Imagem da capa para More awesome than money : four boys, three years, and a chronicle of ideals and ambition in Silicon Valley
More awesome than money : four boys, three years, and a chronicle of ideals and ambition in Silicon Valley
INITIAL_TITLE_SRCH:
More awesome than money : four boys, three years, and a chronicle of ideals and ambition in Silicon Valley
AUTHOR:
Dwyer, Jim, 1957-
ISBN:
9780143127895
PUBLICATION_INFO:
New York : Penguin Books, 2015.
PHYSICAL_DESC:
374 p. ; 22 cm
ABSTRACT:
"Four NYU undergrads wanted to build a social network that would allow users to control what they shared about themselves. They were hoping to raised 10k in 30 days and their project was called Diaspora. Their 2010 Kickstarter campaign ended the first day with three backers. They raised 20 times their goal and had support from around the world. But as the months wore on and the money wore out, they couldn't get there--coding failures, bad business decisions, over-reach and under-organization, and the inevitable conflicts of personality and goals. And when one of the four committed suicide in the fall of 2011, they found out how much they had all been on their own all along"-- Provided by publisher.
CORPORATE_SUBJECT:
SUBJECT:
Internet industry -- United States.
Online social networks -- United States.
Privacy, Right of -- United States.
New business enterprises -- United States.
Business failures -- United States.
Diaspora (Project)
BIBSUMMARY:
"Four NYU undergrads wanted to build a social network that would allow users to control what they shared about themselves. They were hoping to raised 10k in 30 days and their project was called Diaspora. Their 2010 Kickstarter campaign ended the first day with three backers. They raised 20 times their goal and had support from around the world. But as the months wore on and the money wore out, they couldn't get there--coding failures, bad business decisions, over-reach and under-organization, and the inevitable conflicts of personality and goals. And when one of the four committed suicide in the fall of 2011, they found out how much they had all been on their own all along"--