- Computer Lib
{|infobox Book
name = Computer Lib / Dream Machines
author =Ted Nelson
cover_artist =
country =United States
language = English
genre =History
publisher = Tempus Books of Microsoft Press
release_date = 1987 (originally 1974)
media_type = Print (Paperback )
pages =
isbn ="Computer Lib" is a book by
Ted Nelson , originally published in 1974 by Nelson himself, and packaged with Dream Machines, another book by Nelson. The whole publication (referred to as just "Computer Lib" by Nelson and others) had two front covers to indicate the "intertwingling" of the two books, and was republished with a foreword byStewart Brand in 1987 by a division ofMicrosoft Press. The book, which is subtitled "You can and must understand computers NOW," and which Nelson says in the 1987 edition was inspired by Brand'sWhole Earth Catalog , is a spirited manifesto that was inspiring to a generation of DIY computer-lovers. In his book Tools for Thought,Howard Rheingold calls Computer Lib "the best-selling underground manifesto of the microcomputer revolution." [ [http://www.rheingold.com/texts/tft/1.html] , Rheingold, Howard. Tools for Thought.] It is sometimes considered the first book about the personal computer, since it was initially published prior to the release of the Altair, however, that honor is actuallyNicholas Negroponte 's, for his 1970 book "The Architecture Machine: Towards a More Human Environment".In "Computer Lib", Nelson writes passionately about the need for people to understand computers deeply, more deeply than was generally promoted as "computer literacy," which he considers a superficial kind of familiarity with particular hardware and software. His rallying cry "Down with Cybercrud" is against the centralization of computers such as that performed by
IBM at the time, as well as against what he sees as the intentional untruths that "computer people" tell to non-computer people to keep them from understanding computers.In "Dream Machines," Nelson covers the flexible media potential of the computer, which was shockingly new at the time (1974).
Format
Both the 1974 and 1987 editions have an unconventional layout, with two front covers (one for Computer Lib and the other for Dream Machines) and the division between the two books marked by text (for the other side) rotated 180°. The text itself is broken up into many sections, with simulated pull-quotes, comics, side bars, etc., similar to a magazine layout.
References
* Citation
last = Nelson
first = Theodor
author-link = Ted Nelson
title =Computer Lib : You can and must understand computers now/Dream Machines: New freedoms through computer screens—a minority report
publisher = the distributors
year = 1974
location = South Bend, IN
edition = 1st
isbn = 0-89347-002-3
* Citation
last = Nelson
first = Theodor
author-link = Ted Nelson
title =Computer Lib/Dream Machines
publisher = Tempus Books of Microsoft Press
year = 1987
location = Redmond, WA
edition = Rev.
isbn = 0-914845-49-7External links
* [http://www.rheingold.com/texts/tft/1.html Tools for Thought] (book on history of computers) by
Howard Rheingold
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