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Business History, Computer Business & Culture, Internet & World Wide Web, Business Biography, Technology Industries
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Architects of the Web

by Robert H. Reid
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Overview

May 1997

It is arguably the most significant business tool of our time. Seemingly overnight, the Internet has exploded from obscurity to a fantastically broad and powerful resource. More versatile than the television, fax machine, telephone, and personal computer, the Internet is a ready source of information, conversation, and entertainment all at once. The catalyst of this explosion, of course, was the rise of the World Wide Web, the Internet's multimedia domain.

Here is the first behind-the-scenes peek at the rapidly emerging industry of the Web. It profiles the crucial players involved in its genesis, including

  • Marc Andreesen, coauthor of Mosaic and cofounder of Netscape;
  • Kim Polese, who led the Java movement at Sun Microsystems and recently started a venture called Marimba;
  • Mark Pesce, creator of VRML, the language that brings virtual reality to the web;
  • Jerry Yang, cocreator of Yahoo!, the Internet's leading directory service; and
  • Andrew Anker, of HotWired, a pioneer in bringing Wired magazine online.

They are an eclectic group -- diverse enough that their stories give readers a broad and thorough understanding of the Web's history, its capabilities and its business relevance. The stories are presented in a way that makes the concepts and forces they discuss accessible and understandable. All are interesting, funny, and highly significant to the present and future of business.


Synopsis

May 1997

It is arguably the most significant business tool of our time. Seemingly overnight, the Internet has exploded from obscurity to a fantastically broad and powerful resource. More versatile than the television, fax machine, telephone, and personal computer, the Internet is a ready source of information, conversation, and entertainment all at once. The catalyst of this explosion, of course, was the rise of the World Wide Web, the Internet's multimedia domain.

Here is the first behind-the-scenes peek at the rapidly emerging industry of the Web. It profiles the crucial players involved in its genesis, including

  • Marc Andreesen, coauthor of Mosaic and cofounder of Netscape;
  • Kim Polese, who led the Java movement at Sun Microsystems and recently started a venture called Marimba;
  • Mark Pesce, creator of VRML, the language that brings virtual reality to the web;
  • Jerry Yang, cocreator of Yahoo!, the Internet's leading directory service; and
  • Andrew Anker, of HotWired, a pioneer in bringing Wired magazine online.

They are an eclectic group -- diverse enough that their stories give readers a broad and thorough understanding of the Web's history, its capabilities and its business relevance. The stories are presented in a way that makes the concepts and forces they discuss accessible and understandable. All are interesting, funny, and highly significant to the present and future of business.


Library Journal

The origins of the rapidly evolving World Wide Web extend back only to late 1993. Reid, himself a veteran of web business ventures, describes how eight web pioneers and their businesses laid the groundwork for the web today. Drawing on interviews with founders and others, he chronicles the development of Netscape, RealAudio, the Java and VRML programming languages, I/PRO and web advertising, Yahoo!, HotWired, and CNET. Each of the book's eight main segments combines a company history with a biographical sketch of one of the company's entrepreneurial founders. The introduction by technology analyst J. Neil Weintraut clearly delineates the web's uniqueness as an efficient information medium. Despite several typos and the absence of documentation, this book is clearly written, providing good, solid information on an industry that is so new that details are sometimes hard to find. Highly recommended for both public and academic libraries serving readers interested in either the web or in doing business on it.Lawrence R. Maxted, Gannon Univ., Erie, Pa.

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Editorials

Library Journal

The origins of the rapidly evolving World Wide Web extend back only to late 1993. Reid, himself a veteran of web business ventures, describes how eight web pioneers and their businesses laid the groundwork for the web today. Drawing on interviews with founders and others, he chronicles the development of Netscape, RealAudio, the Java and VRML programming languages, I/PRO and web advertising, Yahoo!, HotWired, and CNET. Each of the book's eight main segments combines a company history with a biographical sketch of one of the company's entrepreneurial founders. The introduction by technology analyst J. Neil Weintraut clearly delineates the web's uniqueness as an efficient information medium. Despite several typos and the absence of documentation, this book is clearly written, providing good, solid information on an industry that is so new that details are sometimes hard to find. Highly recommended for both public and academic libraries serving readers interested in either the web or in doing business on it.Lawrence R. Maxted, Gannon Univ., Erie, Pa.

Kirkus Reviews

An authoritative overview of the last three years on the Internet that is plagued, however, by serious questions of audience, an elitist voice, and an almost paranoid preoccupation with Microsoft's Bill Gates. Beginning with the creator of the first graphical Web browser, Marc Andreesen, Reid—himself a Net world wheeler and dealer—takes a 'big-name' approach in his technological history, using the eight people behind such milestone Web products as RealAudio (Rob Glaser), Java (Kim Polese), and Yahoo! (Jerry Yang) as centerpieces around which he builds his study. Subjects run the gamut from pure technological advances to the history of Web marketing and 'merging mediums,' such as the Web and TV. For a CEO looking to launch a Web site, the book's business-savvy language will work, and it may prove an informative read. Similarly, the highly technical style will make a reader already fluent in the online lingo comfortable. However, to a lay reader, this book is likely to sound dangerously technocratic, as Reid is not very thorough in explaining the dozens of highly technical terms he uses. Indeed, Mark Pesce, creator of Virtual Reality Markup Language, states the dangers of too much technology in too few hands, saying: "I am both excited and mortified by this technology." Furthermore, Reid's perspective is very Bay Area-specific, ignoring developments taking place outside of California. If, for example, Wired is the leading Web publisher, as Reid claims, then what of New York exploits such as Word and Charged? And while Gates-bashing has always been the intramural sport of the industry, Reid takes it to a new low by dubbing Microsoft's CEO 'ChairmanGates.'

Book Details

Published
February 1, 1997
Publisher
Wiley, John & Sons, Incorporated
Pages
424
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780471171874

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