There is ripe opportunity for someone to build this technology again (perhaps innovate in places, but not necessarily) and work to a free-mium model.
A great business could be made from $3-month pro accounts, as there is a massive amount of people who would love to use this but are not going to pay $200 year/seat for this technology.
I'd be skeptical of any product that guaranteed to keep my data safe and only cost $3/mo.
Depending on usage, it could be really interesting to consider a Fog Creek Copilot-like business model: charge a reasonable monthly fee for unfettered access and a small fee for one-off usage.
That way, you could nail that $3 a pop sort of usage, and guarantee yourself a steady stream of income at the $20-$30 range.
If it was for the later, I think Wide-Area Bonjour (DNS-SD) is a good substitute. Bonjour handles port-forwarding via NAT-PMP or uPnP as well service discovery. I have a bias or two though (see profile).
great article. I love when people put together in depth posts on businesses you've probably never heard of that do really well + had specific insight (mixergy excels at this in the form of interviews).
the picture of the hamachi homepage has the graphic of the guy writing something on a glass board. what is it with everyone using stock clipart with random people writing random things that are supposed to look really smart on a clear board? ITS EVERYWHERE.
downvote. Hamachi is still completely free for noncommercial use. You can download it from their website\1st google result. Still works full-featured and free.
Besides the point. The product isn't marketed for noncommercial use, and part of the way the entire site is built makes you think "oh man, this is going to cost me down the line," even if it's free now.
Plus even look at how buried the product is. Its been subjugated to secondary brand status, plus clip art. All you need are a set of white papers and it is full-on enterprise sell mode.
If you make social software you have to sell the software and market the software in a friendly, social way. Not in an enterprise-y way. The entire promise of Hamachi was the potential for social computing to rise beyond the authoritarian domain of IT administrators. Yet to position and build a site that only appeals to IT administrators -- there's the rub.
But yes, secondarily, no mac client = non starter for me.
A great business could be made from $3-month pro accounts, as there is a massive amount of people who would love to use this but are not going to pay $200 year/seat for this technology.