Read The Innovators Page 65


  Lotus, 431

  Lovelace, Annabella, 16

  Lovelace, Ralph, 16

  Loving Grace Cybernetics, 303

  Lowe, Bill, 356

  LSD, 266, 267, 268–69, 271, 278, 300

  Ludd, Ned, 9

  Luddites, 9, 14, 487

  Lukasik, Stephen, 248–49, 385

  Lycos, 227

  Lyon, Matthew, 260

  McCarthy, John, 202, 203–4, 224, 236, 281, 285

  AI conference organized by, 468

  time-sharing developed by, 224–26

  McGuinn, Roger, 152

  machines, thinking by, 49, 115, 202–3

  AI and, 474–79

  Lovelace’s doubts about, 8, 12, 29, 122, 123, 126, 467–68, 475, 478

  Turing on, 29, 42, 122–29, 468, 485

  Macintosh, 349, 353, 370, 381, 414

  McKenna, Regis, 166

  McKenzie, Alex, Kleinrock criticized by, 245

  McLuhan, Marshall, 267, 269

  McNulty, Kay, 28, 97–98, 99, 117

  McQueeney, David, 477

  Madison, James, 481

  madrigals, 189

  Magnavox Odyssey, 211, 215

  Mailgram, 391n

  Malone, Michael, 166–67, 192

  Manchester Mark I, 120

  Manchester University, 119–20

  “Man-Computer Symbiosis” (Licklider), 226, 276, 475, 478–79

  Mandel, Tom, 390, 421

  Manhattan Project, 219, 225

  Mansfield, Mike, 248

  Manutius, Aldus, 284

  Mark I, 2, 51–52, 81, 89–90, 92–94

  bomb calculations done on, 104

  Hopper’s history of, 90, 91

  operation of, 92–93

  speed of, 94, 105

  Mark II, 93–94

  Markoff, John, 267, 281, 341n, 422

  Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics, The (von Neumann), 42

  Matsumoto, Craig, 180

  Mauchly, Jimmy, 66

  Mauchly, John, 62–70, 69, 72, 73, 74–75, 81, 82, 88, 92, 94, 97, 104, 105, 110, 113, 119, 134, 137, 211, 238, 481

  ENIAC public display and, 115

  female programmers aided by, 99

  McNulty married by, 117

  patents sought by, 116, 177

  patent trial of, 67, 82–84

  and storage of programs in ENIAC, 100–101, 106

  von Neumann accused of stealing ideas by, 111–12

  Mauchly, Kay McNulty, see McNulty, Kay

  Mayer, Marissa, 481

  Mazor, Stan, 197

  mechanization, 33

  “Meetings with von Neumann,” 106–7

  Melbourne, Viscount, 15

  Meltzer, Marlyn Wescoff, see Wescoff, Marlyn

  memex, 263–64, 273, 276, 409

  memory, 56, 58

  programs stored in, 87, 107–8

  memory unit:

  on Atenoff’s device, 61, 66–67

  on Z1, 53

  Menabrea, Luigi, 24–26

  mercury delay lines, 119

  Merholz, Peter, 427

  Merlin, 19

  Merry Pranksters, 266, 269, 270, 296

  Merton, Robert, 439

  message switching, 238

  Metcalfe, Bob, 256, 364

  Metropolis, Nick, 119

  Michie, Donald, 123

  microchips, 9, 35, 39, 170, 171–99, 201, 467, 473

  dispute over invention of, 178–80

  initial sales of, 181–85

  Noyce’s version of, 174–76, 178–80

  number of transistors in, 184

  Micropayments Markup Working Group, 421

  microprocessors, 196–99, 256, 264, 305, 350, 351

  Microsoft, 197, 312, 338–43, 361, 414, 434, 482

  Apple’s contract with, 367–69

  creation of, 337–38

  operating system of, 357–62, 368–69

  Milbanke, Annabella, see Byron, Lady

  Milhon, Jude (St. Jude), 301, 302

  military, ballistic missiles of, 169

  military-industrial-academic complex, 217, 220–21, 263, 482

  Miller, Herman, 280

  Millikan, Robert, 133

  Mills, Thomas, 70

  Mims, Forrest, 305, 306

  Mind, 124

  Mining Data at Stanford (MIDAS), 456

  MINIX, 374, 376

  Minsky, Marvin, 202–3, 205, 206, 226, 235–36, 284, 468

  Minskytron, 205, 206

  Minuteman II, 181, 182

  Miracle Month, 142–45

  MIT, 34, 38, 40, 47, 68, 156, 157, 200, 217, 222, 271, 336–37, 370, 371, 372, 472, 483

  MITS (Micro Instrumentation and Telemetry Systems), 306, 308–9, 310, 311, 332, 335

  MKUltra, 266

  Model K, 49, 80

  modems, 3, 386–87

  moon landing, 35, 182

  Moore, Betty, 162

  Moore, Fred, 294–95, 296–97, 304

  Moore, Gordon, 130, 158, 161–62, 163, 164, 170, 176, 191, 192, 257, 347, 350, 481

  corporate culture and, 484–85

  Intel founding and, 187–88

  as nonauthoritarian, 189–90

  on Noyce’s leadership skills, 194

  and Shockley’s replacement, 165, 166, 167

  Moore School Lectures, 118–19

  Moore’s Law, 183–85, 198, 201, 284, 291, 326

  Moravec, Hans, 472

  Morcom, Christopher, 41, 42

  Mosaic, 415–18, 420, 422, 433, 452

  “Mother of All Demos, The,” 273–74, 278, 279, 280–82, 283, 294, 308, 354, 388

  Motwani, Rajeev, 454

  mouse, 276–78, 279, 363

  MS-DOS, 360, 374

  Mumford, Lewis, 267

  Munzner, Tamara, 453–54

  Murray, Arnold, 129

  music, 26, 27, 467

  MySpace, 436

  Myth of the Machine, The (Mumford), 267

  NASA, 231, 271, 274, 299

  NASA Ames Research Center, 155

  National Center for Atmospheric Research, 283

  National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA), 415–16, 417

  National Defense Research Committee, 51, 219

  National Information Infrastructure Act (1993), 402

  National Physical Laboratory, 120, 124, 237, 246

  National Science Foundation, 220, 249, 383, 402, 453

  National Semiconductor, 343

  Navy, U.S., 469

  Nelson, Ted, 410–11, 418–19, 456

  Netscape, 208

  networks, 243, 482

  data blocks in, 240–41

  distributed, 240, 246, 250, 253

  lack of centralization in, 235, 240, 250

  packet switched, 238, 244–46, 247, 249

  Network Working Group, 254

  Neumann, Max, 101

  neural networks, 203

  neurons, 473

  Newman, Max, 44, 46, 78, 81, 82, 119, 120, 128, 129

  newsgroups, 386

  Newton, Isaac, 19

  New Yorker, 469

  New York Times, 115, 149, 245, 422, 458, 469, 473, 479–80

  New York World’s Fair (1939), 64, 67, 68

  NeXT, 411, 414

  Nishi, Kay, 359

  Nixon, Richard, 278, 280

  NM Electronics, 188

  noncomputable numbers, 45

  North Carolina, University of, 386

  Norton, Larry, 478

  Norvig, Peter, 473

  Nova, 209, 291

  Novack, Ken, 397

  Noyce, Robert, 130, 157, 158, 159–61, 163, 166, 167, 170, 347, 353, 391, 481, 502–3

  corporate culture and, 189–90, 191, 192, 193–95, 234, 479, 481, 484–85

  Fairchild resignation of, 184–85

  Intel employees empowered by, 193–95

  Intel money raised by, 187–88

  Intel’s organization chart drawn by, 193

  microchip of, 174–76, 178–80

  mi
croprocessor and, 196–97

  in patent lawsuit, 178–79

  planar process and, 175–76

  resistor designed by, 173

  as Shockley’s replacement, 167

  on synergy, 183

  n-p-n junction architecture, 150

  NSFNET, 383

  n-type, 147

  Nuance Communications, 472

  nuclear weapons, 250–51

  Internet and, 247–51

  Nupedia, 438–39, 441, 442

  Nutting, Bill, 209

  Nutting Associates, 209, 210, 215

  Obama, Barack, 484

  Office of Defense Mobilization, 228–29

  Office of Scientific Research, 219

  Ohm’s Law, 97

  oil, 183

  Olsen, Ken, 264

  Olson, Judith, 449–50

  “On Computable Numbers, with an Application to the Entscheidungsproblem“ (Turing), 46–47, 76

  On Distributed Communications (Baran), 241–42

  One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (Kesey), 266

  online communities, 261

  oNLine System (NLS), 278, 281, 283, 284, 293, 354

  On the Connexion of the Physical Sciences (Somerville), 14

  Opel, John, 361

  open architecture, 482, 483

  OpenOffice, 483

  open-sourcing, 261, 370–81

  Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth (Fuller), 294

  operating systems, 357–62

  open-source, 372–81

  operations, 26–27

  Ordnance Department, U.S. Army, 72, 73

  O’Reilly, Tim, 432, 446

  O’Reilly Media, 428–29, 431

  oscillators, 173–74

  Osculometer, 71

  Packard, Dave, 156, 189, 464

  packets, 242

  packet switching, 238, 247, 249, 256, 258, 482

  Kleinrock’s taking credit for, 244–46

  Page, Carl, 449

  Page, Larry, 435, 448–51, 452, 453–56, 485

  Google founded by, 458, 460, 462–64

  hypertext limitations and, 456–57

  PageRank and, 458–62

  Web crawler of, 457–58

  PageRank, 458–62

  Palevsky, Max, 188

  Palo Alto Community Center, 273

  Papadimitriou, Christos, 330

  Papert, Seymour, 284

  PARC Universal Packet, 293

  Pascal, Blaise, 19–20, 22, 33, 90

  Patent and Trademark Office, U.S., 120, 121n, 179

  patents, 121, 215

  tension over, 176–77

  Paterson, Tim, 358–59

  Pathfinder, 420, 421

  PC, 362

  PC-DOS, 360

  PC-Link, 399

  PDP-1 computer, 203, 205, 207, 208, 209, 329

  PDP-8, 264, 297

  PDP-10, 319–22, 325, 329, 333, 334, 336

  PDP-11, 371

  peace movement, 248, 261, 265, 266–67, 295

  peer-to-peer connections, 260–61, 378

  Pellow, Nicola, 414–15

  Pendery, Don, 288

  Pennsylvania, University of, 28, 38, 65, 68, 71, 72–73, 82, 94, 95, 96–97, 108, 110, 112, 113, 115, 118–19, 481

  Pennywhistle, 387

  People Connection, 398

  People’s Computer Center, 304

  People’s Computer Company, 310, 372

  PepsiCo, 395

  Perceptron, 469, 473

  Perlman, Radia, 251

  “Personal Computer for Children of All Ages, A,” 289

  personal computers, 263–304

  Gates’s belief in future of, 329–30

  IBM vs. Apple, 362–63

  Internet and, 4

  Jobs’s idea for, 352–53

  Kay’s prediction of, 284–85, 286, 287–88

  software for, 335

  technology needed for, 261, 264–68

  Philco, 157, 193

  Philips, Thomas, 15–16

  phone circuits, 54

  phone signals, 50

  photovoltaic effect, 142–44

  Physics and Technology of Semiconductor Devices (Grove), 191

  PicoSpan, 388–89

  Pierce, John, 148

  Pinker, Steven, 472

  Pitts, Bill, 209–10, 215

  Pixar, 208, 481

  planar process, 174–78

  planimeter, 37

  plutonium-239, 103

  p-n junction, 173

  PNP transistor, 153

  Poggio, Tomaso, 471

  Polaris, 181

  Pong, 211–15, 329, 347, 348

  Popular Electronics, 306, 307, 308–9, 313, 314, 332, 350

  Post Office Research Station, 78, 79

  Practice of Management, The (Drucker), 192

  Presley, Elvis, 152

  Princeton University, 40, 77–78, 104

  printing press, 4

  private enterprise, 482–83, 484

  PRNET, 256, 257, 258

  Processor Technology, 353

  Procter & Gamble, 395, 399

  Prodigy, 399, 400, 419

  programming, 87–129, 478

  as Babbage’s conceptual leap, 33

  of ENIAC, 95–100

  Lovelace’s exploration of, 25–26, 27–29, 88, 90, 478

  as true value of computers, 117–18

  von Neumann’s work on, 107–8

  on Z1, 53

  “Protocol for Packet Network Interconnection, A” (Kahn and Cerf), 259

  p-type, 147

  punch cards, 3, 14, 23, 26, 28, 33, 35, 267, 345, 394, 478, 481, 484, 487

  Pyra Labs, 429, 430

  QDOS, 358–59

  Q-Link, 398

  Qualcomm, 473

  Quantum, 398

  Quantum 2000, 399

  quantum physics, 42, 45, 134–35

  queuing theory, 243

  QuickWeb, 434

  radar, 72, 273

  radio, 39

  transistors for, 149–52

  Railway Express Agency, 309

  Ralls, John, 175

  Ram Dass, 388

  RAND Corporation, 221, 237, 238, 241, 244, 246, 247, 249

  RankDex, 461

  Raskin, Jef, 363

  Raymond, Eric, 377, 380, 381, 438

  Raytheon, 217, 252

  RCA, 68, 151, 177, 181, 211

  rebel entrepreneurs, 201

  Regency TR-1, 151

  Reich, Charles, 267

  Reid, T. R, 172, 174

  relays, 48, 49, 50, 54

  on Z1, 53

  Remington Rand, 82, 116, 121

  Remote Procedure Cell, 411

  “Report on an Electronic Diff. Analyzer” (Mauchly and Eckert), 74

  Requests for Comments (RFC), 254–55, 257, 482

  Resource One, 301

  Rheingold, Howard, 280, 389–90, 404, 425, 427

  Riordan, Michael, 310

  Roberts, Ed, 305, 307, 309, 332–33, 334–35, 338, 340

  background of, 305–6

  Roberts, Larry, 216, 229–30, 233–34, 241–42, 393, 481, 482

  ARPA funding raised by, 235–37

  ARPA hiring of, 234

  bids solicited for ARPANET minicomputers, 251–52

  decentralized network favored by, 235

  gambling by, 243–44

  Kleinrock hired by, 246

  on nuclear weapons myth of Internet origin, 247–48

  personality of, 230

  robot, 281

  robots, navigating by, 472

  Robot Wisdom, 427

  Rock, Arthur, 167–68, 170, 184, 185, 192

  Intel money raised by, 187–88, 213

  venture capital and, 185–88

  Rockefeller, John D., Jr, 186

  Rockefeller, Laurence, 153, 186, 188

  Rolling Stone, 269, 288, 308, 388

  Rometty, Ginni, 470, 477, 478

  Roosevelt, Franklin, 219

  Rosen, Ben, 355–56

  Rosenberg
, Scott, 426

  Rosenblatt, Frank, 469

  “Rosencrantz and Ethernet” (Cerf), 259

  Rosenfeld, Jeremy, 440

  Rossetto, Louis, 420, 425–26

  routers, 237, 250, 251–52, 253

  Rubenstein, David, 362

  Russell, Bertrand, 47

  Russell, Steve, 203–6, 207, 320, 321, 473

  St. Jude (Jude Milhon), 301, 302

  Sams, Jack, 356–57

  Samson, Peter, 200, 200, 206

  Sanders, Bob, 207

  San Francisco Chronicle, 271

  Sanger, Larry, 438, 439–40, 441, 442–43

  Sarofim, Fayez, 188

  SATNET, 256

  Say Everything (Rosenberg), 426

  Scantlebury, Roger, 237, 238, 242

  Schreyer, Helmut, 53, 54

  “Science, the Endless Frontier” (Bush), 263n

  Scientific American, 47

  Scientific and Advanced Technology Act (1992), 402

  Scientific Data System, 187

  Scientific Memoirs, 25, 30, 32

  Scientific Revolution, 3, 479

  Scripting News, 429

  search engines, 227, 423, 446–65

  Searle, John, 127–28, 470–71

  Sears, 398–99

  Seattle Computer Products, 358

  self-driving cars, 456

  Semi-Automatic Ground Environment (SAGE), 225, 226, 475, 486

  semiconductivity theory, 153

  semiconductor amplifier, 147–48

  semiconductors, 135, 154–56

  Sendall, Mike, 412

  Sequoia Capital, 214n, 464

  Seva Foundation, 388

  Shannon, Claude, 34, 47–50, 54, 122–23, 133, 139, 243, 283

  Shapin, Steven, 3

  Shaw, Artie, 150

  Shelley, Mary, 12, 29, 468

  Shelley, Percy Bysshe, 12

  Shirky, Clay, 442, 444

  Shockley, William, 130, 132, 134, 136, 180, 199

  acoustic delay line developed by, 101

  Bardeen and Brattain’s dispute with, 145–49, 152–53, 163

  credit for transistor taken by, 145–49, 177

  IQ of, 136–37

  midlife crisis of, 153–54

  Nobel Prize won by, 164, 165

  poor leadership skills of, 152, 163–64, 165

  racial views of, 137, 168

  replacement for vacuum tube sought by, 137, 141–45

  researchers recruited to company by, 157, 161, 162

  semiconductor amplifier idea of, 147–48

  solid-state studied by, 139–41

  in World War II, 138

  Shockley Semiconductor Laboratory, 156, 157, 158, 161, 162–64, 485

  Shockley replaced at, 165–67, 168

  Siemens, 180

  Signals and Power Subcommittee, 202

  silicon, 134, 135, 142, 154, 155, 174

  Silverstein, Craig, 456

  Simon, Leslie, 73–74

  Simonyi, Charles, 367

  singularity, 474

  Siri, 472

  Sketchpad, 283

  “Sketchpad: A Man-Machine Graphical Communications System” (Sutherland), 283

  slide rules, 37, 55, 56

  Smalltalk, 289

  Smarter Than You Think (Thompson), 427

  Smith, Adam, 20