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Mohrbooks Literary Agency
Sebastian Ritscher |
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BROAD BAND
The Untold Story of the Women Who Made the Internet
If you loved Hidden Figures or The Rise of the Rocket Girls, you'll love Claire Evans' breakthrough book on the women who brought you the internet - written out of history, until now.
Before Steve Jobs put a personal computer in your hands, before Larry Page and Sergey Brin put any answer at your fingertips, before Mark Zuckerberg connected you to your long-lost friends, female visionaries were at the vanguard of the technology you love (and love to hate).
With BROAD BAND, VICE editor and lead singer of the band YACHT Claire Evans presents the first social history of women and the internet. These innovators, concentrating where computers have made our lives better, richer, and more connected, are the unsung heroes of network culture.
Evans explores the women who have pioneered technology, like Ada Lovelace, the tortured, imaginative daughter of Lord Byron, who wrote the first program for a mechanical computer. Grace Hopper, a navy admiral and mathematician, created machine-independent programming languages. Stacy Horn ran one of the internet's earliest social networks, Echo, out of her apartment in New York. To say nothing of database poets, desktop thespians, cyber-ingenues, glass ceiling-shattering entrepreneurs, and the self-proclaimed "biggest bitch in Silicon Alley."
Evans shines a light on these bright minds whom history forgot, showing us how women have always pushed technology forward and will continue to shape our world in powerful ways that we can no longer ignore.
Claire L. Evans is the Futures Editor of VICE's technology website Motherboard. She is also the editor of VICE's science-fiction imprint Terraform, as well as a contributor to Wired, The Guardian, and others. Previously she was a blogger for National Geographic's popular culture and science blog Universe. She is also the lead singer of the pop group YACHT.
With BROAD BAND, VICE editor and lead singer of the band YACHT Claire Evans presents the first social history of women and the internet. These innovators, concentrating where computers have made our lives better, richer, and more connected, are the unsung heroes of network culture.
Evans explores the women who have pioneered technology, like Ada Lovelace, the tortured, imaginative daughter of Lord Byron, who wrote the first program for a mechanical computer. Grace Hopper, a navy admiral and mathematician, created machine-independent programming languages. Stacy Horn ran one of the internet's earliest social networks, Echo, out of her apartment in New York. To say nothing of database poets, desktop thespians, cyber-ingenues, glass ceiling-shattering entrepreneurs, and the self-proclaimed "biggest bitch in Silicon Alley."
Evans shines a light on these bright minds whom history forgot, showing us how women have always pushed technology forward and will continue to shape our world in powerful ways that we can no longer ignore.
Claire L. Evans is the Futures Editor of VICE's technology website Motherboard. She is also the editor of VICE's science-fiction imprint Terraform, as well as a contributor to Wired, The Guardian, and others. Previously she was a blogger for National Geographic's popular culture and science blog Universe. She is also the lead singer of the pop group YACHT.
Available products |
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Book
Published 2018-03-06 by Portfolio |
Book
Published 2018-03-06 by Portfolio |