
New Books Network Honghong Tinn, "Island Tinkerers: Innovation and Transformation in the Making of Taiwan's Computing Industry" (MIT Press, 2024)
Feb 26, 2026
Honghong Tinn, assistant professor in history of science, technology, and medicine and electrical and computer engineering, explores Taiwan's rise in computing. She traces hobbyist tinkering, student-built mini computers, and engineers' factory experience. Stories cover women assemblers, Acer's origins, and the founding of TSMC through local innovation and global ties.
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Universities Drove Early Taiwanese Computing
- Taiwanese computing leadership grew from universities, not just military funding, with National Chiao Tung University securing the first campus mainframes via UN technical aid.
- The UN sought immediate industry ties, while Taiwanese technocrats prioritized long-term engineering education and in-house maintenance, seeding local tinkering culture.
Student DIY Built The Path To Quanta
- Graduate students built mini computers and calculators from recycled parts and custom-fabricated components to understand black-boxed imported machines.
- Barry Lam (founder of Quanta) built a mini computer for his NTU master's thesis and later leveraged hands-on soldering skills into a major laptop and server manufacturing firm.
Factory Engineers Were Tacit Knowledge Carriers
- Local engineers and maintenance staff at multinational factories became key tinkerers who improvised to keep imported machinery running and ensured product quality.
- Export processing zones attracted multinationals (Philips, TI) whose local hires gained manufacturing and management know-how that later enabled entrepreneurship.

