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13 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good if dry coverage of dot.com bust,
June 12, 2002
There have been a lot of books about the crash of the high tech market. This is one of the best. The coverage is thorough if at times tedious. Cassidy makes an excellent case that the lack of a business model and the prevalent "greater fool" theory led to the demise of the Internet bubble. Too many pitched the idea that if their site captured just one percent of a [Hundred] billion-dollar market, than the firm would be a success. Only even one percent was a pipe dream, and perhaps a dozen firms had the same idea. And the "greater fool" theory suggests that even if the originators are wrong, somebody else will be foolish enough to buy them out.
Cassidy concludes his good work with a lengthy table of dot.com failures, a sobering story in itself. Perhaps it is so sobering that the life and exhuberance of the subject drained away. I found the last third of the book to be more of a continuous litany of mistakes and I lost much of my interest.
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26 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Embarrassing errors, spelling mistakes and confused facts,
September 26, 2002
This should be a book of fiction. I don't know if I can count all the obvious factual errors. Paul Allen, co-founder of Microsoft, has his name wrong. He claims the Altair computer was named after a character in Star Wars. If the Altair computer was invented in 1975, and Star Wars came out in 1977, how was that possible? Duh... The book states: "In 1978, two Chicago students, Randy Seuss and Ward Christensen, invented the modem...."
No they didn't! In 1977, Christensen wrote Xmodem, the first computer program used to transfer files between computers equipped with modems; a year later, he teamed with Seuss to create the first "bulletin board system" software.
Again, Duh....
The CON here is obviously the publisher, Hyberbole, who got conned by a financial writer who apparantly had a bunch of news snippets he gathered to form a book. There is NO STORY here. Just pieces of information pasted together to form a book. The sad part is, much of the information is mis-spelled, misunderstood by the author, grammictally incorrect or just plain false.
To think people are reading this and thinking they are "Learning" something about the internet craze would be like reading a science fiction novel and think you are learning about NASA.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Competent overview but not without flaws,
April 29, 2003
The first thing you'd say about this book is that, however clever the title, it's erroneous: this isn't the story of a "con" at all, it's the story of a speculative bubble.
The whole point is that no-one was "conned" by the hot air. As Cassidy mentions from the outset, the prospectuses all contained large print health warnings in prominent places: "THIS COMPANY HAS NEVER MADE ANY MONEY, MOST LIKELY NEVER WILL" - but the punters still bought and bought. There were many psychological and sociological factors at play, but deception was not one of them.
For all that, Dot Con is well researched, well written and entertaining into the bargain (my copy was the paperback second edition in which the typos & manifest errors spotted by keen Amazonians (none of which, in my view, was earth-shattering) had been corrected). Cassidy describes briefly and competently the history of the internet and the general financial environment of the last 50 years, and then takes you into the maelstrom of the bubble from 1995 to 2001, all of which he portrays in suitably stunned-mullet fashion. The new edition features a lengthy epilogue which surveys the wreckage and covers the subsequent inquiry into the practices of investment banking firms and their uneasy relationships with their research analysts, all of which is still very current.
While he doesn't really dwell on it, I think Cassidy would come out in favour of more market regulation and intervention: He's especially critical of the Fed's approach to monetary policy and the atmosphere on the street which led to the boom in the first place.
In some ways (though it's hardly fashionable to say so) the investment banking firms and fund managers were as much victims of this as anyone: while the roof is blowing off the market and the choice is to join in and make hay, or watch your competitors annexing large portions of your market share while you sit on your hands, it is a singular Wall Street firm indeed which chooses to sit the boom out.
In any event this is a thoughtful and well put together book and serves as a pretty good overview of some of the most remarkable times in the history of modern finance.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
1.0 out of 5 stars Boring list if scatterred facts
While the story of dot com bubble is fascinating, this book is not. The book is a dry compliation of mostly known facts, scatterred throughout the book. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Oleg Kokorin
4.0 out of 5 stars The Parallels Between the Dot.Com Crash and the Subprime Mess Is Startling
I read "Dot.con" after reading an excerpt of it in Michael Lewis' "Panic". I was excited to get a comprehensive account of the internet stock speculative bubble and relate it to... Read more
Published 9 months ago by Douglas C. Childers
5.0 out of 5 stars 4.5 stars-Speculative bubbles always collapse
This is an interesting look at the Dot.Com Nasdaq bubble ,which started in the early 1990's and collapsed in 2000- 2001. Read more
Published 13 months ago by Michael Emmett Brady
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Published 16 months ago by Luc REYNAERT
5.0 out of 5 stars those were the smartest guys in the room
while the personal computer market built a solid base in the 1980s, it took off in the 1990s with the introduction of windows 95 and the world wide web. Read more
Published 17 months ago by Ryan Costa
5.0 out of 5 stars Could use some editing, but the message is clear
I watched the whole dot.com craze from the sidelines 10 years ago when stocks were amazingly overpriced (then just went higher). Read more
Published 22 months ago by R. J. McCabe
5.0 out of 5 stars Greed Can Kill!
During the 1995-2000 period, investing was fun. Everyone was making money.
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Published on December 29, 2007 by Gene P. Louie
4.0 out of 5 stars Good reference for future speculative bubbles... nice nuggest on Bezos, Greenspan and analysts. Few details on past bubbles...
After having read many stories about the companies that are mentioned in this book, I appreciated the way the author was able to put things in context, and his in depth research... Read more
Published on July 9, 2006 by Alejandro D. Gonzalez
5.0 out of 5 stars Was it for real? Yes.
I enjoyed this book. This book is highly recommended as therapy for anyone who went thru the dot com boom and bust and wonders if it is all a dream.
Published on March 12, 2006 by Nathan Thomas
4.0 out of 5 stars Easy, informative book
Dot.con is a book that reads like a long "New Yorker" article. I view this as a quality, given the subject matter. Despite the size of the ". Read more
Published on July 16, 2005 by Giuseppe A. Paleologo