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The Bargain Nexus - Triumph of the Nerds Gift Box Set

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List Price: $49.95
Our Price: $16.99
Your Save: $ 32.96 ( 66% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Ambrose Video Starring: Bill Gates, Steve Jobs Bob Cringely, Paul Sen Directed By: Bill Gates, Steve Jobs Bob Cringely
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Binding: VHS Tape EAN: 9786304170403 Format: Box set ISBN: 6304170408 Label: Ambrose Video Manufacturer: Ambrose Video Number Of Items: 3 Publisher: Ambrose Video Release Date: 1996-04-01 Running Time: 165 Studio: Ambrose Video Theatrical Release Date: 1996-06-12
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Technology Teacher's Perspective Comment: There are plenty of well written reviews here on this excellent DVD so I'll just focus on its instructional value.
I purchased this DVD a year ago right here from Amazon.com because I remembered how excellent the program was when I watched it on PBS in 1996. I teach various technology and computer programming courses at the High School level and I thought this would be a good instructional aid in teaching students about the start of the personal computer industry. To further assist the teacher, Ambrose Video provides a good lesson plan outline (on their website) on how to approach the three parts contained within the DVD.
Overall, most students found the material presented in this video relevant and interesting. The only thing I would be cautious with is a scene in Volume 1, the "HOT TUB" scene. The majority of students were disturbed with it and I wouldn't have minded it if this was one of the scenes Ambrose chose to delete.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Boys will be Boys! Comment: Triumph of the Nerds (which is came from the book: Accidental Empires) is an eye opening documentary of the personal computer revolution and the who made it happen from an inside writer who knew the individuals.
Robert Cringley does an exceptionally thorough job of providing a bird's eye view of the personalities, motivations, business environment and savvy of the nerds who changed the world.
I thoroughly enjoyed reading the entire book. One of the parts that sticks out in my mind is about how the personal computer revolution happened so quickly. Cringley points out that the personal computer industry was totally different than any other industry. The participants shared their friendships, work, and knowledge freely. This "free sharing of knowledge" was on of the primary the lynch pin that allowed the industry to explode so quickly.
They shared this knowledge because it all started out as a hobby and many hobbyists freely share ideas. The nerds had no idea of the powder keg of an industry they were sitting on!
Cringley points out a second lynch pin was the growth of the industry was partially because of the youth and exuberance of its participants. For example, he states: "In the PC business, constant change is the only norm, and adolescent energy is the source of that change."
This is an incredible show for anyone interested in learning about the fascinating story of the start of the PC industry.
The Re-Discovery of Common Sense: A Guide to: The Lost Art of Critical Thinking
Customer Rating:      Summary: Triumph of the Nerds Comment: Documentary style. Excellent if you love history and are interested in the way the computer revolution got started.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Wonderful ... best Silicon Valley story I have known of Comment: The documentry takes you through behind the scenes of what happened in the Valley. Typical in Bob's style, it is full of humour and comments that only someone "who has been there" can narrate.
Of almost all Silicon Valley DVDs available on Amazon, I would rate this one as the superset of all.
Customer Rating:      Summary: It's In The Details Comment: Triumph of the Nerds is an excellent accounting of our computer industry. The interviews with the top CEO's and founders of some of our greatest companies is an interesting insight into the growth of a modern industry. It is also interesting to see how luck played a role, as well as pirating.
The viewer will surely come to understand that we are just now in the infancy of computing and that the future is very bright and vast. Investors will also notice this fact and they will observe the market trends to decide where to invest their money to capture future growth.
I especially enjoyed the interviews and comments by Steve Wozniak. He contributed some of the most incisive work that allowed computers to come to our desktops. He is a very unassuming man who simply enjoyed his hobby and I got the feeling that he still does.
It makes you appreciate the strangers that you see everyday while sitting in a restaurant or driving down the road. Who amongst these strangers are the next Steve Wozniak, or Michael Gates? You come to understand that anyone you see can be a person who contributes the next advancement to mankind and gives one an appreciation of our fellow man.
Triumph of the Nerds illustrates beautifully that great minds are to be admired, as much if not more so than the best of our professional athlete's. We all would benefit if we would do more to celebrate our worlds great minds.
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Editorial Reviews:
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It happened more or less by accident; the people who made it happen were amateurs; and for the most part they still are. From his own Silicon Valley garage, author Bob Cringley puts PC bigshots and nerds on the spot, and tells their incredible true stories. Like the industry itself, the series is informative, funny and brash. Some of the episode participants include: Bill Gates (Chairman of Microsoft, the richest man in the world), Steve Jobs (Hippie co-founder of Apple Computer; CEO of NeXT Computer; and the man who wanted to change the world), and Steve Wozniak (Co-founder of Apple Computer; engineering genius, practical joker).
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