One of the many fine things about the work of Clive Thompson, on the other hand, is his gusty pleasure in our moment ... He likes coders—people who create computer code for a living—and is fascinated by their stories of how they discovered coding, what it’s like to code, and the wonderfully weird and weirdly wonderful world they have helped build ... Anthropologist Clifford Geertz would have admired his thick description of the conditions and structures within which people and machines interact. Never, however, does Thompson lose the personal touch. 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 ... the technical aspect never overwhelms Coders. Rather, it’s the background program for the book, a productive global purr that lets everything happen ... All is not light. Everyone should read Chapter 8, 'Hackers, Crackers, and Freedom Fighters,' which tackles the ambiguous moral and ethical areas where coders, often outright and proudly, run afoul of the law. It’s superb ... Fun to read, this book knows its stuff and makes it fun to learn.
With an anthropologist’s eye, [Thompson] outlines [coders'] different personality traits, their history and cultural touchstones ... By breaking down what the actual work of coding looks like—often pretty simple, rote, done in teams rather than by loner geniuses—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 ... It’s pleasing as he picks up each Silicon Valley cliché, each canard rarely questioned, and dumps it into this wood chip machine ... The new Brahmins lose their power if everyone knows what’s behind the curtain, and that seems to be Thompson’s goal with this book. Algorithms are human tools, not magical spells.
Thompson provides an informative, insightful, accessible and judicious examination of the profession, the characteristics and values of computer programmers, and the opportunities and challenges America’s four million digital architects (and the Big Tech companies that employ them) present to our culture, economy and politics. Drawing on dozens of interviews, Thompson gets inside the heads of coders.
Technology journalist Thompson...delivers again with this well-written narrative ... [Thompson] brilliantly reveals several examples of how [coders] in their respective relationships. Throughout, Thompson also does a great job exploring the various drivers that permeate the industry ... This engaging work will appeal to readers who wish to learn more about the intersection of technology and culture, and the space in which they blur together.
Thompson...offers a broad cultural view of the world of coders and programmers from the field’s origins in the mid-twentieth century to the present ... highly readable and entertaining ... In this comprehensive look at the people behind the digital systems now essential to everyday life, Thompson also elucidates the myth of meritocracy by examining the trend from mostly female to mostly male coders in the past 50 years, how a corporate monoculture can contribute to negative work environments, and what educational institutions are doing to promote gender parity in computer-science programs.
In this revealing exploration of programming, programmers, and their far-reaching influence, Wired columnist Thompson...opens up an insular world and explores its design philosophy’s consequences, some of them unintended. Through interviews and anecdotes, Thompson expertly plumbs the temperament and motivations of programmers ... This book contains possibly the best argument yet for how social media maneuvers users into more extreme political positions ... Impressive in its clarity and thoroughness, Thompson’s survey shines a much-needed light on a group of people who have exerted a powerful effect on almost every aspect of the modern world.
Thompson is an enthusiast and a learned scholar alike ... Fans of Markoff, Levy, Lanier et al. will want to have a look at this intriguing portrait of coding and coders.