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Dot.con: The Greatest Story Ever Sold

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Internet gold rush becomes speculative bubble.

If you've ever been curious about the wild era of the '90s tech boom and how it spiraled into the historic dot-com bust, John Cassidy's "Dot.con" is a book you shouldn't miss. Cassidy weaves a narrative that's as informative as it is engaging, perfect for someone looking to understand the intersection of technology, finance, and human ambition. With a sharp journalistic eye, he lays bare the heady mix of innovation and greed that fueled a revolution and eventually led to a meltdown.

Note: While we do our best to ensure the accuracy of cover images, ISBNs may at times be reused for different editions of the same title which may hence appear as a different cover.
New

Dot.con: The Greatest Story Ever Sold

Regular price RM194.00 MYR
Unit price
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ISBN: 9780060008802
Authors: John Cassidy
Publisher: Harper
Date of Publication: 2002-02-04
Format: Hardcover
Related Collections: History, Economics, Business
Goodreads rating: 3.91
(rated by 502 readers)

Description

When Vannevar Bush, Franklin D. Roosevelt's chief scientific adviser, sat down in 1945 to write a magazine article about the future, he had no idea what he was beginning. Bush's vision of a desktop computer that would contain all of human knowledge inspired the scientists who built the Internet. In the early 1990s, when a British computer programmer devised the World Wide Web and an Illinois student invented an easy-to-use Web browser, the Internet was transformed from a scientific curiosity into the biggest gold rush since the Klondike. In Dot.con, John Cassidy, one of the country's leading financial journalists and a staff writer at the New Yorker, relates the stories of Netscape, Yahoo!, America Online, Amazon.com, and other Internet companies, large and small. In a lively and entertaining narrative, Cassidy traces the rise of Internet stocks and the development of a populist stock market culture to the end of the Cold War. He shows how an unscrupulous alliance of entrepreneurs such as Jeff Bezos, venture capitalists such as John Doerr, stock analysts such as Mary Meeker, and investment bankers such as Frank Quattrone helped turn an exciting technological development into an unstable and dangerous speculative bubble. Cassidy doesn't restrict his attention to Silicon Valley and Wall Street. He demonstrates how many prominent journalists and policy makers helped to expand and prolong the bubble, particularly Alan Greenspan, the chairman of the Federal Reserve. But in the end, Cassidy concludes, responsibility for the Internet boom and bust cannot be placed on any one individual. It was a nationwide epizootic that involved tens of millions of Americans. And now that it is over, the country as a whole is paying a heavy price for succumbing to greed and wishful thinking. An artful blend of storytelling, history, and economics, Dot.con provides the first complete and authoritative account of the biggest financial story of the modern era.
 

Internet gold rush becomes speculative bubble.

If you've ever been curious about the wild era of the '90s tech boom and how it spiraled into the historic dot-com bust, John Cassidy's "Dot.con" is a book you shouldn't miss. Cassidy weaves a narrative that's as informative as it is engaging, perfect for someone looking to understand the intersection of technology, finance, and human ambition. With a sharp journalistic eye, he lays bare the heady mix of innovation and greed that fueled a revolution and eventually led to a meltdown.

Note: While we do our best to ensure the accuracy of cover images, ISBNs may at times be reused for different editions of the same title which may hence appear as a different cover.