NCSA: The unsung hero of Internet history

NCSA: The unsung hero of Internet history

In my mind, the most overlooked contributor to the rise of the Internet as we know it today is the NCSA, the National Center for Supercomputing Applications. The NCSA is a computing research partnership at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Research at the NCSA is the missing link between what Tim Berners-Lee was doing at CERN and Netscape, the early dotcom darling. NCSA opened January 15, 1986.

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When Gamestop stock surged 50% for inexplicable reasons

When Gamestop stock surged 50% for inexplicable reasons

On January 11, 2021, Gamestop stock surged 50% out of the blue. Yes, Gamestop, the brick and mortar video game store that once had about 7,500 locations globally at its peak in 2016, but closes hundreds of locations every year. And 2021 was no exception, with about 400 closures that year. Its closures get it mentioned in the same breath as struggling retailers like Joann, Forever 21, and Macy’s. So why did its stock suddenly jump 50 percent some random day in a year that it closed 400 stores?

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AST Computers and AST Research

AST Computers and AST Research

AST Research was a high-flying brand in the early 1990s, but faded in the second half, making it a somewhat obscure 1990s computer brand. AST computers had a good following in the first half of the decade and they were generally high quality. Samsung’s April 1997 acquisition of AST gave the brand hope, but financial problems sunk the venture in 1999 and an effort to revive the brand failed in 2001.

AST Research shifted from making add-on cards in the 1980s to making entire PCs in the 1990s, but as PCs shifted to commodity parts under price pressure, AST failed to adapt. This led to a rapid decline in market share and the once-popular mass market PC brand disappeared from store shelves.

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Microsoft Bob: Microsoft’s biggest flop of the 1990s

Microsoft Bob: Microsoft’s biggest flop of the 1990s

It was January 1995. Microsoft was riding high. Windows 3.1 had sold well. The interim replacement, Windows 3.11, was selling well. The industry was abuzz for the upcoming Windows 95, expected sometime later in the year. Microsoft was in a golden era, a time when nothing could go wrong for them. And then they released Microsoft Bob. They should have named it Microsoft Bomb, because it bombed. But if you take one letter out of Bomb, you get Bob. So they almost got it right.

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