I
n recent days we have been sharing various examples of the never-ending whitewashing [
1,
2,
3] which goes on in the media. Microsoft's brand value has been sinking, as judged by several different and independent ladders, so the company is trying to use Gates' departure and capitalise on sentimental value. A readers of our shares some insights on this and looks at the brighter future which lies ahead:
Waggener-Edstrom is filling the media with hagiographies of the man who made bad engineering acceptable, but here is something else to reminisce upon as the Botnet King steps down:
By 1995, two years after the launch of the first
popular graphical web browser, the WWW was growing explosively and would continue to do so for several years. Nowadays the growth has leveled off, but is still growth. The WWW, built upon the Internet, is synonymous with e-Business and e-Commerce.
By 1995, nine years after the official launch of the Internet and about 20 years after the first Internet connections, it was
still growing explosively and would continue to do so for several years. Nowadays, too, the growth has leveled off, but you now find Internet connectivity in everything from coffee pots (really) to Linux-based mobile phones.
By 1996, in the midst of ten and three years of explosive growth of the Internet and the World Wide Web, respectively, what was the Botnet King's position? It was that
the Internet was a passing fad and unimportant.
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See also: