Citations:dot compost


 * 2001, "Marketing masquerading as entertainment, The Irish Times, 2 April 2001:
 * But in a post-dotcom world, a company must propagate its message both cleverly and cheaply if it is to avoid ending up on the dot compost heap, which is why viral, or e-mail marketing has been such a popular vehicle.
 * 2002, Jamieson Angus McKenzie, Just in Time Technology: Doing Better with Fewer, FNO Press (2002), ISBN 9780967407845, page 15:
 * But then the Internet and the dot com bubbles burst. Many ventures proved unworthy. Others turned into dot compost.
 * 2004, Juliet A. Williams, "Privacy In the (Too Much) Information Age", in Public Affairs: Politics in the Age of Sex Scandals (eds. Paul Apostolidis & Juliet A. Williams), Duke University Press (2004), ISBN 9780822332657, page 225:
 * the dot-corn boom having landed in the dot-compost heap, technologies we once thought of as enabling now just seem invasive.
 * 2005, "Tech firms pay big bucks to join VoIP list", Evening Edinburgh News, 5 October 2005:
 * By 2000, a huge dose of common sense had returned to the market, turning internet hopefuls such as fashion website Boo, Clickmango and Pets.com into so-called "dot-compost".