michael Arrington, is a network of technology-oriented blogs and other web properties.
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