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About the Author

Claire L. Evans is a writer and musician. She is the singer and coauthor of the Grammy-nominated pop group YACHT, and the founding editor of Terraform, VICE's science-fiction vertical. She is the former futures editor of Motherboard, and a contributor to VICE, Rhizome, The Guardian, WIRED, the Los mostrar mais Angeles Review of Books, Eye on Design, and Aeon. She is an advisor to graduate design students at Art Center College of Design. She lives in Los Angeles. mostrar menos

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Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Outros nomes
Evans, Claire Lisa
Data de nascimento
ca. 1985
Sexo
female
Nacionalidade
USA
Organizações
YACHT (musical group)
VICE
Deep Lab
Guardian

Membros

Resenhas

Really interesting history of women in technology — lots of NYC tech in here. Recommended.
 
Marcado
thisisstephenbetts | outras 18 resenhas | Nov 25, 2023 |
A great read both how the internet came to be and stories about women who impacted it. Highly recommend.
 
Marcado
Cephas730 | outras 18 resenhas | Jun 16, 2023 |
Claire L. Evans takes us through a brisk tour of of women's contributions to computer science and the World Wide Web/Internet. She starts with Ada Lovelace and female computers (if you've seen Hidden Figures then you get it), going on to Grace Hopper and other awesome ladies programming and debugging computers etc. Then she goes on through the decades to talk about other awesome tech women, none of whom I had heard about. An English woman came up with working hypertext like a decade before Tim Berners-Lee did, but she used a different format of internet. It's all such fascinating stuff.

Evans covers all of this in an engaging way, neither too scientific nor casual/chatty. As a journalist, Evans (who interviewed just about all of these women personally) is great at telling the stories. My quibbles: there are hardly any pictures of the women featured/interviewed, and I'd have loved a recommended reading list as well. There are endnotes, but no little numbers in the body of the text to indicate which citation or quotation goes to which endnote, which I personally think is irresponsible in a nonfiction book. Regardless, I really enjoyed this book and want to learn more about the awesome band of broads who gave us the internet/WWW. Thanks for everything, ladies.

Read this book's non-condensed review and trigger warnings at https://fileundermichellaneous.blogspot.com/2022/03/book-review-broad-band-untol...
… (mais)
 
Marcado
Mialro | outras 18 resenhas | Dec 15, 2022 |
The history of computers has always thought to be full of men doing amazing things. This book shows that plenty of women were involved, from the beginning.

Ada Lovelace and Grace Hopper make appearances in this book, along with the "ENIAC Six." They were six women who did the actual "programming" of ENIAC, housed at the University of Pennsylvania, in the mid-1940s. It involved actually moving, and reconnecting, sections of the room-sized computer for each new computation. During the war, a computer was a woman who sat at a table and computed ballistics trajectories by hand. There was no ENIAC manual to consult, so they got very good at knowing how it worked. They also got none of the public credit. After the war, the women, plus Hopper, moved to the Eckert-Mauchly Computer Company, the world's first big computer company. After a few years of being very busy, financial problems forced the company to sell itself to another company. Remington-Rand made business machines and didn't know what to do with computers (or these free-thinking women). Things did not end well for the women.

In 1980s New York City, Stacy Horn loved connecting to the WELL, the famous West Coast BBS (bulletin board system). But the long-distance phone bills were getting out of hand. So she started ECHO, one of the first social networks, out of her apartment.

Girls like playing computer games just as much as boys (perhaps with less emphasis on death and explosions). Some game manufacturers noticed, and tried to take advantage of this untapped market.

This is an excellent book. It expertly punches holes in the all-male mythology of Silicon Valley. For anyone interested in how the future is really made, start here.
… (mais)
 
Marcado
plappen | outras 18 resenhas | Dec 5, 2021 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
1
Membros
346
Popularidade
#69,043
Avaliação
3.9
Resenhas
19
ISBNs
7

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