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Wired - A Romance by Gary Wolf
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Wired - A Romance (original 2003; edition 2003)

by Gary Wolf

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532486,114 (3.21)None
The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Testfor our own age, the story of a dreamer who turned American media upside down—and suffered the consequences Louis Rossetto had no money, no home, no job. Five years later he owned the hottest magazine in America and was poised to become an international tycoon, with America’s most powerful financiers by his side. Rossetto was the founder and editor ofWired,whose hyperactive Day-Glo pages proclaimed that every American institution was obsolete. Instantly,Wired,was everywhere—on television, passed around the halls of Congress, displayed in the office of the president of the United States.Wired,’s headquarters in San Francisco became a pilgrimage site for everybody who wanted to be at the white-hot center of the digital revolution. Not since the early days of Jann Wenner andRolling Stonehad anybody so brilliantly channeled the enthusiasms of his era. But this was only the beginning. Wired cast an uncanny spell, creating a feedback loop that grew stunningly out of control.Wired,’s online site, HotWired, designed and sold the first banner advertisements for the World Wide Web, unleashing a commercial frenzy.Wired,reached for empire, with a book-publishing company, a broadcast division, and foreign editions all over the globe. But as the market’s enthusiasm outstripped the limits of reason, Rossetto faced a battle over the fate of Wired that would prove the ultimate test of his radical ideas. Gary Wolf, one ofWired,’s most popular writers, takes no prisoners in this insider’s account, telling a story that is alternately thrilling, hilarious, heartbreaking, and absurd. Now that bumper stickers read-ing please god–just one more bubble have been sighted on the highways of California,Wired—A Romancegoes beyond the dot.com clichés and paints a deeply affecting portrait of the boom.… (more)
Member:jottce
Title:Wired - A Romance
Authors:Gary Wolf
Info:Random House (2003), Edition: 1st, Hardcover, 304 pages
Collections:Your library
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Wired - A Romance by Gary Wolf (2003)

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An interesting history of the early days of Wired Magazine. ( )
  Katya0133 | Mar 3, 2009 |
Gary Wolf's book Wired : A Romance provides an interesting outlook on the birth of wired. Gary Wolf, as a previous writer with the magazine, he provides an insightful look in how American journalist Louis Rossetto and his partner Jane Metcalfe in 1993 set the company up. Rossetto come's over as a svengali character, but also a real pain, and Metcalfe is virtually a ghost in the book. Wolf's book is good, but it really is not that great. ( )
  plasticspam | Jun 19, 2006 |
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The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Testfor our own age, the story of a dreamer who turned American media upside down—and suffered the consequences Louis Rossetto had no money, no home, no job. Five years later he owned the hottest magazine in America and was poised to become an international tycoon, with America’s most powerful financiers by his side. Rossetto was the founder and editor ofWired,whose hyperactive Day-Glo pages proclaimed that every American institution was obsolete. Instantly,Wired,was everywhere—on television, passed around the halls of Congress, displayed in the office of the president of the United States.Wired,’s headquarters in San Francisco became a pilgrimage site for everybody who wanted to be at the white-hot center of the digital revolution. Not since the early days of Jann Wenner andRolling Stonehad anybody so brilliantly channeled the enthusiasms of his era. But this was only the beginning. Wired cast an uncanny spell, creating a feedback loop that grew stunningly out of control.Wired,’s online site, HotWired, designed and sold the first banner advertisements for the World Wide Web, unleashing a commercial frenzy.Wired,reached for empire, with a book-publishing company, a broadcast division, and foreign editions all over the globe. But as the market’s enthusiasm outstripped the limits of reason, Rossetto faced a battle over the fate of Wired that would prove the ultimate test of his radical ideas. Gary Wolf, one ofWired,’s most popular writers, takes no prisoners in this insider’s account, telling a story that is alternately thrilling, hilarious, heartbreaking, and absurd. Now that bumper stickers read-ing please god–just one more bubble have been sighted on the highways of California,Wired—A Romancegoes beyond the dot.com clichés and paints a deeply affecting portrait of the boom.

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