Kevin Gilbertson could easily make $1 million a month. He chooses not to.
That's not to say the 28-year-old Blaine Web developer isn't doing well since his creation, TinyURL.com, took off in 2002. Recently named one of the 50 best websites by Time magazine, TinyURL does a simple task:
It allows you to turn a long, unwieldy Web address into something you can remember. Something, well, tiny.
The site makes URLs tiny at a rate of about 1 billion per month. Which is where the $1 million comes in. Gilbertson could make about that much if he chose to attach a pop-up advertisement on each URL. But he won't, on principle.
"It's kind of, 'Here's a pop-up, look at me,'" Gilbertson said. "That's not what I want to see. It's all about getting the person to the place."
That's about as expansive as the Web tinkerer and entrepreneur gets. He saves most of his words for his other pursuit -- unicycling. Everything about him is somewhat abbreviated: short sentences, few keystrokes, one wheel. But he might not have been the man behind TinyURL if it weren't for the unicycling.
While hosting an online forum for his riding hobby, Gilbertson wanted a way to keep links from wrapping down several lines of text.
He made TinyURL, it spread to other online forums, and, without much fanfare, ended up everywhere and much-imitated. Today it is one of the top 1,000 sites in terms of hits.