Much of his <b>absorbing </b>book asks serious questions about the direction in which the computer industry and tech giants such as Google and Meta are taking us

Mail on Sunday

<b>Dense, prickly and rewarding</b>...Andrew Smith, who has written absorbingly about astronauts and the dotcom bubble here explores the "haunting alien logic" of computer code

TLS

A <b>humane, nuanced, humorous, insightful </b>work and a much-needed call for greater due diligence around some of the most impactful innovations in human history

Booklist (starred review)

Se alle

A searing philosophical take on the ravages of the digital age, this is <b>a must-read</b>

Publishers Weekly (starred review)

An <b>engaging </b>plunge into the world of code and its transformative implications

Kirkus Reviews

<b>A fascinating journey </b>into the world of computer code, its history, the people who create it, some of its current controversies, and its implications for the future of society . . . Anyone who's curious about the why and how of what makes computers do what they do will find <i>Devil in the Stack </i>a fertile introduction

Shelf Awareness

Smith is <b>an ideal narrator</b>: sharp-eyed yet increasingly affectionate about his subjects; expert enough to dissect Apollo minutiae clearly but not so obsessed as to leave a general reader trailing in the jetwash

Financial Times on MOONDUST

A brilliant exploration of madness and genius in the early days of the web. <b>Fascinatingly weird . . . terrific</b>

Guardian on TOTALLY WIRED

<b>A rich mix </b>of cultural history, reportage and personal reflection

Evening Standard on MOONDUST

Highly entertaining . . . [Smith's] <b>superb book is a fitting tribute</b> to a unique band of 20th-century heroes

GQ on MOONDUST

Computer code was supposed to make the world a better place. When Andrew Smith began to suspect the opposite was happening, he asked himself why. Was it the coders? Or was there something about code itself, about the very way we compute, that could be intensifying rather than relieving our problems? To find out he realized he would need to dive headfirst into the machine by becoming a coder himself - in middle age, with no prior experience.

Devil in the Stack describes what quickly became the strangest and most astonishing assignment of the Moondust author's already colourful career, propelling him to the very heart of what it means to be human; to the cutting edge of philosophy, psychology, music, history and neuroscience, and ultimately the weird noir Neverland of Silicon Valley.

By turns revelatory, funny, inspiring and unsettling, this is an essential book for our time, indispensable to anyone hoping to understand the moment we're in.

Les mer
An immersive, alarming, sharp-eyed journey into the bizarre world of computer code, told through the author's attempt to become a coder himself.
Prologue 0: If Prologue 1: Then 1: Revenge of the SpaghettiOs 2: Holy Grail 3: PyLadies and Code Freaks 4: Minutely Organized Particulars 5: The Real Moriarty 6: The New Mind Readers 7: Theories of Memory 8: Hilarity Ensues 9: Catch 32 10: A Kind of Gentleness 11: The Gun on the Mantelpiece 12: Code Rush 13: Enter the Frankenalgorithm 14: Algorave? 15: A Codemy of Errors 16: Do Algos Dream of Numeric Sheep?: An AI Suite 17: Apologies to Richard Feynman 18: A Cloud Lifts 19: Strange Loops and Abstractions - The Devil in the Stack
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781804710999
Publisert
2025-09-11
Utgiver
Atlantic Books
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
129 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, U, P, 01, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
464

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Andrew Smith has worked as a critic and feature writer for the Sunday Times, the Guardian, the Observer and The Face, and has penned documentaries for the BBC. He is the author of the internationally bestselling book Moondust, about the nine remaining men who walked on the moon between 1969 and 1972, and Totally Wired. He was raised in the UK and currently lives in California.