Programmers at Work : Interviews with 19 Programmers Who Shaped the Computer Industry (1986) by Susan Lammers is a fascinating series of interviews with various programmers and people in the tech industry.
An electronic copy of the book can be borrowed for free from the Internet Archive. There is also a wordpress site that has all the interviews that was created by Susan Lammers herself.
The people interviewed are Charles Simonyi, Butler Lampson, John Warnock, Gary Kildall, Bill Gates, John Page, Wayne Ratliff, Dan Bricklin, Bob Frankston, Jonathan Sachs, Ray Ozzie, Peter Roizen, Bob Carr, Jef Raskin, Andy Hertzfeld, Tori Iwatani, Scott Kim, Jaron Janier and Michael Hawley. With one exception each person now has a wikipedia page.
Today ‘Programmers at Work’ might be a podcast or a Youtube interview series due to the work of all the people interviewed and thousands of others in creating today’s incredible world of the internet. But in 1986 a book was the way to document these things.
The interviews are very interesting. Most of the subjects talk about how their code and when they get their best coding done and what kinds of teams work well. The one or two pizza team is mentioned in the book.
As for predictions, there are some great ones. Gary Kildall points out that the hard drive is one of the few mechanical parts left in a computer and suggests that it will be replaced. Remarkably this happened but after Kildall’s unfortunately early death in 1994. Michael Hawley talks about the ‘Pixar’ computer and what was happening at ILM.
A number of the interviewees talk about the impact that CD-ROM is going to have. Bill Gates mentions it and just passes over how great Microsoft’s internal email service is. He was so close to seeing what an impact the internet would have. It’s surprising how little thought is given to what was coming. Also scant mention is made of mobile phones and how they could be combined with increasing computing power and what sort of impact that would have.
Programmers at Work really is a gem of a book that documents how the technology world was in the mid-1980s. For anyone interested in the history of computing it’s definitely worth a read.