Front cover image for Tools for thought : the history and future of mind-expanding technology

Tools for thought : the history and future of mind-expanding technology

The digital revolution did not begin with the teenage millionaires of Silicon Valley, claims Howard Rheingold, but with such early intellectual giants as Charles Babbage, George Boole, and John von Neumann. In a highly engaging style, Rheingold tells the story of what he calls the patriarchs, pioneers, and infonauts of the computer, focusing in particular on such pioneers as J. C. R. Licklider, Doug Engelbart, Bob Taylor, and Alan Kay. Taking the reader step by step from nineteenth-century mathematics to contemporary computing, he introduces a fascinating collection of eccentrics, mavericks, geniuses, and visionaries.The book was originally published in 1985, and Rheingold's attempt to envision computing in the 1990s turns out to have been remarkably prescient. This edition contains an afterword, in which Rheingold interviews some of the pioneers discussed in the book. As an exercise in what he calls "retrospective futurism", Rheingold also looks back at how he looked forward.
Print Book, English, 2000
1st MIT Press ed View all formats and editions
MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass., 2000
History
359 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
9780262681155, 0262681153
43076809
The Computer Revolution Hasn't Happened Yet
13(12)
The First Programmer Was a Lady
25(20)
The First Hacker and His Imaginary Machine
45(22)
Johnny Builds Bombs and Johnny Builds Brains
67(32)
Ex-Prodigies and Antiaircraft Guns
99(16)
Inside Information
115(17)
Machines to Think With
132(20)
Witness to Software History: The Mascot of Project MAC
152(22)
The Lonelines of a Long-Distance Thinker
174(31)
The New Old Boys from the ARPAnet
205(27)
The Birth of the Fantasy Amplifier
232(28)
Brenda and the Future Squad
260(14)
Knowledge Engineers and Epistemological Entrepreneurs
274(22)
Xanadu, Network Culture, and Beyond
296(25)
Afterword321(24)
Notes345(6)
Index351
Reprint. Originally published: New York : Simon & Schuster, 1985