203. Shirish Nadkarni On Microsoft, Hotmail, MSN and Blackberry Internet Email

203. Shirish Nadkarni On Microsoft, Hotmail, MSN and Blackberry Internet Email

Author: Brian McCullough October 20, 2021 Duration: 34:18
Serial entrepreneur Shirish Nadkarni came to the U.S. as a teenager with $25 in his pocket. After graduating from Harvard Business School, he worked at Microsoft where he engineered the $400 million acquisition of Hotmail and launched MSN.com, the world’s leading web portal. Striking out on his own in 1999 at the height of the dot-com boom, he founded TeamOn Systems, an early pioneer of mobile email that was later acquired by BlackBerry before becoming BlackBerry Internet Email servicing over 50 million users at its peak. His great new book is: From Startup to Exit: An Insider's Guide to Launching and Scaling Your Tech Business

Brian McCullough's Internet History Podcast digs into the foundational stories of our digital world, exploring the pivotal moments and forgotten detours between the rise of the first mainstream web browser and the dawn of the modern mobile era. This isn't just a dry recounting of dates and corporate maneuvers. Instead, the podcast weaves together the intersecting threads of technology, business, and the profound societal shifts they triggered. You'll hear about the personalities, the breakthrough products, the spectacular failures, and the cultural phenomena that collectively built the internet as we know it. Each episode serves as a chapter in a larger, ongoing narrative about how connectivity reshaped everything from commerce and communication to creativity and community. For anyone curious about how we got here, this series provides essential context, revealing the human drama behind the code and the hardware. Tune in for a deeply researched, engagingly told chronicle of the forces that defined a generation and continue to shape our future.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 100

Internet History Podcast
Podcast Episodes
133. Gary Flake on Overture, Yahoo and the History of Search [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:42:03
Gary Flake has been involved with search technology ever since he got turned on to this particular field in college. In this wide-ranging discussion, Gary lays out for us, basically, the history of search technology befo…
132. MG Siegler @mgsiegler on TechCrunch and GV [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:29:20
You all know MG Siegler. From TechCrunch’s most famous blogger to GV’s most affable venture capitalist, he has a lot to say about Apple, the business of blogging and where Silicon Valley is at in the modern era. Hosted o…
131. Elizabeth Osder on the NYTimes.com, Yahoo and More [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:14:33
Elizabeth Osder is one of those digital media veterans who’s career has spanned the entire web era, from bringing the New York Times online (though, she got her native New Jersey online first by launching NJ.com a few ye…
128. Jim McCann of 1800Flowers [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 51:43
Would it surprise you to learn that 1800Flowers was not only one of the first ecommerce pioneers but quite possibly, the first to be profitable in a meaningful way? You wouldn't be surprised if you knew the story of 1800…
127. The History of the iPhone, On Its 10th Anniversary [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:03:30
"So… Three things: A widescreen iPod with touch controls. A revolutionary mobile phone. And a breakthrough internet communications device. An iPod… a phone… and an internet communicator… An iPod, a phone… are you getting…
126. (Ch. 8) How the Dotcom Bubble Happened [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:05:33
The background, root causes and rough outline of the dotcom bubble. How it happened, why it happened... and why it's unlikely to happen again anytime soon. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California P…
125. Sebastian Mallaby on Alan Greenspan and the Dotcom Bubble [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 36:36
As most of you know, I’m busy writing a book that this podcast is partially source material for, and at the moment, I’m deep in the weeds on chapters about the Dotcom bubble—how it happened, why it happened, that sort of…