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Search resuls for: "Indiana University basketball"


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That's where Mark Cuban and his college friend Todd Wagner were in 1995, eating lunch and talking about Indiana University basketball. "There's got to be a way that we can listen to Indiana University basketball ... over the internet," Cuban recalled the two of them saying, during a MasterClass course released Thursday. Cuban and Wagner sold the company to Yahoo for $5.7 billion in stock in 1999. It remains Cuban's most lucrative entrepreneurial endeavor, topping the $6 million sale of his first company, software business Microsolutions, in 1990. Disclosure: CNBC owns the exclusive off-network cable rights to "Shark Tank," which features Mark Cuban as a panelist.
Persons: Mark Cuban, Todd Wagner, There's, Cuban, Wagner, Broadcast.com, he's Organizations: Ivy League, Indiana University basketball, Yahoo, Hoosiers, Cost, CNBC Locations: Dallas, Bloomington , Indiana, Broadcast.com, Cuban
BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA - FEBRUARY 08: Former Indiana Hoosiers Head coach Bob Knight on the court during halftime of the game against the Purdue Boilermakers at Assembly Hall on February 08, 2020 in Bloomington, Indiana. (Photo by Justin Casterline/Getty Images)Bobby Knight, the Indiana University basketball coach who guided the Hoosiers to three NCAA championships, has died at 83, his family said. The Hall of Fame coach died Wednesday surrounded by his family at his home in Bloomington, Indiana, his family said in a statement. Knight was called "a legend among coaches" by the Basketball Hall of Fame, where he was inducted in 1991. Knight was Big Ten coach of the year five times and a four-time national coach of the year.
Persons: Bob Knight, Justin Casterline, Bobby Knight, Knight, Big, Knight's Organizations: Former Indiana Hoosiers, Purdue Boilermakers, Hall, Indiana University, Hoosiers, NCAA, of Fame, Basketball Hall of Fame, Ohio State Buckeyes, Indiana Hoosiers, U.S, Summer Games, NIT, Alzheimer's Association, Marian University Locations: BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA, Bloomington , Indiana, Los Angeles, Massillon , Ohio
The platform, which Schwartz describes as "Etsy for software products," currently brings in roughly $354,000 per month, according to a CNBC Make It estimate. "You want to really orient yourself around a real problem that needs to be solved," Schwartz, 25, tells Make It. During high school, he and Zoub built sneaker bots, or pieces of software that nabbed limited-edition shoes faster than people who manually clicked "buy now." The company clearly solved a problem, but the co-founders didn't find the work creatively fulfilling. It solved a safety problem: Zoub patrolled online forums where people sold software, and found them rife with scammers and rip-off artists.
Persons: Steven Schwartz, Cameron Zoub, Schwartz, Jack Sharkey —, Mark Cuban, Cuban, Todd Wagner, Zoub, didn't, Whop, it's, Warren Buffett Organizations: Tesla, CNBC, Indiana University, Yahoo Locations: Whop
As Cuban built the tech companies in the 1990s that would eventually make him exorbitantly wealthy, he never prioritized personal riches, he told GQ on Wednesday. "I never, ever thought in terms of money," he said. Initially, when Cuban sold his first company MicroSolutions to CompuServe for $6 million, he never thought he'd have to work again, he told GQ. Instead, he told GQ, he was happy with the money he'd earned in the deal and had a feeling the stock market was overpriced. From there, Cuban went about spending his money in ways that made him happy, including buying his hometown Dallas Mavericks in 2000.
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