
Coders
Description
From revolution on Twitter to romance on Tinder, we live in a world constructed of code - and coders are the ones who built it for us. In Coders, acclaimed tech writer Clive Thompson offers an illuminating reckoning with the most powerful tribe in the world today, computer programmers, asking who they are, how they think, and what should give us pause. Along the way, Thompson ponders the morality and politics of code, including its implications for civic life and the economy, and unpacks the surprising history of the field, beginning with the first coders - brilliant and pioneering women, who were later written out of history. To understand the world today, we need to understand code and its consequences. With Coders, Thompson offers a crucial insight into the heart of the machine.
Reviews / Votes
An avalanche of profiles, stories, quips, and anecdotes in this beautifully reported book returns us constantly to people, their stories, their hopes and thrills and disappointments . . . Fun to read, this book knows its stuff and makes it fun to learn. "If we want to understand how today's world works," Thompson writes in his introduction, "we ought to understand something about coders." His book . . . ensures, delightfully, that we can. * Philadelphia Inquirer *
Before I read this brilliantly accessible book . . . coding was something of a foggy concept to me . . . There are strings of engaging insights into the anthropology of computer programmers.
* Bookseller *
It's a delight to follow Clive Thompson's roving, rollicking mind anywhere. When that "anywhere" is the realm of the programmers, the pleasure takes on extra ballast. Coders is an engrossing, deeply clued-in ethnography, and it's also a book about power, a new kind: where it comes from, how it feels to wield it, who gets to try - and how all that is changing.
* Robin Sloan, author of "Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore"*
With his trademark clarity and insight, Clive Thompson gives us an unparalleled vista into the mind-set and culture of programmers, the often-invisible architects and legislators of the digital age.
*Steven Johnson, author of "How We Got to Now"*
With an anthropologist's eye, [Thompson] outlines [coders'] different personality traits, their history and cultural touchstones. He explores how they live, what motivates them and what they fight about. By breaking down what the actual world of coding looks like . . . he removes the mystery and brings it into the legible world for the rest of us to debate. Human beings and their foibles are the reason the internet is how it is - for better and often, as this book shows, for worse.
* New York Times *
Clive Thompson is more than a gifted reporter and writer. He is a brilliant social anthropologist. And, in this masterful book, he illuminates both the fascinating coders and the bewildering technological forces that are transforming the world in which we live.
*David Grann, author of "The Lost City of Z"*
Fascinating. Thompson is an excellent writer and his subjects are themselves gripping... Many books have covered this territory, but Coders is bang up to date in a fast-moving world... Perhaps [coders will] give it to loved ones, with a note attached: "Read this, that's me!"
* Nature *
More details
Person
Clive Thompson is a longtime contributing writer for the New York Times magazine and a columnist for Wired. He is the author of Smarter Than You Think: How Technology is Changing Our Minds for the Better.
Content
Chapter 1: The Software Update That Changed Reality
Chapter 2: The Four Waves of Coders
Chapter 3: Constant Frustration and Bursts of Joy
Chapter 4: Among the INTJs
Chapter 5: The Cult of Efficiency
Chapter 6: 10X, Rock Stars and the Myth of Meritocracy
Chapter 7: The ENAIC Girls Vanish
Chapter 8: Hackers, Crackers, and Freedom Fighters
Chapter 9: Cucumbers, Skynet, and Rise of the AI
Chapter 10: Scale, Trolls, and Big Tech
Chapter 11: Blue-collar Coding Acknowledgements -
- Acknowledgements Section
- Notes Index
- Index