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'Dormouse' Reveals Counterculture Links to Computer History

Started by TooStonedToType, February 08, 2006, 07:27:16 PM

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TooStonedToType

Did you ever think the person who designed your computer must have been on acid?  This book says "yes"!

Has anyone read it:  Sounds interesting.

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http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1759,1788380,00.asp

'Dormouse' Reveals Counterculture Links to Computer History  
By Chris Nolan
April 20, 2005

Opinion: A new book chronicles the development of computer culture in political terms, showing that computer programmers were always aware of the world outside the officeâ€"or the Valley.
 
 One of the more persistent myths in Silicon Valley is that of the socially inept computer geek, the guyâ€"they're assumed to be almost all menâ€"so involved in machinery that his view excludes everything else, particularly politics. This mythical engineer is either too geeky or too inept to really take part in the world around him.

During the tech bubble, this tale took on different shading. The valley's CEOs, chief technology officers, engineers and investors were too busy making insanely great software and hardware (not to mention insanely large sums of money) to be involved in anything as corrupt and inefficient as the political process.

The corollary to this was is that the valley had no need for government; that it stood as a shining example of the free, unregulated market in which ability triumphed.

But in what is probably his best book, John Markoff, the New York Times reporter and almost lifelong Silicon Valley resident, pretty much blows these myths to smithereens.

Markoff's What the Dormouse Said: How the 60s Counterculture Shaped the Computer Industryâ€"the title's from Jefferson Airplane's "White Rabbit," a paean to pills and other substancesâ€"details the valley's early history, which involves computers, LSD, some marijuana and a lot of time in hot tubs and saunas, not to mention the occasional acts of civil disobedience and arrests for protesting against the Vietnam War.

"They were very political," Markoff says of the men and the timeâ€"the late 1960s and early 1970sâ€"he's described. "The people who pretend the valley is apolitical mean 'political' in a very conventional sense."

Since he knows so many of those he profiles so well, Markoffâ€"who was in high school in Palo Alto during much of the time he chronicles in the bookâ€"jokes that it could be read as a plaintive "why didn't you tell me all this cool stuff was going on?" to an "older brother."

"I wasn't really clueful," he says with some chagrin. When it's pointed out that he was just a kid at the time, Markoff turns rueful. "So was Steve Jobs: Look what happened to him."

Like Jobs, many of those Markoff writes about are pillars of Silicon Valley's engineering community. They are older, settled and wealthy. It's a long list and includes Whole Earth Catalog author and social activist Stewart Brand, Doug Englebart, inventor of the computer mouse, Xerox PARC co-founder Robert Taylor, cryptographer Whit Diffie, Larry Tesler, founder of Apple Computer's Advanced Technology Group, and others too geekyâ€"even for eWEEK.comâ€"to mention.

In this book they attend raucous parties, do a fair amount of LSD, smoke a goodly amount of marijuana and generally rabble-rouse, not just with machines but with household names from the era like Ken Kesey and the Grateful Dead. "If you were inside someplace like SAIL (the Stanford Artificial Intelligence Lab) it's a very social world,'' says Markoff of one of the institutions that fostered these men and their work. "It's a different kind of sociability."

Indeed. To a large extent it wasâ€"and remainsâ€"a kind of idealistic socializing; elitist even, where very smart people spend their time almost exclusively with other very smartâ€"or smarterâ€"people. All them share a few common understandings, primary among them that technology canâ€"and shouldâ€"make a difference in people's lives. Accompanying that belief is the conviction that technology will almost always change people's lives for the better.

Where'd it come from? There were as many sources as there are engineers and scientists in What the Dormouse Said. But Markoff shows pretty clearly that the engagement these engineers had with one another and the era in which they workedâ€"the 1960sâ€"played a role.

Although many of their projects were generously funded by the U.S. Department of Defense, most of the engineers and computer scientists Markoff writes about weren't just opposed to the Vietnam War but worked, on and off the campuses where they researched and studied, against the war effort and for a variety of social and other Lefty causes. And while many today like to insist that their "business" lives are isolated form their other activities, Markoff in writing part of the history of Silicon Valley shows how silly this assertion can be.

The antiwar sentiment that Markoff traces is hardly part of the Silicon Valley we know today. But the idea that a brilliant programmer canâ€"or shouldâ€"bite the hand that feeds or funds him or her isn't just a statement, it's an entrenched way of life. It is, in fact, one of the roots of today's more Libertarian culture that thrives in engineering-heavy enclaves like Slashdot, the Mozilla Org. and others.

The early work done in the valley by people with visions of improving the world wasn't isolated from their politics or what was going on around them. It was part of a broader movement, of a profound cultural shift. "Technology is shaped by the prism of culture, politics and economics,'' says Markoff. "Technology takes many different forms."
...and as if from the inception of time itself I realized I was and had been for sometime, elsewhere, elsewhen or somehow, quite seriously, otherwise...

judih

#1
grateful dead hangs out with the silicone set.

what's the big surprise?
How good that it's been published, and may it be publicized that those with open minds are opening society's options.