'90s Dot-Coms — Where Are They Now?
An anonymous reader writes "The Industry Standard has put together a list of 10 dot-com stars from the Internet bubble of the late 1990s, and tracked down what happened to the services and their founders. A lot of the services are still around, albeit under new ownership, including eToys, Garden.com, and DrKoop.com. Others have been completely reinvented — Boo.com, an online clothing retailer that burned through $125 million in funding in the late 1990s, is now an online travel community. Of the founders, many were able to cash out early and/or achieve later online success. Excite's Joe Kraus and Graham Spencer later started JotSpot, which was bought by Google, and Kraus now directs work on Google's OpenSocial initiative. Others did not fare as well, such as two of the co-founders of Garden.com, who declined to cash out at the height of the bubble, and are currently 'between business ventures.' The insiders' post-mortems of the failed dot-coms are interesting — several suggest the concepts were good but too early for their time, while others identify specific factors that led to the failures — ranging from a lack of advertising to 'intense' greed."
They went to Africa so they can be with all the knee grows.
Many Doc-com people as doing one of these things.
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Wash Dishes
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Profit.
Sorry about the writing. Robot fingers, you know? Cliff Steele in DOOM PATROL #23
Only the Soylent Green ones.
My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
It looks closer to the HP's Compaq 2133. They improved the mouse button layout but the Shift keys are horribly placed; I'd be hitting the up arrow/cursor instead of left Shift. They need to be arranged more like Thinkpad keyboards.
similes are like metaphors.
If you can read this, I forgot to post anonymously.