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Nerds 2.0.1 Paperback – November 1, 1999
- Print length416 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherTV Books
- Publication dateNovember 1, 1999
- Dimensions6.75 x 1.25 x 10 inches
- ISBN-101575000881
- ISBN-13978-1575000886
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Product details
- Publisher : TV Books (November 1, 1999)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 416 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1575000881
- ISBN-13 : 978-1575000886
- Item Weight : 2.7 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.75 x 1.25 x 10 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #3,668,790 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,620 in Computers & Internet Humor
- Customer Reviews:
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On another note, you know that you're growing old when such an eventful volume covers your life's exact timeline, and when you've watched over half the volume's events unfold before you in the workplace.
Stephen Segaller deserves credit for compiling an exhaustive background of four decades of Internet-related activity, including the major and minor players, their opinions, their backgrounds, thoughts, related feelings, reactions, plans, failures and successes. As a writer and television producer, Segaller originally created a television program titled "Nerds 2.0.1" during which he took a short break from production and adapted his material for this book.
I was pleasantly surprised to be intimately introduced to people I've either heard of - or read about - over the years. It was fascinating to watch the Internet unfold from behind-the-scenes as if I were closely involved in making historic progress with Frank Heart, Tim Berners-Lee, Norm Abramson, Vint Serf, Bob Metcalfe, Scott McNealy, Bill Joy, or my favorites (since I'm a Cisco fanatic) Len Bosack and Sandy Lerner.
It is easy to see the parallel between the television documentary and the book, as the book contains four neatly divided parts consisting of the decades of the 60's, 70's, 80's and 90's, though the book could be divided into parts related more closely to significant events in the development of the Internet. These events would include: the introduction of the modem, the rejection by AT&T, Control Data Corp., and IBM of the original RFP to create a non-modem "Internet", the establishment of ARPAnet via packet switching, the development of routing protocols, the introduction of e-mail and FTP, the international expansion of ARPAnet, the establishment of Ethernet, the start of the continuing proliferation of Intel processors, the entry and exponential growth of microcomputer use, the TCP/IP protocol formally split and defined, the designation of the Domain Name System (.com, .edu, .org, etc.), the replacement of ARPAnet by the World Wide Web, the congressional act to permit commerce on the Web, the unbelievable growth of the Web in the early to mid 90's and thereafter, the continued dominance of Cisco and Microsoft in their related fields, and finally the continued exponential growth of Internet users, sites, traffic and commerce.
In conclusion I would highly recommend this book to anyone with even the slightest curiosity as to how this transforming medium we call the Internet just happened into being. Stephen Segaller's work is comprehensive and written for the reader as an active and interesting novel rather than a dry volume of compiled facts and figures.
As much as we would long for these bright sunny days of the Roaring 1990s that this book ruminates about, the current state of the Internet and the Tech Industry is looking pretty dim. And it is time for the innovators to take back control from the crooked profiteers!
As a side note, Segaller's many errors regarding simple facts of the U.S. space program did not inspire my confidence in his investigative abilities, especially since Segaller ties the subject together with the very beginnings of ARPAnet.
Additionally, this book is "obsolete" because Segaller uses contemporary analogies to illustrate the significance of the history (he uses dangerous words such as 'now' and 'present,' which automatically date any history book). Nevertheless, I would not want to attempt a history of the Internet, and it is for his daunting task that Segaller deserves recognition.

