dot-coms - meaning and definition. What is dot-coms
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What (who) is dot-coms - definition

HISTORIC SPECULATIVE BUBBLE COVERING ROUGHLY 1997–2000
Tech bubble; Dot-com boom; Dot.com bust; Dotcom boom; Dot com bust; Dot com boom; Dotcom death; Dot Com Boom; Dot-com bust; Internet bubble; Tech boom; Dot com crash; Dot Com Bubble; Dot-compost; Internet stock bubble; .com bubble; .com era; Dotcom bubble; Dot bomb; Dot com bubble; Tech wreck; Dot-bomb; Dot-com start-up; Dot-com failure; Dot-com era; Dot-com business; Internet based company; Dot-com crash; Dot.com bubble; Dot-com craze; Dot-com startup; Dot-com collapse; Internet business; Dot-Com era; Dotcoms; Dot-Com Bust; IT bubble; Dotcom crash; Internet boom; .com boom; Technology bubble; Dotpocolypse; Dot-com Boom; Dot-com 2.0; Internet stock collapse; Dot-com millionaire; Dotcom bust; Dot com companies; Dot.com boom; Dot-coms; Internet startup; .com .bomb; Dot.com failure; .com company; Dot-Com; Webpany; 2000 dot-com bust; Tech Bubble; Dot-com bubble collapse; "dot-com" boom; Dotcom fail; Internet Bubble
  • The [[NASDAQ Composite]] index spiked in the late 1990s and then fell sharply as a result of the dot-com bubble.
  • Historical government interest rates in the United States
  • Quarterly U.S. venture capital investments, 1995–2017

DOT (graph description language)         
  • An image that seems improperly rendered
  • A graph with attributes
  • A directed graph
  • An undirected graph
  • rendering]] of the example script using the tool <code>dotty</code>
  • Binary tree generated in Graphviz from a DOT description by an online [http://huffman.ooz.ie/ Huffman Tree generator]
FILE FORMAT
DOT Language; Dot language; DOT computer language; DOT Graph; Dot Graph; Dot graph; DOT graph; .gv; DOT language
DOT is a graph description language. DOT graphs are typically files with the filename extension gv or dot.
Dot-com bubble         
The dot-com bubble, also known as the dot-com boom, the tech bubble, and the Internet bubble, was a stock market bubble in the late 1990s, a period of massive growth in the use and adoption of the Internet.
Dot distribution map         
  • Representative dot density map of Acres of Harvested Wheat in Illinois in 2012, using county-level aggregate data.
  • de Montizon's 1830 ''Carte Philosophique figurant la Population de la France'', the earliest known dot density map.
  • A one-to-one dot distribution map, identifying concentrations of homicides in Washington, D.C.
  • von Mentzer's 1859 dot density map of Sweden and Norway, probably the first fully-developed representative dot density map.
  • This one-to-one dot map shows the 1,300 immigrants from Germany and Switzerland in Salt Lake City, Utah in 1900 in black, compared to all 55,000 residents shown in gray. Note the blocks in which residents of the same household have been spread into distinct points using the "Grid" renderer in QGIS.
  • clusters]] of cholera cases in the London epidemic of 1854. The pump is located at the intersection of Broad Street and Little Windmill Street.
  • Shapter's 1849 map of the 1832-1834 Cholera outbreak in Exeter, with different symbols for cases in each year.
  • Valentine Seaman's map of the 1796 outbreak of [[yellow fever]] in New York City, showing disease cases by numbered dots that were analyzed in the text.
TYPE OF MAP
Dot Distribution Maps; Dot map
A dot distribution map (or a dot density map or simply a dot map) is a type of thematic map that uses a point symbol to visualize the geographic distribution of a large number of related phenomena. Dot maps are a type of unit visualizations that rely on a visual scatter to show spatial patterns, especially variances in density.

Wikipedia

Dot-com bubble

The dot-com bubble (or dot-com boom) was a stock market bubble in the late 1990s. The period coincided with massive growth in Internet adoption, a proliferation of available venture capital, and the rapid growth of valuations in new dot-com startups.

Between 1995 and its peak in March 2000, the Nasdaq Composite stock market index rose 800%, only to fall 78% from its peak by October 2002, giving up all its gains during the bubble.

During the dot-com crash, many online shopping companies, notably Pets.com, Webvan, and Boo.com, as well as several communication companies, such as Worldcom, NorthPoint Communications, and Global Crossing, failed and shut down. Others, like Lastminute.com, MP3.com and PeopleSound, survived the burst but were acquired. Larger companies like Amazon and Cisco Systems lost large portions of their market capitalization, with Cisco losing 80% of its stock value.

Examples of use of dot-coms
1. In China, polysilicon plants are the new dot–coms.
2. When the dot–com bubble burst seven years ago, many high–tech companies gloated that they had no connection with dot–coms, so they‘d be fine.
3. "I think they were looking for a company in the area that is part of the economy not tied to dot–coms or anything like that, but a steady–as–she–goes–type industry," Wright said.
4. The frenzy of investments here began in early 2005, when venture capitalists were getting excited again about dot–coms after Google‘s eye–popping initial public offering a few months earlier.