by theluckycountry » Wed 12 Jun 2024, 02:24:31
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('careinke', 'L')ucky,
Patience grasshopper, watch and learn.
Oh I learnt, long long ago.

Slow and steady wins the race

A Salon article in April of 2000 article painted a picture of the party scene in the technology world that was produced by too much cash chasing too little value. What is most notable perhaps about the article is that it appeared
after the bubble had popped. The party scene was operating on momentum still, but about to come to a calamitous halt.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')“Jessica Crolick downs her free drink, grabs a black fleece jacket from the table and darts out of the dot-com party at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. She hops into a van with four strangers, who are on their way to another dot-com bash across town. The conversation moves from work to apartments, but conspicuously absent from the chatter is Digital Island the digital content delivery company that spent over $50,000 for food, drink and fleece to fete its new logo and announce a partnership with Apple. In fact, by the time Crolick and her posse reach the second party — a tropical-themed and more raucous affair hosted by Beenz an online currency company — few remember the first company’s name, and no one knows or cares what either company does. Dot-com valuations may have withered, but the enthusiasm for extravagant dot-com parties hasn’t, and party budgets show no signs of being trimmed.
In any given week, technology companies throw 15 to 20 parties in the San Francisco Bay Area. On average, each costs $30,000 to $50,000, according to party planners and venue owners, although the $250,000 blowout is hardly rare. In March, for example, Salesforce an online sales automation service, and iCast which offers streaming media tools and content, each ran up tabs greater than $200,000, entertaining more than 1,000 guests each…. Marx, the president of Acteva — which brought 2,000 people to Treasure Island in December for a $200,000 party to announce its new name — agrees. More money, more people and more extravagant ideas are definitely the way to go. It’s no longer enough to just “get a few hundred people together and give them a drink,” he says, glancing around at the paltry WiredPlanet party.”
Of course a scant few dotcoms made it through the era and the market recovered, but the vast majority just vanished off the Nasdaq, never to be seen again. The ones that survived had a practical business model, Bitcoin? Not with it's electricity consumption, that has become it's death knell.