142 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
142 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 2142
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Title: HPR2142: Book Reviews
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2142/hpr2142.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 14:51:08
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---
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This in HPR episode 2,142 entitled Book Reviews, it is posted by M1 on our 0R5H4D35 and
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in about 16 minutes long, the summary is, I take a brief look at two books others may find
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on interest.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com, get 15% discount on all shared hosting
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with the offer code HPR15, that's HPR15.
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Get your web hosting that's honest and fair at AnanasThost.com.
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Hello world, it's mirror shades here again.
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So today I'm going to do another book review and this book isn't a, this isn't as common
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title that you hear about, it's an interesting book, even if it's not, it doesn't talk anything
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really about the technical side of hacking, so if that's something you're looking for,
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this isn't a book for you, but it is an interesting book to pick up, I bought it used, I think
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you can find this on Amazon pretty cheap, I actually think I only gave a penny plus
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shipping for this book, so it's called Hacker Culture, it's by Douglas Thomas and it's
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an older book, it actually came out in 2002 and what the book covers is mainly Hacker
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Culture and Computer Culture of that time and he covers a lot of the stuff from the 90s
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and kind of how it came from the Hacker Culture of the 80s and the 70s and some of you
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probably just aren't, you know, it's not going to be of any interest to you whatsoever,
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but I find that stuff fascinating, I like reading about it, I like reading about the
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history of modern computing and Hacker Culture particularly of the 90s, I grew up in the
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80s and the early 90s, so it made it a lot more fun because this wasn't the kind of thing
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I had access to back in the day, so getting you read about it now is pretty cool, it's
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some of the book, if you actually pick it up and read it, some of it is really interesting
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and then there's a couple of sections which will, I don't know, it'll kind of drone
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on a little bit, he tries to, this really reads like somebody's dissertation or something,
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you know, like this started out as like a college paper or study and something, but the author
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you could tell he at least had some passion for subject matter, so it's not like it's just
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a big boring dry document, so real quickly I'm going to read you the contents here just
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so you have an idea of what's in it, there's part one, the evolution of the Hacker and that's
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divided up into subsections, Hacker Culture, Hacker as the performance of technology reading
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the Hacker manifesto and then Hacker in the 1990s, those are pretty straightforward,
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the second section where he talks about reading the Hacker manifesto, he actually, he kind
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of breaks it down from, I don't know if it's a psychological or maybe sociological, some
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of the implications there, then part two, it's a hacking representation and the first chapter
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is representing Hacker Culture reading frack and you know if you might be too young now to know
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what frack was, frack was like a, kind of like, I don't know, an electronic magazine sort of if you
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think about it like that, they published articles but they were essentially like ASCII text if I'm
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not mistaken and you had to actually dial into their like BBS or whatever to get it but they were
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circulated back in the day and then when the internet got bigger I think maybe they had a website
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you could download from, I don't remember it but it is a very interesting read and then the next
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chapter is not Hacker subculture style and media incorporation and then part three is hacking
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law, technology and punishment, the judicial construction of the Hacker and then there's an
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epilogue that's actually written by Kevin Mittenick and Chris Lamprick, I hope I said his name right, so the book let's see it's like
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said it came out in 2002, it is a little bit dated, it if you like stuff from that period or if you if you want
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to know about that culture from that time period it is a very interesting read because it does capture sort
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of the essence of, let's face it, these were a lot of teenagers and young like early 20s guys who
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were into this stuff back in the day, so it does capture that really well, like I said there are a few
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parts where the author kind of he starts to drone on a little bit and he gets a little wordy but over I mean it's worth
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the price obviously I mean if this book was a penny plus shipping I think so overall it cost me $4 and it was
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fun to read it's not it's not a technical book, so you're not going to get you're not going to you know learn how to
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hack or anything like that it's not that kind of a book but I think it was worth checking out they sell it on Amazon
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I'm not sure about other resellers but yeah anyway so I'm actually going to do a second book today too
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just because I don't want this episode to be completely crazy short so the next book I want to talk about it is a little more technical
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and this book is called a history of modern computing and it's by Paul E. I'm going to try to say his name Saroozy
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it's spelled C-E-R-U-Z-E-I so if you're looking for it on Amazon or Barnes and Abel or whatever it's actually put out by MIT press
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and if you have any real interest at all in computers and where they came from and how they got to be where they're at today I would highly recommend this book
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I haven't read it recently I do I'm looking forward to reading it again I read it once some years ago when I was in college the first time
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and I actually had a PDF of it but I liked it so well that I bought a hard copy
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well I said it is hard copy but it's a softback book I'm not totally sure if they release this in hardback now the other book
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agriculture the copy I got's hardback if that's something that you know some people are very
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particular about that some people only like to buy hardbacks because I like them on their shelves or whatever I don't know whatever your preference is but
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my copy of this book is paperback but it's a really really good book
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like I said it's from MIT press and this this book starts with Charles Babbage and goes all the way up to
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you know I don't remember where it stops I know this book is a little dated now let me see if I can locate the
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looks like this the one I've got is the first edition from 2000 I think it's been reprinted since then
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so I think it goes up this copy probably goes up to there
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um it goes all the way up to 2000 and I do believe there's a newer version that goes a little further
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but it's really really great it talks about it not just
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not just computers as we know them but like mechanical computers and adding machines and
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like tabulation machines I mean it spends a lot of time in the excuse me the the mainframe era
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and there is so much of the mainframe era that I just did not know and some of it was really
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fascinating to read about so just real quick I want to go over the the table of contents in this book
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there's an introduction defining computer and then chapter one is the advent of commercial
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computing 1945 to 1956 um chapter two's computing comes of age 56 through 64
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chapter three the early history of software 52 to 68
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and that's 1952 to 1968 I'm sorry if I'm not being those aren't page numbers those are
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years uh chapter four is from mainframe to many computer 1959 to 1969 and then chapter five
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the go-go years and the system 360 that's 1961 through 1975 uh chapter six is the chip and its
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impact 1965 to 1975 and chapter seven is the personal computer 1972 through 1977
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um chapter eight's augmenting human intellect 1975 through 1985 and then chapter nine's work
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stations Unix and the net 1981 through 1995 and then there's a conclusion the digitization of
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the world picture um so it's a little over 300 pages um like I said I think this one I think the
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one I read that had a PDF of was actually a newer printing of this or something because I seem
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to recall there was a little bit I think it went a little bit more into modern times than just
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the year 2000 but it is absolutely if you are interested at all in in computer history this is
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the I can't recommend this book enough this is the one to get um because it is very uh it's it's
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very factual but it's not dry you know it wasn't boring it was actually a lot of fun to read this book
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um I don't know maybe I'm just more of a hardcore nerd or something yes I'm I'm sure some people
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would find this book very boring but um it's uh it's very thorough as well there's um you know it
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talks about a lot of the different manufacturers of of mainframes I did not know that back in the day
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Honeywell made mainframes um and there was a mainframe manufacturer right here in Kentucky actually
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in Louisville didn't know that um there's a lot of great information in this it's not again
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this isn't the kind of book that you buy to learn how computers work um it is to a certain extent
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there is some technical stuff in here I don't think there's anything in here that the average reader
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with an interest in computers couldn't figure out I don't think there's anything super
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technical it is mostly um a history but it's like I said I can't recommend this book enough it's um
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again this is another cheap book too if you go on amazon and you look for the used copies I
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I don't think I paid very much for this I I think I might have paid less than a dollar for this
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not including shipping so shipping was maybe four or five bucks um both of these books really
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good if you were just going to buy one I would probably buy history of modern computing uh
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hacker culture is it's an it's an okay book um it's not quite as fun to read as some of the other
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books I might review later um I would say if you were wanting to read something that was sort of
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90s-ish um well really it was more 80s-ish uh the book the kukuzeg if you've never read that
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that's by Clifford Stall that's a really good read um I have a couple other books that um
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hopefully in the future I can do some reviews of I have um what is it I think I have a book called
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cyberpunk which I believe that's Katie Hathner and John Markov uh there's a lot of that books
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a little controversial though a lot of people said that book was one sided so I don't know I'll
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I'll read it and let you know what I think it it probably is it it it never really it didn't do
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very well um I don't think sales wise um I have a um I actually have the book that I took my handle
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from mirror shades which is a cyberpunk anthology by Bruce sterling or it's edited by Bruce sterling
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I may do a review of that later down the road a couple other books I'm looking at reading
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haven't gotten the chance to read I don't have a whole lot of time right now um just sit and get
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to to read anything uh but hopefully um soon I'll be able to um pick up a couple of these titles
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and do some reviews or if any of you out there have already read them and but like that that would
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be great I would like to hear other people's opinions on them uh a couple of books that I've
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got lined up here soon I want to read are uh the soul of a new machine uh Tracy Kitter um and
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Turing's Cathedral by George Dyson um and uh well there's a book I have read I'm not going to review
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that this episode but there's a book uh little brother but Corey doctoro I'd never um I'd never
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actually this sounds bad I never heard of of Corey doctoro before I I found that book and um
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he actually I'm sure many of you are already familiar with him but um he makes all of his books
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free to download on his personal homepage now they're just um they're simple files uh just simple
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ebooks um I think some of them may even be plain text but uh um I downloaded it from his website
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and it was such a fun book to read that I did buy a hardback copy of it uh for the bookshelf um I
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might I might talk about that one later that was a that was a pretty fun book to read um so
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if any of you have already read those I would love or have an opinion about these two books maybe
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read them and be like them you don't like them leave a comment and um I will talk to you guys
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later thanks for listening you've been listening to hecka public radio at hecka public radio dot
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