|
Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution - 25th Anniversary Edition |  | Author: Steven Levy Publisher: O'Reilly Media Category: Book
List Price: $21.99 Buy New: $14.95 as of 9/9/2010 16:04 CDT details You Save: $7.04 (32%)
Seller: Amazon.com Rating: 10 reviews Sales Rank: 67809
Media: Paperback Edition: 1 Pages: 528 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4 Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.5 x 1.2
ISBN: 1449388396 Dewey Decimal Number: 005 EAN: 9781449388393 ASIN: 1449388396
Shipping: Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
| | |
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description
This 25th anniversary edition of Steven Levy's classic book traces the exploits of the computer revolution's original hackers -- those brilliant and eccentric nerds from the late 1950s through the early '80s who took risks, bent the rules, and pushed the world in a radical new direction. With updated material from noteworthy hackers such as Bill Gates, Mark Zukerberg, Richard Stallman, and Steve Wozniak, Hackers is a fascinating story that begins in early computer research labs and leads to the first home computers. Levy profiles the imaginative brainiacs who found clever and unorthodox solutions to computer engineering problems. They had a shared sense of values, known as "the hacker ethic," that still thrives today. Hackers captures a seminal period in recent history when underground activities blazed a trail for today's digital world, from MIT students finagling access to clunky computer-card machines to the DIY culture that spawned the Altair and the Apple II. Amazon.com Exclusive: The Rant Heard Round the World By Steven Levy  | | Author Steven Levy | When I began researching Hackers--so many years ago that it’s scary--I thought I’d largely be chronicling the foibles of a sociologically weird cohort who escaped normal human interaction by retreating to the sterile confines of computers labs. Instead, I discovered a fascinating, funny cohort who wound up transforming human interaction, spreading a culture that affects our views about everything from politics to entertainment to business. The stories of those amazing people and what they did is the backbone of Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution. But when I revisited the book recently to prepare the 25th Anniversary Edition of my first book, it was clear that I had luckily stumbled on the origin of a computer (and Internet) related controversy that still permeates the digital discussion. Throughout the book I write about something I called The Hacker Ethic, my interpretation of several principles implicitly shared by true hackers, no matter whether they were among the early pioneers from MIT’s Tech Model Railroad Club (the Mesopotamia of hacker culture), the hardware hackers of Silicon Valley’s Homebrew Computer Club (who invented the PC industry), or the slick kid programmers of commercial game software. One of those principles was “Information Should Be Free.” This wasn’t a justification of stealing, but an expression of the yearning to know more so one could hack more. The programs that early MIT hackers wrote for big computers were stored on paper tapes. The hackers would keep the tapes in a drawer by the computer so anyone could run the program, change it, and then cut a new tape for the next person to improve. The idea of ownership was alien. This idea came under stress with the advent of personal computers. The Homebrew Club was made of fanatic engineers, along with a few social activists who were thrilled at the democratic possibilities of PCs. The first home computer they could get their hands on was 1975’s Altair, which came in a kit that required a fairly hairy assembly process. (Its inventor was Ed Roberts, an underappreciated pioneer who died earlier this year.) No software came with it. So it was a big deal when 19-year-old Harvard undergrad Bill Gates and his partner Paul Allen wrote a BASIC computer language for it. The Homebrew people were delighted with Altair BASIC, but unhappy that Gates and Allen charged real money for it. Some Homebrew people felt that their need for it outweighed their ability to pay. And after one of them got hold of a “borrowed” tape with the program, he showed up at a meeting with a box of copies (because it is so easy to make perfect copies in the digital age), and proceeded to distribute them to anyone who wanted one, gratis. This didn’t sit well with Bill Gates, who wrote what was to become a famous “Letter to Hobbyists,” basically accusing them of stealing his property. It was the computer-age equivalent to Luther posting the Ninety-Five Theses on the Castle Church. Gate’s complaints would reverberate well into the Internet age, and variations on the controversy persist. Years later, when another undergrad named Shawn Fanning wrote a program called Napster that kicked off massive piracy of song files over the Internet, we saw a bloodier replay of the flap. Today, issues of cost, copying and control still rage--note Viacom’s continuing lawsuit against YouTube and Google. And in my own business—journalism--availability of free news is threatening more traditional, expensive new-gathering. Related issues that also spring from controversies in Hackers are debates over the “walled gardens” of Facebook and Apple’s iPad. I ended the original Hackers with a portrait of Richard Stallman, an MIT hacker dedicated to the principle of free software. I recently revisited him while gathering new material for the 25th Anniversary Edition of Hackers, he was more hard core than ever. He even eschewed the Open Source movement for being insufficiently noncommercial. When I spoke to Gates for the update, I asked him about his 1976 letter and the subsequent intellectual property wars. “Don’t call it war,” he said. “Thank God we have an incentive system. Striking the right balance of how this should work, you know, there's going to be tons of exploration.” Then he applied the controversy to my own situation as a journalism. “Things are in a crazy way for music and movies and books,” he said. “Maybe magazine writers will still get paid 20 years from now. Who knows? Maybe you'll have to cut hair during the day and just write articles at night.” So Amazon.com readers, it’s up to you. Those who have not read Hackers,, have fun and be amazed at the tales of those who changed the world and had a hell of time doing it. Those who have previously read and loved Hackers, replace your beat-up copies, or the ones you loaned out and never got back, with this beautiful 25th Anniversary Edition from O’Reilly with new material about my subsequent visits with Gates, Stallman, and younger hacker figures like Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook. If you don’t I may have to buy a scissors--and the next bad haircut could be yours! Read Bill Gates' letter to hobbyists
|
| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 10
Formatting errors on Kindle September 6, 2010 A. Alderman I love this book, and would normally give it five-stars, but I am very disappointed that the table of contents is completely messed up on the Kindle--it only displays one or two lines per page, which makes it unusable. Considering how this edition of the book is being marketed as eBook friendly, it seems like someone at the publishing company would have caught this problem since the formatting errors are visible as soon as the book is opened for the first time.
History you will WANT to read August 20, 2010 R. Moore Being a computer geek always felt like a stigma, but after reading about some of the real computer geeks from an age where computers were mystical 'black boxes' and seeing how they created the world that we now live in, I am proud to be a computer geek and Hope that I can live up to the 'Hacker Ethic'
An Updated History August 16, 2010 John Jacobson (Riverside CA USA) This is an updated version of the original Hackers By Steven Levy first published 25 years ago. There is a 14 page afterword that updates stories about Bill Gates, Stewart Brand, Steve Wozniak, Andy Hertzfeld, Richard Greenblatt, Richard Stallman, Lee Felsenstein, Paul Graham, and introduces Mark Zuckerberg.
The book is valuable as an introduction to those who made the personal computer "revolution" an exciting place to be in the 80s and 90s. But if you read one of the earlier editions, there is not a great deal of additional information in this book.
Great Book If You Have The Prerequisites August 5, 2010 Joseph L. Famulary What do you think of then you think of the word hackers? It is one of those words that has morphed from a good to a bad connotation. This book is about the good guys; those who developed the original computers and software that made the home computer possible. This is not the immediate perception the buyer may have. If you just glance at the title and buy the book assuming it is about modern-day bad-guy hackers who use their genius for criminal purposes, you will be totally disappointed. This work is a 25-year anniversary edition, so the original writing was done by 1985.
A hacker is by definition in this book someone who is passionate almost beyond physical and mental limits about something, in this case machines (specifically computers). One can feel the nascent stages of the eerie marriage of carbon-based intelligence and silicone-based intelligence that is now seen as a likely, even certain for some, probability.
There are two requisites to enjoy this work as I did:
1.It will help immensely if you are a hacker, or at least a programmer, or perhaps even an experienced software user. Many of the acronyms are explained, but many are not (HTML, BASIC for example). Actually, to explain Hyper Text Markup Language or Beginner's All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code and give examples is not in the province of this work. But it really does help to have done some HTML or other programming. (I have 25 years of programming experience, mostly in x-base.)
2.You will enjoy it much more if you were around for the personal computer revolution as I was. My first programming was on an Apple IIe. I remember Woz, Jobs, Gates and others of the 80's. That helps a lot in making the book meaningful and enjoyable.
If you meet those requirements, you will enjoy this book, though it will not be one you just can't put down. At almost 500 pages, you have to take it in small chunks.
If you know next to nothing about computers, but are a hacker at heart, you will probably like this book too. Just go on-line and look up things like CPU's, registers, accumulators, BASIC and other terms that may not be familiar.
A great companion to this book would be: Cyber War, by Richard A Clarke. This work discusses the modern-day bad-guy hackers who have hacked into such things as major US power grids and even weapon systems. It is a very scary warning about the power of the computer and hackers to win a war with cyber weapons.
A book that should be read by anyone associated with technology... July 28, 2010 Thomas Duff (Portland, OR United States) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
To find out how you got to where you're at, you often have to look at where you came from. In the world of computers, that means going back to the late 1950's to observe the mindset and personalities that shaped the growth of the personal computer. Steven Levy has what could be considered the best analysis of those individuals in his book Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution - 25th Anniversary Edition. Yes, it's been 25 years since since this book was first published in 1985. But it's as relevant now as it was then. I read this book quite some time ago and enjoyed it immensely. My enjoyment with rereading it hasn't diminished.
Contents:
Part 1 - True Hackers - Cambridge - The Fifties and Sixties: The Tech Model Railroad Club; The Hacker Ethic; Spacewar; Greenblatt and Gosper; The Midnight Computer Wiring Society; Winners and Losers; Life
Part 2 - Hardware Hackers - Northern California - The Seventies: Revolt in 2100; Every Man a God; The Homebrew Computer Club; Tiny BASIC; Woz; Secrets
Part 3 - Game Hackers - The Sierras - The Eighties: The Wizard and the Princess; The Brotherhood; The Third Generation; Summer Camp; Frogger; Applefest; Wizard vs. Wizards
Part 4 - The Last of the True Hackers - Cambridge - 1983: The Last of the True Hackers; Afterword - Ten Years Later; Afterword - 2010
Notes; Acknowledgments; About the Author
When you walk into a Best Buy or any other retailer today, you simply pick up the computer you want, head home, plug it in, and away you go. But when you go back to the beginning, you start to understand just how amazing these things are. Levy steps into the inner sanctums of the large mainframe computers, devices that cost millions of dollars and allowed few the privilege of touching them. But there were some who immediately understood the power and the vision, and they weren't going to be denied the opportunity to play, learn, and push the limits. Hackers goes from those who spent time re-engineering model railroad layouts to those who took that same drive to the world of bits and bytes. Everything was a challenge, what with virtually no memory and nothing much in the way of input/output devices. But even though their efforts weren't always appreciated or welcome, these hackers continued to lead the way to discover what *was* possible. As the mainframes continued to shrink, more and more individuals focused on what could be done if you put the CPU and memory together with a keyboard and screen. The Homebrew Computer Club was the birthplace of people like Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak, who went on to form Apple and create the history of the personal computer. Levy also digs into the birth of the fast-paced world of computer gaming, when companies like Atari, Apple, Sierra, and others wrote computer games to push the boundaries of the ever-more-powerful personal computers, while also making the programmers literal superstars and millionaires. For those who had the right skills and the drive to learn, there was seemingly nothing they couldn't accomplish.
What makes the book shine, over and above the historical narrative, is the commentary and analysis of the hacker code and mentality. At the start, there was little financial gain to be found by writing code and building new devices to hook onto the computer. As such, the creed was that everything was open and information was to be shared. But as time progressed and companies started to form around software and hardware, it became harder to maintain that pure approach, and information started to become proprietary. Things once open and free came with price tags. People like Richard Stallman, the last "true hacker", railed against this "perversion" (as he still does today), but few follow him at the level of fanaticism he demands. But understanding his mindset helps to understand the philosophy behind open source software, where software is still free as in beer and free as in speech.
If you haven't read Hackers, either in the original or new edition, I would recommend it. It's a fascinating read.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 10
|
|
|
CERTAIN CONTENT THAT APPEARS ON THIS SITE COMES FROM AMAZON SERVICES LLC. THIS CONTENT IS PROVIDED ‘AS IS’ AND IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE OR REMOVAL AT ANY TIME.
| | iPod Batteries |  |
|
|
| MacMall |
 |
|
|
| Partners |
 |
|
|
|