review 10/8/14 : aol.inc Kara Swisher Times Business
4 stars - conditionally - strictly a biographical and financial focus.
This book is based on interviews and articles from a significant number of the people responsible for bringing AOL public and continuing to operate it throughout the book's publication in 1999. Opponent personalities are highlighted, as well as 3rd party participants such as congressmen, judges, lawyers, etc.
The value in the text is that it represents a summarized history of over 10 years of operation of a significant communication technology company in the 90's that foreshadowed the global graph data-centric Facebook type operators . Unfortunately, because of its focus on the personalities and financial pressures and manipulations of stock, loans, and business mergers, there is only a superficial mention of AOL's operating characteristics and configuration. By this I mean that there is no discourse on the configuration and operation of a dial up ISP type of operator in this significant decade, prior to the emergence of widespread cable and phone line server connections.
I say that this is unfortunate because a significant number of readers today, of a history that is approaching 20 years old, have never had the experience of operating a character based terminal, or dialing up a phone number and hearing the mesmerizing growl of the modem handshake. Current and future users will fail to grasp a lifestyle in which the internet for all practical purposes did not yet exist, and dialing up direct connections at very low modem speeds for a high cost of minimal interaction time will not believe the connection limitations and costs compared to the current accepted always-on connectability. This current generation of web designers and operators also will not have experienced the design and operational constraints that early pioneer companies faced.
While there may be separate parallel texts that provide this operational history, I would have preferred that this book provide a links type listing of references to operational design, or could have added up to 50+ pages providing some internal operational details.
Near the end, this book has at least 2 significant chapters that deal with the freedom of the internet - a big struggle here, and the case taken through Congress that was overturned by the Supreme Court as unconstitutional that would have led to severe restrictions on internet speech freedoms, and added a horrific burden to ISP's to be naughty-or-nice police.