Internet History Podcast show

Internet History Podcast

Summary: A history of the Internet Era from Netscape to the iPad. Oral histories from the people that made the technology happen. "Chapter" episodes providing background on the history of the companies.

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  • Artist: Brian McCullough @brianmcc
  • Copyright: Copyright, Amalgamated Internets

Podcasts:

 185. Ripple's David Schwartz | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 39:43

David Schwartz is the Chief Technology Officer at Ripple, the company behind the cryptocurrency XRP. What is it like to start, build and build out a crypto startup? Is it different than the web and internet startups that we’ve covered on this show for years? What is Ripple? How is it unique in the crypto ecosystem? What is it trying to do for the world? All of this… and yes, why is crypto so tribal… and yes… where is the crypto space even at in this moment in time (December 9th, 2018, btw, for poste

 184. GV's Ken Norton | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 01:19:37

Ken Norton is a partner at GV, Alphabets venture capital arm, but before that, he was a product manager at Google, where he led the development of products like Google Docs, Google Calendar and Google Mobile Maps. But he was also early at JotSpot which became Google sites, was a product manager at Yahoo, was an early employee at CNET and was CTO of Snap, a company probably none of you have ever heard of but I’ve been dying to talk about for years. No. Not snapchat. The original Snap. The dotcom era snap.

 183. Selling the First Facebook Ads, With Matt Britton | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 28:36

Matt Britton not only sold the first ads to and for Facebook, way back in 2004, he gives us a really insightful and, frankly, unbiased look at what Facebook was like as a company in its very earliest days.

 Emergency Podcast Announcement | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 01:45

Emergency Podcast Announcement

 182. Google's Matt Cutts @mattcutts | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 01:01:51

I figure most of you should know who Matt Cutts is, but if you don't, let's just leave it at this: he's about to give you the best, most behind-the-scenes oral history of early Google we've gotten so far on this podcast. He was the head of Google's web spam team for nearly 15 years. He's also the current head of the USDS, so if you what to know what YOU can do for your country—if you're in technology and you want to make the government work better—listen to this episode!

 181. (Ch. 7.5) The Story of craigslist | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 22:23

SUMMARY: The history of Craig Newmark, craigslist and other odds and ends that didn’t make the book!

 180. Part 2 With John McCrea | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 01:31:19

Simple enough: Part 2 with John McCrea. More on SGI, more on doing battle with Microsoft in the 90s. And... interesting stuff on VR and the future...

 179. On Silicon Graphics with John McCrea (Pt. 1) | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 01:11:21

John McCrea is a Zelig-like personality who pops up in so many of the narratives we've already covered: Apple. Netscape. Doing battle with Microsoft. This is part one, mostly about Silicon Graphics, a company I had been thinking about doing an episode on for a while now, to really rejuvenate that company’s reputation, historically. For reasons that will be obvious when you listen.

 178. On Google's 20th Birthday - The History of Google | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 01:35:03

On Google's 20th Birthday (September 4th) a re-cutting and re-airing of my comprehensive history of Google, from it's inception through its IPO. Happy Birthday, Google!

 177. NandO.net with Fraser Van Asch | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 37:16

Nando.net was not only a very early experiment in bringing journalism to the web, it was also one of those local ISP's that flowered in the era of the early 1990s. Fraser Von Asch was not only one of the key players at The News & Observer (thus, "NandO") who brought the project to life, he is another person who has straddled the media industry between the print and digital eras and can give us some amazing insights into the transitions therein... or lack thereof.

 176. The Epic Fail of Digg V.4 With Will Larson | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 3010

This story has gone down in Silicon Valley lore as the ultimate cautionary tale. Digg was the earliest high flying startup in early social media. But then, other startups like Facebook and Twitter started to steal the limelight. So Digg tried to keep up by launching the infamous Digg version 4. And… it’s a disaster. Users hate it. So much so, that many people feel that the reason Reddit is Reddit today is because the Digg community fled there en-masse. Digg Version 4 has become a much cited horror story for when a redesign can be so disruptive it can kill a company. So, what’s the real story behind this urban legend? Today, we talk to Will Larson, who today is at Stripe, was a young engineer working on the launch of Digg version 4.

 176. The Epic Fail of Digg V.4 With Will Larson | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 49:56

Digg was the earliest high flying startup in early social media. But then, other startups started to steal the limelight. Digg tried to keep up by launching Digg version 4. And… users hate it. Many people feel that the reason Reddit is Reddit today is because the Digg community fled their en-masse. Digg Version 4 has become legendary as a redesign so disruptive it can kill a company. So, what’s the real story? Today, we talk to Will Larson, who was a young engineer working on the launch of Digg version

 175. How the Internet Came to Pakistan With Imran Haider | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2558

Today, we're going to continue our occasional project of getting oral histories and personal anecdotes about how, exactly, the Internet and the web came to various places around the world. On this episode we're going to look at how the Internet came to—and is still in the process of coming to—Pakistan. Imran Haider is a listener to the show, works in the tech industry, and analyzes the south asian tech scene at his blog, arkito.co. Today, he tells us how the digital revolution came to Pakistan, how it's still in the process of rolling out, what that has meant for Pakistani society and what the startup and tech scene IS in Pakistan. My thanks to Imran Haider for being a longtime listener to this show, and for being willing to contribute to the project, and please, check him out at arkito.co... it's Ben Thompson level analysis of the tech scene in the sub continent.

 175. How the Internet Came to Pakistan With Imran Haider | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 41:24

On this episode we're going to look at how the Internet came to—and is still in the process of coming to—Pakistan. Imran Haider is a listener to the show, works in the tech industry, and analyzes the south asian tech scene at his blog, arkito.co. Today, he tells us how the digital revolution came to Pakistan, how it's still in the process of rolling out.

 174. Bringing the NYTimes and MSNBC Online With Lisa Napoli | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 4094

Lisa Napoli got a job straight out of college at CNN in its earliest days, which is a crazy startup story in it’s own right. But then she worked for a time at Delphi, which was an early online service and competitor to AOL and Prodigy that I don’t think we’ve covered much here before. And then she helped bring the NYTimes online with CyberTimes, which, as she said, is forgotten to history even by the New York Times. Then on to MSNBC, a crazy hybrid tech and media startup that I don’t think we’ve discussed much either. There’s just so many great stories here. Please enjoy this conversation with Lisa Napoli.

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