Go Homedisinformation ®  
Welcome to Disinformation   |   July 06, 2003
     
item of the day
Abuse Your Illusions - the follow-up to Everything You Know Is Wrong & You Are Being Lied To is in the store and every bit as essential. The long-awaited Disinformation DVD is in too!
>>Go
personal of the day
U.S. Weighs Military Intervention in Liberia
>>Go
What The European Papers Say
>>Go
Violence Mars Nigerian Strikes
>>Go
Religion in the News: June 2003
>>Go
login
signup
email
chat
forum
store

activism
aliens
conspiracies
drugs
entertainment
environment
government
history
humanrights
media
mindcontrol
paranormal
people
philosophies
politics
science
sex
spirituality
technology

about
free newsletter
help


dotcom deathwatch
by Alex Burns (alex@disinfo.com) - September 07, 2002
Bibliography

Adizes, Ichak (1999). Managing Corporate Lifecycles. Paramus, NJ: Prentice Hall Press.

Arnott, Dave (1999). Corporate Cults: The Insidious Lure of the All-Consuming Organization. New York: AMACOM, 1999.

Auletta, Ken (2001). World War 3.0: Microsoft and Its Enemies. New York: Random House. [10 June 2002].

Badikian, Ben (1997). The Media Monopoly (5th ed.). Boston, MA: Beacon Press.

Bank, David (2001). Breaking Windows: How Bill Gates Fumbled The Future of Microsoft. New York: The Free Press. [10 June 2002].

Barbrook, Richard and Andy Cameron (1996). The Californian Ideology. [10 June 2002].

Brooks, David (April 2001). "The Organization Kids." Atlantic Monthly Magazine. [10 June 2002].

Brown, Janelle and Katharine Mieszkowski (2001). "The New Slackers." Salon Magazine (February 26, 2001). [10 June 2002].

Butter, Andrea and David Pogue (2002). Piloting Palm: The Inside Story of Palm, Handspring, and the Birth of the Billion-Dollar Handheld Industry. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Calcutt, Andrew (1999). White Noise: An A-Z of the Contradictions in Cyberculture. London: Macmillan Press Ltd.

Cassidy, John (2002). Dot.Con: The Greatest Story Ever Sold. New York and London: Allen Lane.

Castells, Manuel (2000). The Rise of the Network Society: Volume 1 (2nd ed.). Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishers.

Chandler, Alfred D. (2000). A Nation Transformed by Information: How Information Has Transformed The United States from Colonial Times to the Present. New York: Oxford University Press.

Cohn, Jonathan (2001). "The Jungle: Amazon.com and the Return of the Old Economy." The New Republic (19 February 2001).

Cook, David C. (1998). "Auteur Cinema and the 'Film Generation' in 1970s Hollywood." In Jon Lewis (ed.). The New American Cinema. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

Corrigan, Timothy (1998). "Auteurs and the New Hollywood." In Steve Neale and Murray Smith (ed.). Contemporary Hollywood Cinema. London and New York: Routledge.

Corteda, James (2001). Making the Information Society: Experience, Consequences, and Possibilities. London: Financial Times Prentice-Hall.

Crosby, Cason (30 March 2001). "'The Organization Kid' Responds: Analyzing The Atlantic Article." The Daily Princetonian. [10 June 2002].

Cunningham, Brent (March/April 2001). "The World Sees News Through New York Eyes." Columbia Journalism Review. [10 June 2002].

Davis, Erik (1999). TechGnosis: Magic + Mysticism in the Age of the Internet. San Francisco: Harmony Books.

Dery, Mark (1996). Escape Velocity: Cyberculture at the End of the Century. New York: Grove Press.

Dotinga, Randy (2002). "About.com That Labour Lawsuit . . ." Wired News. [12 June 2002].

Edvinsson, Leif and Michael S. Malone (1998). Intellectual Capital. London: Nicholas Brealey Publishing.

Eshun, Kodwo (1998). More Brilliant Than The Sun: Adventures in Sonic Fiction. London: Quartet Books.

Evans, Philip and Thomas S. Wurstler (2000). Blown to Bits: How the New Economy of Information Transforms Strategy. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press.

Frank, Thomas (2002). One Market Under God: Extreme Capitalism, Market Populism and the End of Economic Democracy. London: Vintage.

Frank, Thomas and Matt Weiland (ed.). (1997). Commodify Your Dissent: Salvos From The Baffler. New York: W.W. Norton & Co.

Fraser, Andresky (2001). White Collar Sweatshop: The Deterioration of Work and Its Rewards in Corporate America. New York: W.W. Norton & Co.

Fullerton, Ticky and 4 Corners (2001). "This Time It's Different." 4 Corners. [10 June 2002].

Grove, Andrew S. (1999). Only The Paranoid Survive: How to Exploit the Crisis Points That Challenge Every Company (rev). New York: Bantam/Currency.

Hamel, Gary (2000). Leading the Revolution. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press.

Hamel, Gary and C.K. Pralahad (1996). Competing for the Future. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press.

Hammonds, Keith H. (March 2001). "Michael Porter's Big Ideas." Fast Company. [10 June 2002].

Hitchens, Christopher (2001). "The Car: Mercedes SLK 320. The Address: Atherton, CA 94027. The Obligatory Proto-Capitalist Worldview: Ayn Rand." Business 2.0 Magazine. (August 2001). [10 June 2002].

Hodges, Jane (2001). "Bear Opportunities." Business 2.0 Magazine (9 April 2001) [9 June 2002].

Honan, Matthew (2002a). "When Automatic's Teller Ran Dry." Online Journalism Review. [10 June 2002].

Honan, Matthew (2002b). "Plastic Is All I Do." Online Journalism Review. [10 June 2002].

Howe, Neil and Bill Strauss (1993). 13th Gen: Abort, Ignore, Retry, Fail? New York: Vintage Books.

Howe, Neil and Bill Strauss (2001). Millennials Rising: The Next Great Generation. New York: Vintage Books.

Kaitt, Casey and Stephen Weis (2001). Digital Hustlers: Living Large and Falling Hard in Silicon Alley. New York: Regan Books.

Kamppinen, Matti and Markku Wilenius (2001). "Risk Landscapes in the Era of Social Transition." Futures 33: 307–317.

Kaplan, Philip J. (2002). F’d Companies: Spectacular Dot-com Flameouts. New York: Simon & Schuster.

Katz, Jon (2000). Geeks: How Two Lost Boys Rode the Internet Out of Idaho. New York: Villard Books.

Katz, Jon (2001). "Rise and Fall of Geek Culture." Shift Magazine (March/April) [10 June 2001].

King, Ralph (2001). "The Talented Mr. Greenberg." Business 2.0 (May 2001). 62-68. .

Koch, Richard (2000). The Natural Laws of Business (aka The Power Laws: The Science of Success). London: Nicholas Brealey Publishing.

 
 

<< LAST ... 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 ... NEXT >>



No Messages Posted Yet...


© 1997-2002 The Disinformation Company Ltd. All rights reserved.