
The Secret Lives of Web Pages
Paul Ford(Author)
Allen Lane (Publisher)
Published on 2. September 2021
Book
Hardback
320 pages
978-0-241-26256-6 (ISBN)
Description
Every day billions of people view billions of web pages. A blank rectangle in a web browser transforms into the Guardian, or Google, or, God help us, Yahoo! News. That single home page is often the work of hundreds of people over thousands of hours. A single page of the Huffington Post is more complex than the space shuttle. And yet most people don't know what's behind a web page. Paul Ford knows how the web works, every bit of it. He was one of the first bloggers - he started well before the term "blog" was coined, and so programmed all his own web publishing software himself - and he is now a well-respected programmer. In The Secret Lives of Web Pages, he explains what happens when a web page loads into your browser, from the basic text and headlines to the moment your identity can be stolen, in an engaging, funny, smart, and accessible way, from a place of love and wonder and with deep historical understanding. Based on his own experience and extensive conversations with a who's who of Internet creators, The Secret Lives of Web Pages is the definitive book on coding and the web page: what it is, why it happened, and how to understand it.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Penguin Books Ltd
Product notice
Paper over boards
ISBN-13
978-0-241-26256-6 (9780241262566)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Paul Ford is one of the most prominent and in-demand commentators on technology. He teaches in the MFA program in Interaction Design at the School of Visual Arts in New York City and is an adviser to web start-ups such as Kickstarter, Medium and Readability. He has unimpeachable technical credentials - he was one of the first bloggers, starting his website Ftrain.com in 1997 - and is also a novelist and a onetime editor of Harper's Magazine. He is a regular contributor to Bloomberg, New Republic, the New Yorker, Wired, BusinessWeek, and NPR and often invited to speak at conferences.