Janet Abbate
More books by Janet Abbate…
“The story of the Internet's origins departs from the explanations of technical innovation that center on individual inventors or on the pull of markets. Cerf and Kahn were neither captains of industry nor "two guys tinkering in a garage." The Internet was not built in response to popular demand, real or imagined; its subsequent mass appeal had no part in the decisions made in 1973. Rather, the project reflected the command economy of military procurement, where specialized performance is everything and money is no object, and the research ethos of the university, where experimental interest and technical elegance take precedence over commercial application. This was surely an unlikely context for the creation of what would become a popular and profitable service. Perhaps the key to the Internet's later commercial success was that the project internalized the competitive forces of the market by bringing representatives of diverse interest groups together and allowing them to argue through design issues. Ironically, this unconventional approach produced a system that proved to have more appeal for potential "customers"—people building networks—than did the overtly commercial alternatives that appeared soon after.”
― Inventing the Internet
― Inventing the Internet
“As to the future, the only certainty is that the Internet will encounter new technical and social challenges. If the Internet is to continue as an innovative means of collaboration, discovery, and social interaction, it will need to draw on its legacy of adaptability and participatory design.”
― Inventing the Internet
― Inventing the Internet
“The early history of programming methods shows how seemingly technical debates can encode social issues such as labor and gender. The assumption that programming would be improved by making it more like engineering was based on the cultural linking of engineering with masculinity and, by extension, with prestige and authority. Rethinking the gendered value system that is embedded in the metaphor of engineering—perhaps by reclaiming women’s understandings of the term—has the potential not only to make computer science and programming more appealing to women but also to benefit the discipline itself.”
― [Recoding Gender: Women's Changing Participation in Computing (History of Computing)] [By: Abbate, Janet] [October, 2012]
― [Recoding Gender: Women's Changing Participation in Computing (History of Computing)] [By: Abbate, Janet] [October, 2012]
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