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Paperback Net Slaves 2.0: Tales of Surviving the Great Tech Gold Rush Book

ISBN: 1581152841

ISBN13: 9781581152845

Net Slaves 2.0: Tales of Surviving the Great Tech Gold Rush

Technology professionals, former employees of failed Internet start-ups, downsized corporate workers, and entrepreneurs eager to avoid mistakes of the recent past will be captivated by this humorous... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Like New

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Customer Reviews

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Even The Losers Get Lucky Sometimes

NetSlaves 2.0: Tales of Surviving the Great Tech Gold Rush, is a must read for anyone who has risked it all in the hopes of building a better life, only to fall flat on their ... Thankfully, this book is not about 24 year old dot com millionaires crying about their lost fortunes. As Tom Petty says, "Baby, even the losers get lucky sometimes," and this is a collection of stories about hard working underdogs that are worth caring about.Charles is a young ambitious college student who loves the idea of creating an online zine. Instead of handing out a Xeroxed packet of articles to his 10 closest friends, he knows that the Internet will give him a whole new audience of readers from around the world. His passion even leads to a job at the ultimate destination for tech-nerd-intellectuals, Wired. Unfortunately Charles falls in love with the wrong girl at the same time that the Internet bubble is bursting, so Charles must find his inner resolve in order to survive physically and emotionally. What may make NetSlaves 2.0 a frustrating read for some is the fact that most of the characters in these stories do not find a happy ending. That may leave readers wondering why the authors have bothered to bring these stories to the page at all. The reason may be that Bill Lessard and Steve Baldwin simply want these stories to be heard. They have also chosen to use a mix of fact and fiction when telling these stories which may add to this frustration. The reader is sometimes left wondering how much of each story is fact or fiction. NetSlaves 2.0 rings true because it highlights the willful ignorance that many had as they jumped on the Internet bandwagon. One of the least sympathetic characters in the book is Gene. Gene is a 12-year Proctor and Gamble marketing man who is on the brink of a mid-life crisis. Instead of buying a red Porsche and spending his evenings down at the strip club, Gene decides to pin all of his hopes on the Internet. It seems obvious from the start that his dreams of getting rich quick will never come to pass but it's still painful to see him lose his wife, kids, and house. Gene does manage to stumble upon redemption as he comes to accept his fate and bounce back to minor entrepreneurial success. The most compelling story in the book is the Matrix-esque tale of Vincent who finds himself in possession of something extremely valuable to his employers. The drama unfolds as the company resorts to illegal tactics in order to protect their corporate assets. Vincent is standing on strong legal ground, as he tries to protect what is clearly his intellectual property, but the ultimate challenge will be coming up with the money to fight a company with nearly limitless legal resources. Netslaves 2.0 is a quick history of how the Internet debacle occurred and the lives that were changed in the process. Bill Lessard and Steve Baldwin chronicle the daily lives of some of the individual net slaves while also looking at a larger world that includes

What You Need to Kick the Recession Blues

Everyone who has dissed this book obviously hasn't read it. This book is fun, and puts the entire Dot-Com Bubble and its aftermath into perspective. The people profiled run the gamut from executives to regular tech workers who went from making a great deal of money to barely getting by and the dignity that they somehow muster amidst very unpleasant circumstances. (In a way, NetSlaves 2.0 reminds me of "The Shawshank Redemption, because it's about hope, and retaining one's humanity.)

Bizarre and Funny

I'm not much of a fan of Internet books, I suppose both because they so typically stereotype those who use or work in the industry as a bunch of narcissistic, surprisingly narrow-minded, 20-something geeks whose desires are one-dimensional, or that they focus on totally abstract issues or arcane technology that's irrelevant outside of Palo Alto.That being said, I read this book on the plane and really liked it. It fashions, in a 9-part, highly modularized fashion, a picture of those who work(ed) in the New Economy that is likely to resonate with those outsiders (such as myself) who have largely been spared the worst excesses of this period, but have seen many less lucky people destroyed by it. The after-shocks of the damage are likely to be felt for quite a few years in the future, i.e. I maintain with the authors that the dot-com meltdown was indeed the "leading and bleeding edge" of a larger, more catastrophic meltdown of ethics in society now written large in names such as Enron, Merril-Lynch, and even MTA. So I'd say that this is probably one of the few "important" books to be written about the period we've recently witnessed, i.e. 1995-2002.Criticisms? Some of the stories are funnier and terser than others, and I didn't catch all of their references all the time. Still, I have the feeling that I got most of what the authors intended to lay down. Again, I'm on an industry insider by any means, nor do I think that this book was written for insiders but for the general population at large.

Making me glad I missed it

I was in college during the madness of the dot-com boom, just aching to be part of the stock-option party. By the time I left, the bust was beginning and things were seemingly all down hill - I felt as though I had missed something magical.After reading Netslaves 2.0, I realized something. I was an idiot. Bill Lessard and Steve Baldwin have removed looked past the facade of of 24 year-old CEOs and free-money stock-options and dreams of reinventing the world and revealed just how miserable life at the average dot-com was. The book is hillariously funny, but its comedy in the Mel Brooks sense: "Tragedy is when I cut my finger. Comedy is when you fall down a manhole and die." The lives and experiences of these dot-com worker-bees while on the surface had me laughing out loud, they also anecdotally reveal the systemic problems of the cheap-money craze between 1998 and 2000.
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