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Broad Band

The Untold Story of the Women Who Made the Internet

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
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.
"This is a radically important, timely work," says Miranda July, filmmaker and author of The First Bad Man. The history of technology you probably know is one of men and machines, garages and riches, alpha nerds and brogrammers—but from Ada Lovelace, who wrote the first computer program in the Victorian Age, to the cyberpunk Web designers of the 1990s, female visionaries have always been at the vanguard of technology and innovation.
In fact, women turn up at the very beginning of every important wave in technology. They may have been hidden in plain sight, their inventions and contributions touching our lives in ways we don't even realize, but they have always been part of the story.
VICE reporter and YACHT lead singer Claire L. Evans finally gives these unsung female heroes their due with her insightful social history of the Broad Band, the women who made the internet what it is today.
Seek inspiration from Grace Hopper, the tenacious mathematician who democratized computing by leading the charge for machine-independent programming languages after World War II. Meet Elizabeth "Jake" Feinler, the one-woman Google who kept the earliest version of the Internet online, and Stacy Horn, who ran one of the first-ever social networks on a shoestring out of her New York City apartment in the 1980s.
Join the ranks of the pioneers who defied social convention to become database poets, information-wranglers, hypertext dreamers, and glass ceiling-shattering dot com-era entrepreneurs. This inspiring call to action shines a light on the bright minds whom history forgot, and shows us how they will continue to shape our world in ways we can no longer ignore.
Welcome to the Broad Band. You're next.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 15, 2018
      Journalist Evans’s first book is an invigorating history of female coders, engineers, entrepreneurs, and visionaries who helped create and shape the internet, and whose contributions, she argues, are too often overlooked. The book’s subjects stretch back to Ada Lovelace, Lord Byron’s daughter and a collaborator with Charles Babbage on his analytical engine. Evans makes astute connections to draw her subjects into a narrative about the democratization of technology. Grace Hopper, who worked on the Harvard Mark I computer during WWII, “believed that computer programming should be widely known and available to nonexperts,” which led her to develop one of the earliest programming languages. Stanford scientist Elizabeth “Jake” Feinler hired and trained other women to help her develop and maintain one of the first servers at the Network Information Center at Stanford in 1970s, and programmer Brenda Laurel brought gaming (and computer skills) to a generation of girls through her Rockett Movado series in the 1990s. If the spirit of the internet is collaborative, Evans’s women embody that spirit entirely—which is no surprise, since, as Evans dutifully shows, they had a huge role in inventing it.

    • Kirkus

      February 1, 2018
      A history of the major role women played in creating the internet and the computer industry.Long before there were machines called computers, women worked as "computers," performing complex mathematical computations by hand for the U.S. Naval Observatory and other entities. When male engineers designed the first computing machines, using relays and switches and then vacuum tubes, they hired these same women to become the operators and programmers of the machines. Evans, the former futures editor of VICE's Motherboard and founding editor of its sci-fi imprint, Terraform, tells the fascinating story of how these highly intelligent, mathematically astute women were pioneers in a new field integral to the rise of the computer age. Since there were no training manuals, they had to figure out how the Mark I or the ENIAC computers worked by studying the hardware. Then they invented the software to run them and went back and wrote the training manuals for others to use. They wrote code, created ballistic trajectories for the war effort during World War II, invented the languages used by microprocessors today, designed searchable databases that were used to connect people across the country, and figured out a standard addressing format, which has led to the billions of .com, .org, .gov designations found online today. Throughout, the author consistently demonstrates how often these women were overlooked when it came time to acknowledge who had performed the work; they were the silent, behind-the-scenes workers who were underpaid and ignored when accolades were due. "Again and again," she writes, "women did the jobs nobody thought were important, until they were." Thankfully, Evans provides an informative corrective, giving proper due to these women and their invaluable work.An edifying and entertaining history of the rise of the computer age and the women who made it possible. A good choice for fans of Hidden Figures.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      March 15, 2018

      Journalist and musician Evans delivers engaging, well-crafted portraits of the women who contributed to and influenced the development and invention of the Internet. Profiles include Grace Hopper, a gifted mathematician and academic who championed a future where computer programming was accessible to nonexperts. Hopper spent her days and many nights minding the Mark 1 computer at Harvard University during World War II, eventually crafting an early programming language. Some decades later, Elizabeth "Jake" Feinler harnessed and advanced ARPANET, a proto-Internet funded by the Department of Defense Advanced Project Research Agency. The narrative continues into the 1980s, when New York-based visionary Stacy Horn ran Echo, a pioneering social network popularized by women. These visionaries, Evans writes, arrive with each new technological wave, steadily and quietly forging indelible paths to the future. VERDICT A tribute to the underacknowledged female pioneers whose contributions to technology, while sometimes difficult to measure, are impossible to forget.--Emily Patti, Racine P.L., WI

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from February 15, 2018
      According to Evans, the first ad in which the word computer appeared was in the classified pages of the New York Times in 1892. In this book, with its clever play-on-words title, Evans tells the stories of the many unsung women who propelled our computer age. As anyone familiar with Hidden Figures (2016) knows, early tech workers were called computers, as in someone who computes, or performs computations, and many of them were women. Thus, women were on the forefront of technology from the beginning. We're not ancillary; we're central, often hiding in plain sight, Evans notes. She writes about the best-known of these pioneers, Ada Lovelace (Lord Byron's daughter), Maria Mitchell, and many others, including the women the Harvard astronomer Edward Charles Pickering hired to analyze data because he could pay them for next to nothing. And yet despite the lack of proper payment, Pickering's maid and computer, Williamina Fleming, was credited with discovering the Horsehead Nebula. From COBOL and ARPANET to Silicon Valley and cyberfeminism, women have always played a major role in developing computer technology. Now their collective stories are finally being shared in Evans' fascinating and inspiring work of women's history.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)

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