New Books in Intellectual History

W. Patrick McCray, "README: A Bookish History of Computing from Electronic Brains to Everything Machines" (MIT Press, 2025)

Feb 19, 2026
W. Patrick McCray, historian of technology and UCSB professor, explores how books made computers familiar and culturally significant. He surveys key nonfiction works from cybernetics and early AI to personal computing and the web. Short, vivid scenes trace publishing, bestselling surprises, and how texts seeded technical communities and shaped public imagination.
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INSIGHT

AI Debates Stretch Back Decades

  • AI discourse started early: mid-century books used brain metaphors to speculate on machine intelligence.
  • Early AI claims mixed hype and serious debate, a pattern that persists today.
INSIGHT

Military Ties Shaped Ethical Debates

  • Military funding shaped early computing research and ethical debates among scientists.
  • Questions about what computer scientists should or should not do echo from Vietnam-era debates to modern DOD ties.
ANECDOTE

Trenton’s Teen Hackers And Ted Nelson

  • McCray picked Trenton/Princeton to recover a lesser-known origin story of personal computing communities.
  • He centered teenagers and their mentor Ted Nelson to show 'personal computing' as activity, not just devices.
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