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Everything and Nothing Is a Tech Company Now

Everything and Nothing Is a Tech Company Now

4 years ago
Anonymous $mKxHd64frN

https://www.wired.com/story/everything-nothing-tech-company-now/

It was 1998 and internet mania was in full swing. Fueled by the fear of missing out on the next big e-thing, freewheeling venture capitalists and speculators poured money into companies that appeared only tangentially internet-related. Entrepreneurs responded in kind, many going so far as to add “.com” or some techy sounding prefix like “e-“ or “net-“ to their company’s name in the hopes of attracting attention from internet-obsessed investors.

Some went even further. In 1998, CEO Alan Meckler of the niche magazine publishing company MecklerMedia renamed the firm “Internet.com Corp.” It worked. When the company went public in June 1999, shares were trading at $14. By December 1999, at the height of the dot-com bubble, shares of Internet.com had spiked to $72.25. All sorts of dot-com companies, no matter how tenuous their connection to the internet, continued to surge in value in the eyes of Wall Street—until the bubble burst in early March 2000.

Everything and Nothing Is a Tech Company Now

Dec 26, 2019, 2:13pm UTC
https://www.wired.com/story/everything-nothing-tech-company-now/ > It was 1998 and internet mania was in full swing. Fueled by the fear of missing out on the next big e-thing, freewheeling venture capitalists and speculators poured money into companies that appeared only tangentially internet-related. Entrepreneurs responded in kind, many going so far as to add “.com” or some techy sounding prefix like “e-“ or “net-“ to their company’s name in the hopes of attracting attention from internet-obsessed investors. > Some went even further. In 1998, CEO Alan Meckler of the niche magazine publishing company MecklerMedia renamed the firm “Internet.com Corp.” It worked. When the company went public in June 1999, shares were trading at $14. By December 1999, at the height of the dot-com bubble, shares of Internet.com had spiked to $72.25. All sorts of dot-com companies, no matter how tenuous their connection to the internet, continued to surge in value in the eyes of Wall Street—until the bubble burst in early March 2000.