The dot-com bubble was one of the worst periods in modern tech history. Other companies like Amazon and eBay survived the dot-com crash and are now thriving. Are you ahead, or behind on retirement?
If you were investing in the late 1990s, you’ll remember the euphoria of the dot-com boom. Anything with a ".com" at the end of its name could raise millions in capital and see its stock price double ...
This March marks the 20th anniversary of the bursting of the dot-com bubble in 2000, which led to the demise of iconic startups with names like Pets.com and Webvan. Experts reminisce about the era ...
The Internet is filled with nostalgia on Monday as geeks all over the world celebrate the 25th anniversary of the registration of the first dot-com domain. On March 15, 1985, a small ...
A couple of years ago senior executives, managers and other employees of dot-com companies seemed to have it all, enjoying heady, fast-track careers in growing industries where it seemed the only ...
The Nasdaq-100 took more than 15 years to return to its dot-com-era peak. One investor who saw the crash coming sees echoes in today's AI craze. This week marks the 25th anniversary of the peak of the ...
Shelling out millions of dollars for a Super Bowl commercial can be a risky move. Just ask the 14 companies with dot com in their name how things turned out after being featured in Super Bowl ads in ...
Nearly every startup founder has undergone a torturous process that invariably includes whiteboards, hours of late-night bantering sessions, and days spent typing potential domain names into a browser ...
As the AI industry’s market value continues to balloon, experts are warning that its meteoric rise is eerily similar to that of a different — and significant — moment in economic history: the dot com ...
The years 2000 to 2002, when the bottom fell out of the dot-com industry and hundreds of Internet-based companies went bankrupt. According to Kara Swisher in "Burn Book," a 2024 tell-all about the ...
The S&P 500 just delivered back-to-back annual gains of more than 25% for only the second time in its history. The last time was during the dot-com era in 1998, which was an irrational period in stock ...
Remember 1999? As Prince predicted, it was one long party. And who were the party meisters tapping the kegs of capital investment? Technology nerds, that’s who. Not only were nerds saving the world ...