December 12, 2024

Tishamarie online

Specialists in technology

CNET’s early years put the tech boom, and life, in perspective

ina-fried-bill-gates.png

Ina Fried interviewing Bill Gates in 2010.


CNET

This story is part of CNET at 25, celebrating a quarter century of industry tech and our role in telling you its story.

Editor’s note: As part of CNET’s 25th birthday feature package, we’re publishing a series of guest columns from former CNET leaders, editors and reporters. You’ll find Ina’s bio below.

When I arrived at CNET News.com in May 2000, the Palm Pilot was the latest in mobile technology, and both Mac OS X and Windows XP were in beta testing. 

At 5 years old, CNET was both the leader in online tech news and yet still not well known to the broader world. We were an incredibly fast-paced, online newsroom at a time when most other newsrooms thought of the internet as a minor adjunct to their print magazines and newspapers. Tech companies and enthusiasts knew us as the place readers turned to find out about the latest in tech, whether it was the scoop on the next PC or on a problem with Intel’s chips.


Brett Pearce/CNET

But when we ventured outside our tech home turf, people often hadn’t heard of CNET. Some thought we were calling from CNN, a notion we didn’t always immediately dispossess them of.

As a young reporter, I found CNET a great place to be. I learned so much just by listening over the cubicle walls in our modest newsroom on Battery Street in San Francisco. I was surrounded by talented reporters, chasing scoops and breaking down jargon and industry spin into stories that helped educate and inform.


Now playing:
Watch this:

Celebrating 25 years of CNET



3:58

I joined at the peak of the dot-com boom, when stocks would soar on mere mention of a new Web site or e-commerce initiative. And my colleagues and I covered the ensuing bust as the entire tech industry came crashing back to Earth.

ina-fried-headshot

Former CNET reporter Ina Fried


Ina Fried

I remember being in our newsroom on 9/11, trying to make sense of the day’s events for myself, and for readers. And I was there barely a month later as Apple launched the first iPod and as the industry tried to keep plugging along despite the economic and political turmoil. I remember that my first flight after 9/11 had shut down US airspace for two days was with a CNET colleague, Dawn Kawamoto, to interview Gateway’s Ted Waitt in San Diego. It was my first time experiencing the enhanced security procedures that have now become normal.

In the ensuing years, CNET took me all kinds of places, and I traveled the world. I reported from Computex in Taiwan. I went to Brazil and Colombia to see how computing was changing emerging markets. And I covered the tech of the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, British Columbia.

Closer to home, I covered Apple’s return to prominence, Bill Gates’ journey from pioneering tech executive to philanthropist and HP’s highly contested bid to acquire Compaq.

And CNET was always at the forefront of new ways to reach audiences. During my time, we had a broadcast radio station. One night Brian Cooley and I even broadcast a friendly hockey game between Apple and Sun Microsystems. We also experimented with videos and podcasts and blogs long before those were mainstream practices.

Beyond those professional highlights, CNET was as much a family as a workplace can be. CNET was a great place to share one’s joy and accomplishments, but also a caring environment when life was at its most challenging.

CNET was the place I felt at home enough to share my inner self, coming out as transgender first to my newsroom colleagues and, a couple of weeks later, to my sources and our readers. I still have the poignant e-mails I got from colleagues and readers, as well as the hand-drawn congrats note from the woman who led our graphics team. It was also a bonding moment with the tech world. People still fondly recall to me where they were and their initial reactions when they got my e-mail.

And, yes, I’ve gone a lot of places since. (OK, not so many recently.) But, even years after my tenure there, CNET remains like home.

Ina Fried worked at CNET from 2000 to 2010, covering Apple and Microsoft, among other beats. She’s now chief technology correspondent for Axios, appears frequently on Axios on HBO and is lead author of Login, Axios’ daily newsletter (you can sign up here).

Source Article