- Title : How the Web Was Won: How Bill Gates and His Internet Idealists Transformed the Microsoft Empire
- Author : Paul Andrews
- Rating : 4.85 (151 Vote)
- Publish : 2014-8-23
- Format : Paperback
- Pages : 368 Pages
- Asin : 0767900499
- Language : English
True, as one reviewer notes, the Grand Canyon is not included, but this title contains more than the obvious (that most other travel books focus one). This book gives a nice rundown of different handbag styles, and designers. Loki is the HERO. Bernie Sieg
True, as one reviewer notes, the Grand Canyon is not included, but this title contains more than the obvious (that most other travel books focus one). This book gives a nice rundown of different handbag styles, and designers. Loki is the HERO. Bernie Siegel is the founder of ECAP (Exceptional Cancer Patients) and much of this book is drawn from his experiences with these patients. For more about Simon see BOOK VIII in Twentieth-Century Philosophy of Science: A HistoryThomas J. Thousands of practical insider techniques and tips come from successful professional operations around the world and cover all the basics. Highly Recommend!!! This book has a lot great information on several things. In Supreme Mode, we focus on our relationship to 'being', beyond notions of self, as portrayed in various degrees within Eastern schools of thought. This book covers the basics, to some pretty advanced jobs on the covered motorcycles. Daniel Scott tells these stories in a standard issue working-class shtick, using simple declarative sentences, the smug irony of none-too-bright narrators, and the catalog of dirty realistic detail found in doublewides. I stillSince 1989 he has written one of the nation's longest-running weekly personal technology columns, "User Friendly." Andrews has won numerous awards for his coverage of Microsoft over the past decade. Coauthor of the 1993 national bestseller Gates, Paul Andrews has watched Microsoft as a Seattle Times reporter since the company moved to suburban Bellevue from Albuquerque, New Mexico, in 1979. He lives in Seattle with his wife, Cecile, and bichon frise, Maggie.From the Hardcover edition.
"An exemplary tale of corporate resilience filled with insider details."-- New York Times Book Review"A well-researched, highly readable account of how the Internet has changed everything and everyone Readers will find his profiles of Internet zealots both in and outside of Microsoft fascinating."-- New York Times"Andrews's minute descriptions of the technology and of the problem-solving approaches of Microsoft and its rivals will fascinate tech-heads and intrigue the uninitiated." -- Publishers Weekly"Andrews brings humor and drama to this narrative account A riveting look at the strong wills, huge egos, and technological and business prowess that engineered Windows' dominance of Internet software." -- Booklist"Andrews clearly has a sense of the Microsoft Man."-- UpsidIn How the Web Was Won, veteran Seattle Times journalist Paul Andrews chronicles the explosive drama and high-stakes gamesmanship behind the most remarkable business turnaround of the 1990s: the story of Microsoft's turbulent journey from Windows to the Web--and of the handful of Internet believers who led the charge.. When Bill Gates peered into Microsoft's crystal ball, he saw a world of Windows. Then the Internet burst onto the scene, and suddenly Gates's Windows-oriented future didn't look so bright. The Internet was the future of computing--and the world's largest software company wasn't ready for it. The inside story of how a small band of agitators at Microsoft staged the stunning turnaround that transformed the company from an Internet laggard into such a dominant force that it was declared a monopolist.1993
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