Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Philosopher of Palo Alto: Mark Weiser, Xerox PARC, and the Original Internet of Things [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 368 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x38 mm, kaal: 594 g, 17 halftones, 1 table
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-May-2023
  • Kirjastus: University of Chicago Press
  • ISBN-10: 022675720X
  • ISBN-13: 9780226757209
  • Formaat: Hardback, 368 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x38 mm, kaal: 594 g, 17 halftones, 1 table
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-May-2023
  • Kirjastus: University of Chicago Press
  • ISBN-10: 022675720X
  • ISBN-13: 9780226757209
"As a pioneer of ubiquitous computing-the embedding of technology in everyday objects from thermostats to doorbells-computer scientist Mark Weiser's descriptions of smart homes, now thirty years later, might seem to approach our reality. Weiser's views certainly influenced our technology's developers-his 1991 Scientific American article "The Computer for the 21st Century" was flagged a must-read by Microsoft's Bill Gates and then circulated among the day's digirati, including those Silicon Valley insiders who crowded his beer garden-based "office hours". Unlike many of his contemporaries, Weiser's vision was motivated by the philosophies of Michael Polanyi and Martin Heidegger, collaboration with anthropologists such as Lucy Suchman, and insights from artists including Natalie Jeremijenko. He hoped to realize "tacit computing" as an escape from a single attention-grabbing screen as a portal to work, entertainment, and education. When rivals such as Nicholas Negroponte at MIT's Media Lab championed the development of smart agents (the ancestors of Siri and Alexa) or pervasive sensing in wearable technologies (proto-Fitbits or Apple Watches), Weiser balked. Weiser wanted computers to be something closer to the white cane a person with low vision might use to navigate the world. Good technology, he argued, should not mine our experiences for data to sell or demand our attention. Technology should not rob its users of the hardships that establish their expertise, but instead give them the ability to conceiveof the world in new ways. In this compelling biography of a person and idea, digital studies scholar John Tinnell shows Weiser, who died of cancer at 46, would be heartbroken if he had lived to see the ways we use technology today. Informed by deep archival research and interviews with Weiser's family and Xerox PARC colleagues, this book uses Weiser's life to offer a new history of today's technological reality, an inside view of Xerox PARC during its heyday, and a compelling vision of what computers failed to be"--

A compelling biography of Mark Weiser, a pioneering innovator whose legacy looms over the tech industry’s quest to connect everything—and who hoped for something better.

When developers and critics trace the roots of today’s Internet of Things—our smart gadgets and smart cities—they may single out the same creative source: Mark Weiser (1952–99), the first chief technology officer at Xerox PARC and the so-called “father of ubiquitous computing.” But Weiser, who died young at age 46 in 1999, would be heartbroken if he had lived to see the ways we use technology today. As John Tinnell shows in this thought-provoking narrative, Weiser was an outlier in Silicon Valley. A computer scientist whose first love was philosophy, he relished debates about the machine’s ultimate purpose. Good technology, Weiser argued, should not mine our experiences for saleable data or demand our attention; rather, it should quietly boost our intuition as we move through the world.
 
Informed by deep archival research and interviews with Weiser’s family and colleagues, The Philosopher of Palo Alto chronicles Weiser’s struggle to initiate a new era of computing. Working in the shadows of the dot-com boom, Weiser and his collaborators made Xerox PARC headquarters the site of a grand experiment. Throughout the building, they embedded software into all sorts of objects—coffeepots, pens, energy systems, ID badges—imbuing them with interactive features. Their push to integrate the digital and the physical soon caught on. Microsoft’s Bill Gates flagged Weiser’s Scientific American article “The Computer for the 21st Century” as a must-read. Yet, as more tech leaders warmed to his vision, Weiser grew alarmed about where they wished to take it. 
 
In this fascinating story of an innovator and a big idea, Tinnell crafts a poignant and critical history of today’s Internet of Things. At the heart of the narrative is Weiser’s desire for deeper connection, which animated his life and inspired his notion of what technology at its best could be.

Arvustused

"Weisers pioneering ideas, which he refined in the nineteen-eighties and nineties, led to the present-day Internet of Things, but his vision lost out to the surveillance-capitalist imperatives of Big Tech. Tinnells profound biography evokes an alternative paradigm, in which technology companies did not seek to monitor and exploit users." * New Yorker * "The story of Weisers undertaking is told by John Tinnell, a professor of English at the University of Colorado at Denver, in his new biography The Philosopher of Palo Alto, and its refreshingly strange. . . . Tinnell presents Weiser both as a progenitor of this state of affairshis PARC was where 'the seeds for the Internet of Things had been sownand as the prophet of an alternative paradigm that might hold some conceptual tenets for building a better Internet of Things today,' one that rejects 'total surveillance and zero privacy, runaway automation, and diminished agency.' * New York Review of Books * "In many ways, the era of rapid technological growth we find ourselves in currently can be traced back to the work of the pioneering computer scientist, Mark Weiser. . . . Driven by a wealth of relevant source data and deep archival research, Tinnells biography offers a thoughtful and in-depth analysis of how Weiser came to influence the direction of technological growth in Silicon Valley during the 1980s and 1990s. . . . [ Tinnell] offers an objective and factual account of Weisers life that is meticulously researched and well analyzed." * Metascience * "John Tinnells book is an excellent study, rich in material and very well narrated. . . . Today, when communicative AI is becoming increasingly incorporated into everyday life, looking back at the original ideas of ubicomp is incredibly valuable. . ." * Technology and Culture * "In the life of Mark Weiser, John Tinnell has found a morality tale for our times. For anyone looking to understand how technology is shaping society today, The Philosopher of Palo Alto is a compelling and necessary read."   -- Nicholas Carr, author of The Shallows and The Glass Cage "This riveting, up-close account reveals how one mans dream of benevolent computing helped set us on the road to the hyper-connected, surveillance-driven nightmare we inhabit today. A deeply unsettling and cautionary tale." -- Fred Turner, author of From Counterculture to Cyberculture: Stewart Brand, the Whole Earth Network, and the Rise of Digital Utopianism "Along with Doug Engelbarts intelligence augmentation and Alan Kays Dynabook, Mark Weisers ubiquitous computing is one of the three big concepts that Silicon Valley has fed off of for decades. Tinnell has done a wonderful job of capturing the arc of Weisers ideas." -- John Markoff author of Whole Earth: The Many Lives of Stewart Brand The Philosopher of Palo Alto is a really interesting read in the context of the latest developments in AI. I do have a boundless appetite for books about the history of the industry and was intrigued by this as Id never heard of Mark Weiser. The reason for that gap, even though he ran the computer science lab at Xerox PARC, is probably that his philosophy of computing lost out. In a nutshell, he was strongly opposed to tech whose smartness involved making people superfluous.



  -- Diane Coyle * Enlightened Economist *

Prologue 1(4)
Introduction Googleville 5(14)
Chapter 1 Messy Systems
19(24)
Chapter 2 The Innovator as a Young Seeker
43(34)
Chapter 3 Asymmetrical Encounters
77(32)
Chapter 4 Tabs, Pads, and Boards
109(32)
Chapter 5 One Hundred Computers per Room
141(26)
Chapter 6 Retreat
167(26)
Chapter 7 Tacit Inc.
193(22)
Chapter 8 The Dangling String
215(28)
Chapter 9 Smarter Ways to Make Things Smart
243(24)
Chapter 10 A Form of Worship
267(18)
Epilogue 285(10)
Acknowledgments 295(4)
Notes 299(20)
Bibliography 319(14)
Index 333
John Tinnell is director of digital studies and associate professor of English at the University of Colorado Denver. He is the author of Actionable Media: Digital Communication Beyond the Desktop, and he has written for the Los Angeles Times and Boston Review.