Product Description
November 2000 issue of the short lived magazine AlleyCat News "The Business of Silicon Alley". Volume 4, number 10. 146 pages.
The AlleyCat News magazine was published 1997-2001 during the dot com boom (and bust) days of the early Internet and focused onNYC based Internet companies and venture capital opportunities in Silicon Alley. Silicon Alley was the epicenter of the NYC technology scene in the 1990's and early 2000's and referred to the area centered around the Flatiron neighborhood (and Flatiron building) in Manhattan.
This issue features articles on startup iClips and video, PBS host Charlie Rose interviewing dot com founders at the NEVC 2000 Entrepreneur's Panel, a look at "Silicon Parkway" (Connecticut's tech corridor), and more.
The magazine also has AlleyCat's regular features like Internet policy issues, Silicon Alley dot com news, the Public Record (tabular listings of publicly traded NYC Internet companies...most of which no longer exist), AlleyCat Grid (tabular listings of NYC companies seeking VC funding), AlleyCat Investor Scorecard (VC firm listings), reviews (including a review of Yahoo's plan to put Palm Pilots in taxi cabs..).
The magazine is in excellent condition and still has its original mailing plastic baggie and label insert (the plastic mailer has been opened).
Product Description
November 2000 issue of the short lived magazine AlleyCat News "The Business of Silicon Alley". Volume 4, number 10. 146 pages.
The AlleyCat News magazine was published 1997-2001 during the dot com boom (and bust) days of the early Internet and focused onNYC based Internet companies and venture capital opportunities in Silicon Alley. Silicon Alley was the epicenter of the NYC technology scene in the 1990's and early 2000's and referred to the area centered around the Flatiron neighborhood (and Flatiron building) in Manhattan.
This issue features articles on startup iClips and video, PBS host Charlie Rose interviewing dot com founders at the NEVC 2000 Entrepreneur's Panel, a look at "Silicon Parkway" (Connecticut's tech corridor), and more.
The magazine also has AlleyCat's regular features like Internet policy issues, Silicon Alley dot com news, the Public Record (tabular listings of publicly traded NYC Internet companies...most of which no longer exist), AlleyCat Grid (tabular listings of NYC companies seeking VC funding), AlleyCat Investor Scorecard (VC firm listings), reviews (including a review of Yahoo's plan to put Palm Pilots in taxi cabs..).
The magazine is in excellent condition and still has its original mailing plastic baggie and label insert (the plastic mailer has been opened).