Internet Collapses and Other InfoWorld Punditry by Bob Metcalfe, Robert M. Metcalfe

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  • Pub. Date: May 2000
  • 360pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: May 2000
    • Publisher: Wiley, John & Sons, Incorporated
    • Format: Paperback, 360pp

    Synopsis

    Introducing the most provocative technology book of the year! Bob Metcalfe is a leading inventor (Ethernet) and entrepreneur (3Com) who has been challenging the conventional wisdom since 1992 in his weekly InfoWorld column. This book collects his most stimulating, prophetic, and inflammatory columns—and pairs them with rebuttals and commentary by Esther Dyson, Vint Cerf, Eric Raymond, John Levine, Arno Penzias, and other noted technology pioneers.

    ercb.com - Kirk McElhearn

    Feisty Bob Metcalfe is the curmudgeon of the computer press. While his counterparts excel in hubris, Metcalfe is the king of chutzpah. His no-holds-barred style of journalism is refreshing in a field where most writers merely interpret press releases.

    A Metcalfe column, such as those collected in Metcalfe's Internet Collapses and Other Infoworld Punditry, can be exciting or unnerving, it can wax poetic or incite controversy. While the subject matter is not always the most interesting to non-geeks (after all, he was the inventor of the Ethernet protocol and cofounder of 3Com; that is, an engineer), he has a way of tackling subjects that are at the very heart of computing and the Internet.

    This book contains 133 columns written between 1991 and 2000, on subjects ranging from wiring, pricing, Microsoft, and privacy, to the "collapse" of the Internet, the Internet stock bubble burst, ISPs and the Open Source movement. Metcalfe has probably made as many friends as he has enemies writing these columns, but no one can accuse him of toning down his message.

    As far back as 1991, he was suggesting that Microsoft was "abusing its power," and he has born the standard of this idea ever since. The many columns on the Microsoft question show that, while the issue is not black-and-white, neither are his opinions. He lashes out at the "Open-Sores" movement with the same acerbic wit, prompting the ire of many who thought he was their friend.

    What is unique in this book is all the places where Metcalfe has been wrong. There are many, which is not surprising for someone who goes out on a limb so often, but he has no qualms about including these major mistakes in the book for posterity. In 1995, given the exponential growth of the Internet, he predicted that it would collapse in 1996. (Remember that this is the man who posited Metcalfe's law, which says the value of a network is relative to the square of the number of its users -- in other words, the more users there are, the more traffic increases, and this increase is not geometric, but exponential.) Well, it didn't collapse in 1996, or ever since, for that matter, but the columns on the subject, all written in 1995 and 1996, give good insight into what might have happened. Even though he was dead wrong, a lot of the points he raised are valid.

    Another unique element of this book is that it contains rebuttals from many people who put his comments in a different light. They range from Bruce Sterling, rebutting a column on the term "cyberspace;" to Nathan Myhrvold, whose refusal to rebut is included as a rebuttal; to Eric Raymond, attacking his comments on the "Open-Sores" movement.

    As a historical document, Internet Collapses and Other Infoworld Punditry shows the thinking and insights of one of the key thinkers in the computer world. While he is not always right, his opinions are often controversial, and his track record is pretty good. The book contains columns that, in retrospect are correct, and others that aren't, but at least he's not afraid of showing where he went wrong.

    This book is a good read, though not for everyone. The geekier among us will appreciate it most, since it often deals with technical questions. But Metcalfe writes with a refreshing tone, one that is all too absent these days.

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    Internet Collapses and Other InfoWorld Punditryby Anonymous

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    April 21, 2000: You are invited to read how I predicted an Internet gigalapse in 1996. Thank heaven the worst outage that year was only a 118 megalapse. I ate that worrisome column in front of a thousand Internet enthusiasts at the Santa Clara Convention Center. Then, having learned that it is better for a pundit to be wrong than vague, I predicted that the Internet stock bubble would burst on November 8, 1999, which it didn't, not that exact day anyway. I'm still standing by that prediction. On the other hand, I've been on Microsoft's antitrust case since 1991. In late 1999, I predicted Bill Gates would be replaced as CEO during 2000, and a month later, Ballmer took over. And I was for advertising on the Internet back when its few grouchy users were all non-commercial. Being right and wrong like this is one part of my being a technology pundit. Another part is calling attention to important technology trends before they're obvious -- bogus software patents, for example -- and coining terms to help talk about these trends -- I'm especially proud of 'extranet.' Internet Collapses is a book of my best columns over the last 10 years. I've made no attempt to update them, or retroactively revise my predictions. I thought you'd be interested in these columns and the evolving punditry process that they portray. And as an extra added attraction, I invited a few big shots to rebut my columns, which some of them took too much enjoyment in doing. Anyway, I hope you'll end up as another of my enthusiastic readers. /Bob Metcalfe (metcalfe@infoworld.com)