Bandwidth: The Untold Story of Ambition, Deception, and Innovation that Shaped the Internet Age and Dot-Com Boom
Dan Caruso’s new book Bandwidth: The Untold Story of Ambition, Deception, and Innovation that Shaped the Internet Age and Dot-Com Boom is available for pre-order, to be released on February 4, 2025.
Order your copy today on Amazon or Barnes & Noble. You can also subscribe to Dan’s Bandwidth newsletter to receive updates on the book release and launch events.
Dan asked me to write the foreword, which I happily did. See an excerpt explaining why I loved reading this book.
Bandwidth Foreword Excerpt
In April 2024, Dan asked me to look at his manuscript. I read the introduction and, within a week, the rest of the book. Reading it reminded me of places where my path crossed his, such as Exodus acquiring Service Metrics (a Mobius investment), which returned our entire first fund. Of course, several years later, after the result of a horrifying merger with Global Crossing, the combined Exodus-Global Crossing went bankrupt. Or, the day Howard Diamond, CEO of Corporate Software (another Mobius investment), walked into my office and said, “Level 3 is acquiring us for $125 million,” to which I said, “Why the fuck would a telecom infrastructure company buy a software reseller?” And then there were stories Dan didn’t even know, like the time I sat in Level 3’s office in Broomfield, Colorado (five minutes from my office in Superior, Colorado), in 2001, praying Level 3 would buy Interliant (a failing public company I was co-chair of) for no other reason than Level 3 had bought other failing public companies. And, no, Level 3 didn’t buy Interliant, and yes, Interliant did fail.
Before reading Bandwidth, I saw the Internet Revolution through the lens of software and Internet companies. I knew some of the stories of Qwest, Enron, Global Crossing, Level 3, and others—but didn’t appreciate the details and magnitude of the Bandwidth Boom and Bust. The adventurous stories of business legends such as Phil Anschutz, Craig McCaw, Jim Crowe, and even Carl Icahn were exciting to read. The exploits of bad actors such as Joe Nacchio, Gary Winnick, and Bernie Ebbers were even more exhilarating. Epic battles of hostile takeovers, botched business plans, phoenixes rising from ashes, and entrepreneurs who persevered reminded me why I get so much fulfillment from helping start-ups become large successes and enduring companies. And why I am willing to fight for any company in which I’m involved.
As I read, I also learned a lot more about Dan. I now know why so many people have strong feelings about Dan—some think he walks on water, while others wish a big wave would knock him over. In this book, he openly shares the challenges he had to overcome and the pivots he had to make. At each step, he is delightfully self-deprecating and aware of what worked and what didn’t. I, for one, enjoy watching him continually do extraordinary things. Put me in the “Dan walks on water” camp.