Anything Could Happen
A story written about Twitter and one its founders, Evan Williams, when the company’s chief source of revenue was subletting desks in their partially filled office.
A story written about Twitter and one its founders, Evan Williams, when the company’s chief source of revenue was subletting desks in their partially filled office.
Max Chafkin Inc. Mar 2008 15min Permalink
An artifact from the era when MySpace was king.
James Verini Vanity Fair Mar 2006 20min Permalink
“If 4chan sounds trivial, that’s because it is. The site certainly doesn’t make much money…In fact, you could say that 4chan has cornered the market on the trivial on the Internet, which is no small feat (the trivial usually spreads by accident on the Web, according to no logic).”
Vanessa Grigoriadis Vanity Fair Apr 2011 Permalink
A profile of Jack Dorsey, co-founder (and displaced CEO) of Twitter. Dorsey’s latest venture, a mobile credit card system called Square that only officially launched in February 2011, already processes more than a million transactions per day.
David Kirkpatrick Vanity Fair Apr 2011 Permalink
How a journalism professor named Dan Sinker became the most entertaining part of the Chicago mayoral race.
Alexis Madrigal The Atlantic Feb 2011 10min Permalink
A grandmother from Chicago, she’s one of those people who knows everybody. And those people who know everybody, the connectors, make the world work. A study of the power of (offline) social networking.
Malcolm Gladwell New Yorker Jan 1999 35min Permalink
When Conan O’Brien left NBC, he agreed to stay off TV for months and stay quiet about the network and its executives. The agreement contained no mention of social media, however. On the origins of a digital renaissance.
Douglas Alden Warshaw Fortune Feb 2011 15min Permalink
A remembrance of relationships formed when the author, at 13 and using a false identity, frequented hockey chat rooms.
Katie Baker Deadspin Jan 2011 20min Permalink
How the social networks that popped up in Facebook’s absence—the site is not available behind the Great Firewall—are changing Chinese culture.
April Rabkin Fast Company Feb 2011 Permalink
The new purgatory; what becomes of digital identities after death.
Rob Walker New York Times Magazine Jan 2011 Permalink
A tech neophyte looks for answers in Silicon Valley, “the last place in America where people are this optimistic.”
Devin Friedman GQ Dec 2010 Permalink
Can real activism happen on Twitter and Facebook? Malcolm Gladwell says no.
Malcolm Gladwell New Yorker Oct 2010 15min Permalink
A 2006 profile of Mark Zuckerberg as Facebook opened from a college-only site to a public social network.
John Cassidy New Yorker May 2006 30min Permalink
The writer (Aaron Sorkin), director (David Fincher), and actors (Jesse Eisenberg & Justin Timberlake) of The Social Network on dramatizing the real story of a 20 year old into “the Citizen Kane of John Hughes movies.”
Mark Harris New York Sep 2010 25min Permalink
Mark Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook, on the eve of the release of The Social Network, believed to be a deeply unflattering portrait of him and the genesis of his company.
Jose Antonio Vargas New Yorker Sep 2010 25min Permalink
A 2009 profile of the guy behind 4chan, Christoper “moot” Poole, his anonymous army of millions, and how it’s all losing him money.
Monica Hesse Washington Post Feb 2009 10min Permalink
Foursquare and Gowalla are in a VC-funded race to become the dominant location-based social network. But their founders say both companies have a larger purpose.
Neal Pollack Wired (UK) Jun 2010 Permalink