Michael J. Halvorson 
Code Nation [EPUB ebook] 
Personal Computing and the Learn to Program Movement in America

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Code Nation explores the rise of software development as a social, cultural, and technical phenomenon in American history. The movement germinated in government and university labs during the 1950s, gained momentum through corporate and counterculture experiments in the 1960s and 1970s, and became a broad-based computer literacy movement in the 1980s. As personal computing came to the fore, learning to program was transformed by a groundswell of popular enthusiasm, exciting new platforms, and an array of commercial practices that have been further amplified by distributed computing and the Internet. The resulting society can be depicted as a “Code Nation”—a globally-connected world that is saturated with computer technology and enchanted by software and its creation.

Code Nation is a new history of personal computing that emphasizes the technical and business challenges that software developers faced when building applications for CP/M, MS-DOS, UNIX, Microsoft Windows, the Apple Macintosh, and other emerging platforms. It is a popular history of computing that explores the experiences of novice computer users, tinkerers, hackers, and power users, as well as the ideals and aspirations of leading computer scientists, engineers, educators, and entrepreneurs. Computer book and magazine publishers also played important, if overlooked, roles in the diffusion of new technical skills, and this book highlights their creative work and influence.

Code Nation offers a “behind-the-scenes” look at application and operating-system programming practices, the diversity of historic computer languages, the rise of user communities, early attempts to market PC software, and the origins of “enterprise” computing systems. Code samples and over 80 historic photographs support the text. The book concludes with an assessment of contemporary efforts to teach computational thinking to young people.

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Inhaltsverzeichnis


  • Acknowledgments

  • How important is programming?

  • Four computing mythologies

  • FORTRAN, Logo, and the Tower of Babel

  • Advocating computer literacy

  • Four million BASIC programmers

  • Power users, tinkerers, and gurus

  • Hackers and cyberpunks

  • Computer magazines and historical research

  • Developing for MS-DOS: authors and entrepreneurs

  • C programming nation: from Tiny C to Microsoft Windows

  • “Evangelism is sales done right”: PCs and commercial programming culture

  • Afterword: programming in the Internet age

  • Index

Über den Autor

Michael J. Halvorson, Ph.D., is Benson Chair of Business and Economic History at Pacific Lutheran University, where he teaches courses on the history of business, computing, and technology. He has written widely on European history, application software, and programming personal computers, including the popular series Microsoft Visual Basic Step by Step, Pearson (2013). To learn more about the Code Nation project, visit www.thiscodenation.com.

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Sprache Englisch ● Format EPUB ● Seiten 404 ● ISBN 9781450377560 ● Dateigröße 11.8 MB ● Verlag Association for Computing Machinery and Morgan & Claypool Publishers ● Ort New York City ● Land US ● Erscheinungsjahr 2020 ● herunterladbar 24 Monate ● Währung EUR ● ID 7453059 ● Kopierschutz Adobe DRM
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