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The top event of the noughties...the dotcom dotbomb and the prick that burst the bubble

By | December 31, 2009, 11:44am PST

Summary: AOL/Time Warner defined the decade and now that it’s been undone maybe we will have a decade of growth rather than recovery…

I like the term the Brits use to describe the decade of the 2000s - ‘The Noughties.’ Since we are in the final hours of the Noughties, it’s good to look back at some of the most important events.

John McCrea, from Plaxo, writes about his top ten events of this decade.

These are:

- The Dot Com Bubble Collapse.
- Broadband and Wi-Fi.
- Google IPO.
- Blogging.
- YouTube.
- Facebook.
- Twitter.
- Ereaders (Kindle, nook, and more to come).
- Apple, iPod, and iPhone.
- The Social Web.

You can read his reasons for each choice here: Silicon Valley: Top 10 of the 2000s « The Real McCrea

For me, by far the top event of the decade was the dotcom dotbomb. And the AOL/Time Warner was the prick that burst the bubble.

I remember in the late 1990s chatting with my friend Carol Dukes, who was at the London School of Economics at the time, and later became one of the UK’s top female entrepreneurs.

We were discussing the dotcom madness going on, and she said she could predict when the bubble would burst.

I was intrigued. She said she couldn’t tell me the exact date but that it would happen when a ‘new economy’ dotcom company acquired a large traditional company. She made that prediction long before the AOL merger with Time Warner was announced.

And she was right. That merger marked the start of the dotbomb.

That merger never made any sense to me. Why would shareholders of AOL want to own a ‘brick and mortar’ company such as Time Warner with its slow growth strategy? Why would shareholders in Time Warner want a high risk fast growing business such as AOL?

Both sets of shareholders were completely different in their investment strategies and their risk tolerance. It made no sense and neither did the two different management styles and objectives.

The AOL/Time Warner merger was a ridiculous deal and the madness of the deal was the sign that the bubble had burst. What followed was several years of hard times for Silicon Valley. And it’s taken years to recover from the dotbomb.

Now that AOL/Time Warner have broken up maybe this is a sign that a new era has emerged and that finally, we have repaired the deep, gouging effects of the dotbomb.

Maybe this next decade will be one of new growth rather than one long recovery from the excesses of the 1990s.

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Topics

Tom Foremski reports on the business and culture of Silicon Valley at the intersection of technology and media.

Disclosure

Tom Foremski

Tom Foremski is the editor and publisher of Silicon Valley Watcher and Silicon Valley Watch. Tibco Software is an advertiser.

Biography

Tom Foremski

In May 2004, Tom Foremski became the first journalist to leave a major newspaper, the Financial Times, to make a living as a full-time journalist blogger. He writes the popular news blog Silicon Valley Watcher--reporting on the business of Silicon Valley.

Tom arrived in San Francisco in 1984, and has covered US technology markets for leading computer journals around the world.

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RE:The top event of the noughties...the dotcom dotbomb and the prick that b
yantangseo 17th Sep
I hope this article will be better. hermes bags
0 Votes
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The first decade of the 21st century hasn't ended yet, that
will happen at midnight on 31/12/2010.
0 Votes
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So you've asked them all?
Fred Fredrickson 3rd Jan 2010
You don't have any idea what "the majority tells us" about what year it
is because you have no idea how many different calendars there are,
nor how many are actively used throughout the world.

My point had nothing to do with the various calendars or epochs, it
only dealt with the Gregorian calendar referenced by the article. And
that calendar has no year zero, so the first decade CE (or AD if you
prefer) was years 1 to 10.

However, a decade is any period of 10 years, so the naughties can be
defined as the decade from 2000 to 2009 inclusive (but it is still not
the first decade of the 21st centruy).

A question for you: what will you call the decade from 2010 to 2019
inclusive? The one-ies?
The dotcom bubble didn't have anything to do with technology or deals.

The bubble was a concerted effort to steal 401K money.

It worked!
0 Votes
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I thought it was Allan Greenspan
rasmasyean 1st Jan 2010
Wasn't it widely advertised that Allan Greenspan was "the prick that burst the bubble"? LOL
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Fear...
RunSilent23 2nd Jan 2010
started the dotcom bubble and fear burst it. When short-sighted brick and mortor companies felt like they were being left behind in the "new" economy, speed trumped common sense.

For example, Montana Power Company sold their power producing assets which produced solid returns year after year to become a telecom - They were gone in the space of a few years.

Why? Everyone realized in fear that there was no underlying value other than subscriber revenue which could be lost to the lowest bidder or better service provider.

What a great call by your economist friend!
0 Votes
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Here's something to "fear"
rasmasyean Updated - 2nd Jan 2010
Yeah, but the "new economy" still emerged slowly and brick and mortars are feeling the pain now. It's just that since the bubble was burst almost a decade ago,the "new economy" trend happened over a decade vs. a couple of years.

Someone high had so much power that he was able to preserve the old ways, even though it really meant just delaying their demise anyway while having foreign nations arise to take over the technology sector and perhaps eventually supplant the United States. It's happening now and I'm not sure if we can re-secure the mantle. Our only hope is that the pie-in-the-sky nanotech age emerges soon and becomes more significant than the information age of the past. Otherwise, the US may become just a chapter in future history books.
I hope this article will be better. hermes bags

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