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Uncategorized Wednesday, October 10th 2012 at 9:45 am

OnLive Owed Local Bakery $2,000, Probably Explains Why They Ran Out of Cash

Cloud-based video game streaming company OnLive has had a rough year. The company underwent an insolvency process in August, laying off all their staff, only to come back with the same name under new leadership. This maneuver left OnLive’s creditors in a pickle. Some of the bigger lenders are certainly going to get their due, but the smaller folks might not ever see that money. For example, the $2,000 the company owed to Prolific Oven Bakery may never be paid in full. The Credit For Cupcakes initiative apparently didn’t turn out so well.

The best part of this nonsense is this paragraph from the San Jose Mercury News, which sits just a few paragraphs before the mention of the bakery’s debt:

In a statement, the new OnLive said its predecessor’s basic problem was not its business model but that it simply hadn’t raised enough cash for its business to take off.

It’s not that OnLive’s previous business model was the problem. Of course not. They just didn’t have the correct amount of cash required to promote growth and all that. That’s why they were ordering two grand worth of baked goods a month. It’s not like their priorities were out of sync or anything.

In all fairness, the new company — with the same name — might not follow the same path. If you’re metaphorically tightening the belt on finances, baked goods are one of the first things likely to go. It does, however, come off as somewhat obnoxious that they could blame lack of money for their original failure when they were obviously involved in some foolish spending decisions.

Feel free to send money their way, though. Their conference room might need donuts.

(San Jose Mercury News via Hacker News, image via lamantin)

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  • Orangatang

    The cake is a lie…

  • Anonymous

    What kind of bakery gives someone a tab and then lets it run up that high?

  • Walter

    Prolific Oven is also does lunches for a lot of the local startups. All of that debt was lunches brought in for people working over lunch. OnLive ordered from there quite frequently and probably spent $150/week there over the course of two years. No one mentions the part of how much the businessea make off startups that go bust… Just what they owe in the end.

  • mike p

    It is called Net 30. Most business with deal with caterers and other services if they do just be billed monthly. Keep in mind that the Prolific Oven is not some hole in the wall bakery. It can seat about 40 people.

  • mike p

    No, I am not defending it. OnLive fed us our normal Friday bagels the morning we were laid off. You think they got paid?