We review 15+ internet startups per working day. Vote for the one you think will be a killer.
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In their own words
“5 Reasons To Use MomentVille For Your Wedding Website
1. You Can Use It For FREE As Long As You Want! Our free wedding websites have the same features as other paid wedding websites. It is not a time limited trial. You can use it for free as long as you want, or upgrade at any time for advanced features.
2. Your Wedding Website Will Never Expire! You can always view your wedding website at any time. We have the ONLY personal wedding websites that never expire.
3. It’s Easy To Use! MomentVille is the easiest to use of all the personal wedding websites. Edit in place, drag & drop, and more! Watch how easy it is!
4. Its Green! MomentVille uses the tickgreen service to ensure that your personal wedding website is carbon neutral!
5. Its Stylish! Choose from our many themes to make your wedding website personal”.
Why it might be a killer
Other than the obvious reasons of being able to keep your memories forever for free, I reckon there is a good chance for this site to become a killer startup in so as much as it makes wedding planning very easy, because you can centralize your RSVPs in one same place, avoid those awful bits of small papers giving directions to get to the party venue from getting lost (quite cool if you’re hosting it in a non-traditional place, like a beach or the countryside), and make your wedding registry pocket-friendly, because you can get links to online stores that sell the stuff you like at reduced prices.
Some questions
I reckon the slight problem with this site (as with tattoos, relatives and wedding themselves) is that you can’t quietly erase them, and they get to stick there for as long as you remember the URL, which in any case is quite easy to remember. Well, you can actually erase the site, but in order to do it you need to have the password, which both spouses-to-be hold, which means that at any point in a horrid marriage or divorce process quite ugly stuff can get posted without the other person’s consent or possibility to do anything, as the password will probably have been changed at that stage. But hey, what are the odds of something like that happening? 1 in 3?
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