This is annoyingly true but very wise:

Absolutely true indeed.

Vevue was first conceived by Thomas Olson in 2012, as peer-to-peer video exchange platform. It was a hotel misrepresented online which caused a restless night that led to wanting a more honest and transparent system for sharing information. In dog years and tech ages, 2012 seems like eons ago. Back then, Instagram had 13 million followers after launching only a year prior. (source) Facebook, began their steep adoption curve and was climbing to 490 million active users. Google+ was the fastest growing network and ideas like Patreon had yet to launch. Needless to say, times have greatly changed since 2012.

We’ve witnessed the proliferation of visual communication through Instagram and the rise and fall of juggernauts Facebook and Google+. Consumer habits are changing to pave the way for creativity thanks to game-changers like Patreon.

Digital social culture is shifting. And the seedling Thomas planted in 2012 is a uniqueness that is far from outdated. Many great ideas come ahead of their time. No matter how fast technology continues to evolve, sometimes time is required for a good idea to find the right intersection. Our agility to develop within an ever-changing tech landscape has brought forth a first to market product. Last year we became the industry standard for video distribution on the blockchain. Yet, our successes have been met with shortcomings as well. We haven’t been able to deliver Android. Subsequently, we have yet to reach a benchmark of mass adoption.