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The Entrepreneurs of Silicon Valley

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The Entrepreneurs of Silicon Valley

By: John McLaughlin, The Great Courses
Narrated by: John McLaughlin
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About this listen

California’s San Francisco Bay Area is home to an incredible renaissance to rival that of the Italians in the 15th and 16th centuries. But instead of working with oils and marble, creators like Tim Cook, Sergey Brin, and Mark Zuckerberg work with code and computer chips.

In 10 episodes written by John McLaughlin, president of the Silicon Valley Historical Association, The Entrepreneurs of Silicon Valley reveals the fascinating story of entrepreneurship, invention, and innovation in the most risk-friendly place on the planet. Bringing together three decades of research and interviews, McLaughlin takes you inside the minds of the founders of giants like Hewlett-Packard, Apple, Intel, Adobe, Intuit, and other revolutionary companies. It's these innovators themselves who can bring the stories of Silicon Valley to life better than anyone, and in their own words they’ll recount their struggles, their successes - and even their failures.

You’ll also come to see this stretch of Northern California as a place of constant transformation, a region with perpetual ties to science, wealth, and power. Spanning over 100 years of history, these episodes recount the rise of Stanford University and the valley’s first high-tech company, Federal Telegraph; and they continue through world-changing innovations in times of war and peace, right up to the birth of the internet, the dot-com bubble, and beyond. The episodes also include the history of video gaming, the emergence of cell phones and search engines, and the invention of social media networks that continue to shape how we live today.

Apple, Google, Adobe, Facebook - you use products and services by these and other tech giants every single day. Guess what? They all started right here.

©2020 Audible Originals, LLC (P)2020 Audible Originals, LLC.
Business Professionals & Academics

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Most relevant
It started interesting with the origins of the Valley and the first notable inventions and investors but later it’s a biased love letter. Is this seriously a 2020 production? These so called lectures are using nothing more than interviews and recordings which by now are minimum 30 years old. The Valley is showed through pink glasses and nothing in terms of not so recent controversies is mentioned. The author clearly has some kind of weird obsession about Steve Jobs, who is mentioned more than all other entrepreneurs combined - for inventing few fancy devices. Sends a clear message what the author considers as the most important ‘contribution’ in terms of inventions that came from the Valley. Lecture 9 had me shaking my head in disbelief. Comparing Silicon Valley development to a period of renaissance, based on the opinion of just one historian is as ridiculous as it is biased and the ending where the author says that the Valley will be the source of solutions for global warming, when the big tech companies are at the front of the biggest environmental destruction? Is that guy for real? Overall - not worth investing 5 hours of your life. You can find much less biased information online

A fairy tale for children

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