The Internet

The Crash of 2000: When the Bubble Burst

3 min · 27. maj 2026
episode The Crash of 2000: When the Bubble Burst cover

Beskrivelse

In this compelling episode of The Internet, host Daniel Cole examines the dramatic rise and fall of the dot-com bubble that fundamentally shaped the modern internet landscape. The episode explores how speculative investment in internet companies during the late 1990s led to astronomical valuations for unprofitable businesses, culminating in the devastating market crash of 2000. Listeners will discover how companies like Pets.com and Webvan became symbols of the era's irrational exuberance, burning through hundreds of millions in investor capital without sustainable business models. Cole details the staggering statistics: the NASDAQ's rise from under 1,000 to over 5,000 points, followed by a crushing 75% decline that wiped out trillions in market value. The episode doesn't just focus on the destruction - it reveals how the crash created opportunities for genuine innovation. Companies like Amazon, despite losing 94% of their value, emerged stronger, while new players like Google were founded during this tumultuous period. The infrastructure investments made during the boom years - fiber optic networks, data centers, and technical expertise - became the foundation for today's internet economy. This episode offers valuable insights into market cycles, speculative bubbles, and the evolution of internet business models. Perfect for entrepreneurs, investors, technology enthusiasts, and anyone interested in understanding how one of history's most significant market corrections shaped the digital world we inhabit today.

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8 episoder

episode The Crash of 2000: When the Bubble Burst cover

The Crash of 2000: When the Bubble Burst

In this compelling episode of The Internet, host Daniel Cole examines the dramatic rise and fall of the dot-com bubble that fundamentally shaped the modern internet landscape. The episode explores how speculative investment in internet companies during the late 1990s led to astronomical valuations for unprofitable businesses, culminating in the devastating market crash of 2000. Listeners will discover how companies like Pets.com and Webvan became symbols of the era's irrational exuberance, burning through hundreds of millions in investor capital without sustainable business models. Cole details the staggering statistics: the NASDAQ's rise from under 1,000 to over 5,000 points, followed by a crushing 75% decline that wiped out trillions in market value. The episode doesn't just focus on the destruction - it reveals how the crash created opportunities for genuine innovation. Companies like Amazon, despite losing 94% of their value, emerged stronger, while new players like Google were founded during this tumultuous period. The infrastructure investments made during the boom years - fiber optic networks, data centers, and technical expertise - became the foundation for today's internet economy. This episode offers valuable insights into market cycles, speculative bubbles, and the evolution of internet business models. Perfect for entrepreneurs, investors, technology enthusiasts, and anyone interested in understanding how one of history's most significant market corrections shaped the digital world we inhabit today.

27. maj 20263 min
episode The Dot-Com Gold Rush: When Everything Had a .com cover

The Dot-Com Gold Rush: When Everything Had a .com

Join host Daniel Cole as he explores the wild days of the late 1990s dot-com boom, when internet startups dominated headlines and venture capital flowed like water. This episode examines the cultural phenomenon that transformed Silicon Valley from a sleepy tech corridor into the epicenter of digital dreams and financial speculation. We'll dive into iconic companies like Pets.com, Webvan, and Kozmo.com, exploring how traditional business metrics were abandoned in favor of 'eyeballs' and 'burn rates.' From the NASDAQ's meteoric rise to its devastating crash, discover how ordinary employees became paper millionaires overnight and why companies spent millions with no clear path to profitability. Cole examines the workplace revolution that introduced foosball tables and free gourmet meals to corporate culture, while analyzing the human stories behind one of the most significant economic bubbles in modern history. Despite the eventual crash in 2000, the episode reveals how the dot-com era's innovations laid the groundwork for today's digital giants like Amazon and Google. Perfect for anyone interested in internet history, startup culture, economic bubbles, or the evolution of Silicon Valley entrepreneurship during this transformative period.

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You've Got Mail: The Wild World of AOL and Dial-Up in the '90s

Join host Daniel Cole on a nostalgic journey back to the 1990s internet era, when AOL reigned supreme and dial-up connections ruled the digital landscape. This episode explores the fascinating history of America Online, from its origins as Control Video Corporation to becoming the world's largest internet service provider with over 26 million subscribers. Discover how AOL's walled garden approach introduced millions to the internet through keywords, chat rooms, and that iconic 'You've Got Mail' notification. Learn about the technical challenges of 56k dial-up modems, the cultural phenomenon of AOL's billion CD-ROM marketing campaign, and how instant messaging revolutionized digital communication. We examine the social dynamics of early chat rooms, the birth of online communities, and how bandwidth limitations shaped 1990s web design. The episode also covers the transition from dial-up to broadband and AOL's eventual decline as internet users demanded more speed and freedom. Whether you lived through the era of busy signals and connection sounds or you're curious about internet history, this episode captures the magic and frustration of going online in the 1990s. Perfect for technology enthusiasts, digital culture historians, and anyone interested in how the modern internet evolved from those early dial-up days.

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episode Mosaic to Netscape: The First Browser Wars cover

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episode The World Wide Web: Tim Berners-Lee's Gift to Humanity cover

The World Wide Web: Tim Berners-Lee's Gift to Humanity

In this episode of The Internet, host Daniel Cole explores the revolutionary creation of the World Wide Web by Tim Berners-Lee at CERN in 1989. Discover how Berners-Lee's frustration with incompatible information systems led to his groundbreaking proposal for a universal information sharing system. Learn about the three fundamental technologies that power the web today: HTML, HTTP, and URLs, and how these open standards enabled the web's explosive growth. The episode examines Berners-Lee's pivotal decision to release the World Wide Web into the public domain in 1993, forgoing potential billions in profits to ensure universal access to this transformative technology. We explore the immediate global impact of this decision, from democratizing information access to enabling small businesses to reach worldwide markets. The discussion covers how the web's collaborative philosophy laid the foundation for modern platforms like wikis, blogs, and social networks, transforming users from passive consumers to active contributors. This episode highlights the moral principles of openness and accessibility that guided the web's creation and continues to influence internet development today. Perfect for technology enthusiasts, history buffs, and anyone interested in understanding how one person's vision fundamentally changed human communication and knowledge sharing forever.

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