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A Brief History of the FutureThe Origins of the Internet
readable account of computer and Internet development
This is a fascinating history of the Internet - but given a personal spin. Journalist and academic John Naughton describes the technology of the digital revolution from a user's point of view. What are the concerns of the average person? How does it all work?
He also writes amusingly about the pleasures and perils of email, and takes a refreshingly tolerant view on the issues of censorship and control. There are some parts of the hard technical developments which he leaves out of his account - politely admitting that he has done so. This seems to me a wise choice, because the type of popular readership at which the book is aimed will welcome his focus on the personal achievements and his own enthusiastic account of engineering history. Some of the other accounts of the Internet such as Hafner and Lyon's Where Wizards Stay up Late and Robert Cringley's Accidental Empires occasionally tax the non-specialist reader in this respect. Like these other books, his narrative becomes chronologically scrambled at times, maybe because this reflects the disparate locations, enterprises, and time schemes [not to mention funding and government enterprises] involved in the enterprise. Naughton goes out of his way to be scrupulously fair to them all - including even monopolies such IT & T - which like British Telecom put a brake on the development of the Internet for a long time. There is a particularly interesting chapter on the development of the UNIX operating system, and an explanation of how and why the Usenet News system evolved from it. He also provides interesting introductions to topics such the development of Linux and the Open Source movement which belives that software should be available free of charge. He is at his best when describing the development of hypertext and the World Wide Web - perhaps because the story flows in an unbroken chronological sequence from Vannevar Bush, via Douglas Engelbart and Ted Nelson, through to Tim Berners-Lee and Marc Andreesson. He ends with a brief glimpse at the current dangers of the commercialisation of the Net and the reasons why it is almost impossible to predict its future. Naughton offers a very readable, humane, and contagiously enthusiastic account of the Net and its major features. This is a perfect book for anyone who wants to know the background to this major technological revolution. © Roy Johnson 2001 [more WEB TECHNOLOGY books] John Naughton, A Brief History of the Future: The Origins of the Internet, London: Orion Books, 2000, pp.332, ISBN 075381093X |
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