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    DotCom Freedom

    Written by

    Tom Steinert-Threlkeld
    Published January 15, 2001

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    It was the wee hours of the morning when Mitch Maddox made his first appearance in public since 1999. He showed up at a party at the Studio Movie Grill in Plano, Texas, to celebrate his release. He didnt just get out of prison, unless you consider his vocation of the past year to be the commercial equivalent of a self-imposed house arrest. You see he actually could be called the Electronic Shopper Formerly Known as Mitch Maddox.

    If you know him at all, you know him as DotComGuy, now his legal name. DotComguy stayed indoors for a year, to prove to the world that every necessity in life could be ordered from the Internet, from toilet paper to furniture to food. Not only has he survived; hes thrived.

    “It hasnt been a sacrifice,” he says. “Its been a blast.”

    Local rock and country bands, at the rate of about one a week, came to perform. Ed McMahon dropped by. DotComGuy learned how to handle the best questions People, USA Today and the Washington Post could throw at him. He raised money for charities.

    His year of being cooped up in a rented townhouse around-the-clock is over. Hes now about to re-enter the normal business world. His biggest worry: Hes a Lotus Notes and Oracle database programmer. Hes now a year behind his peers in keeping up with the technology. “I might as well start over,” he says.

    The real question though: What has he accomplished with his year in confinement? Did it really take a closed-door policy to prove the Internet could be used to buy anything or everything? And what kind of person takes that upon himself, as a cause?

    DotComGuy says he only tried to show people they didnt have to drive around and stand in lines to get things done. Hes also not saying everything that can be bought on line should be bought online. Case in point: furniture, which you cant evaluate very well online and be sure that you are making an intelligent purchase. No wonder pure Internet furniture retailers such as Furniture.com, fail, he says. The real point for most retailers and manufacturers is to regard the Internet as an additional means of selling goods, not the primary means.

    It can simplify your life, though, giving you more time to go out to dinner with your folks or friends. Or to spend on recreation. Or to dote on kids. Or to deal with real work.

    Electronic shopping hardly seems a life calling. But its not hard to imagine DotComGuy being syndicated as an e-commerce critic. After all, if youve made your name buying things over the Net, if youve had your life scrutinized for a year while doing so, and if youve already played before an audience of millions, whats left but to be some sort of Rush Limbaugh for those who are either, a.) passionate about, or b) learning about online purchasing?

    As dot-com merchants have learned, fame and success can be fleeting. DotComGuy himself acknowledges, “Anybody could do this; it doesnt take a rocket scientist.”

    Theres also not a lot of spade work left to be done.

    Its pretty safe to say he raised the consciousness of tens of thousands of Americans about the benefits and travails of buying stuff in cyberspace. His benchmark on impact: “If even five people have gotten the message, then its been worth it.”

    Not a very high standard perhaps. But, think back to just over a year ago. A lot more attention, time and money was spent on whether cyberspace might be shut down altogether, because of — dig deep into your memory — the pending impact of Y2K bugs on computer networks.

    January 1, 2000 came and went without a real hitch. So did Jan. 1, 2001. The fact that the DotComGuy can go out, party and become a footnote in the growth of electronic shopping is a welcome sign of the maturity of the Internet as a commercial medium.

    Tom Steinert-Threlkeld
    Tom Steinert-Threlkeld
    Tom Steinert-Threlkeld is an award-winning technology journalist and former Editor-in-Chief of Interactive Week, where he led the creation of the Internet industry's first newspaper. With extensive experience covering technology, digital transformation, and industry innovation, he has played a key role in shaping technology reporting. A graduate of the University of Missouri School of Journalism and Harvard Business School, Tom has provided in-depth analysis and thought leadership on emerging trends in tech and business.

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