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The Y Combinator Database

ycdb.co

196 points by milhouse1337 7 years ago · 33 comments

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jedberg 7 years ago

Infogami didn't die, it merged with reddit. I know because I had to figure out how to make that code actually run.

Illniyar 7 years ago

The footer reads:

"Search experience powered by Algolia (W14). Icons powered by Font Awesome (S15). Hosted on Heroku (W08).

The original (v1.0) YCDB was rated #1 Product of the Day on Product Hunt, Sept 27, 2017. The original YCDB was made with Webflow (S13)."

I suppose you can no make an entire website/product only using YC company tech. ha.

rococode 7 years ago

Well, TIL that the ACLU was in YC W17 thanks to the "top 100 tweet count" page. I was kind of surprised by that, are there other well-established organizations that have joined YC at a (very) late stage or are they unique?

myroon5 7 years ago

Guessed this site was made by them when the third metric was:

"The Most Photogenic Based on Snappr Photo Quality Score"

Interesting site regardless

cyberferret 7 years ago

"Most photogenic"... Really??

EDIT: And here come the downvotes, so let me clarify my stance. I haven't a clue what Snappr does, or what their definition of 'photogenic' is. But here is the dictionary definition of 'photogenic':

    (adjective) (especially of a person) looking attractive in photographs or on film.
So my impression was that this metric was to do with how attractive perhaps the founders were. The overall impression here is YC somehow rates the aesthetic qualities of people in order to select who is 'in'. That sort of impression can do untold damage to their brand, and I am surprised that they let this be a thing.
verdverm 7 years ago

The "search" seems more like autocomplete than search. Try entering "banana" and the search button is disabled

arkadiyt 7 years ago

They're missing the YC13 company I work at (Lob).

hliyan 7 years ago

Looking at the top 100 funded companies: it's interesting that the majority are in the "Consumer", "Dev Tools" or "Healthcare" categories, and hardly any are in the "AI and ML" category.

  • sonnyblarney 7 years ago

    AI is an approach, not a market, so I suggest those who make bank from AI will be companies like consumer, healthcare etc..

  • onion2k 7 years ago

    The list is charting total funding. Older companies that have raised more rounds will be at the top.

codegeek 7 years ago

There is also https://yclist.com which is not as polished but has some interesting information.

ericjang 7 years ago

Very nice! Is the raw data publicly available? Or is it just scraped from Crunchbase?

  • throwaway673874 7 years ago

    It has become very tough to scrape crunchbase off late. I cant do any scripting around it using headless chrome. It instantly recognizes you are not a human

vasilipupkin 7 years ago

you should make detailed ( already public, not suggesting nefarious data snooping ) info available on founder profiles. This would allow mining what kind of founders tend to do well vs average vs poorly

  • majewsky 7 years ago

    That information would likely be useless because of survivorship bias.

    • vasilipupkin 7 years ago

      no, it wouldn't be useless. Firstly, bias alone doesn't make information useless. Secondly, how is it survivor bias if the dataset also includes failed ycombinator companies?

kylelibra 7 years ago

What's the marketing angle for Snappr here?

  • rozenmd 7 years ago

    It's classic side-project marketing to increase brand visibility, etc

  • nodesocket 7 years ago

    This is awesome, but I also wondered how much effort it took the Snappr team to build? I suspect just having a plug/link in the footer is enough, plus SEO juice.

sonnyblarney 7 years ago

A lot of the big hits from quite a while ago. I wonder if there is a trend?

How long as it been since a big, recognizable brand hit?

beaconstudios 7 years ago

it'd be interesting to see companies by investment size vs. exit value. I noticed when clicking around that one of the companies with the highest investment (Cruise) exited for less than its total investment and it got me thinking about which companies might exit for a profit/loss.

snek 7 years ago

YC's portfolio is staggering. Whatever they use to pick who to fund, they're doing it right.

  • dsamarin 7 years ago

    I wonder if it would be reasonable to match their investments albeit on a much smaller scale

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