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Author Tinnell, John, author.

Title The philosopher of Palo Alto : Mark Weiser, Xerox PARC, and the original Internet of things / John Tinnell.

Publication Info. Chicago : The University of Chicago Press, 2023.
©2023
1 hold on first copy returned of 1 copy

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 Manchester, Main Library - New Materials  338.761 TINNEL    Check Shelf
Description 347 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents Introduction Googleville -- Messy Systems -- The Innovator as a Young Seeker -- Asymmetrical Encounters -- Tabs, Pads, and Boards -- One Hundred Computers per Room -- Retreat -- Tacit Inc. -- The Dangling String -- Smarter Ways to Make Things Smart -- A Form of Worship.
Summary "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 conceive of 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"-- Provided by publisher.
Subject Weiser, Mark.
Xerox PARC (Firm)
Internet -- Social aspects.
Digital communications -- United States -- Biography.
Computer software industry -- United States -- Biography.
TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING / History.
COMPUTERS / Internet of Things (IoT)
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Technology Studies.
Weiser, Mark. (OCoLC)fst00368575
Computer software industry. (OCoLC)fst00872606
Digital communications. (OCoLC)fst00893634
Internet -- Social aspects. (OCoLC)fst01766793
United States. (OCoLC)fst01204155
Genre/Form Biographies. (OCoLC)fst01919896
Biographies.
Added Title Mark Weiser, Xerox PARC, and the original IoT
ISBN 9780226757209 hardcover
022675720X hardcover
9780226757346 electronic book
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