Research Catalog

Machine beauty : elegance and the heart of technology / David Gelernter.

Title
Machine beauty : elegance and the heart of technology / David Gelernter.
Author
Gelernter, David Hillel.
Publication
New York : Basic Books, c1998.

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TextRequest in advance QA76.9.H85 G46 1998Off-site

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Description
ix, 166 p. : ill.; 25 cm.
Summary
When something works well, you can feel it; there is a sense of rightness to it. We call that rightness beauty, and it ought to be the single most important component of design. This recognition is at the heart of David Gelernter's wittily argued essay, Machine Beauty, which defines beauty as an inspired mating of simplicity and power. You can see it in a Bauhaus chair, the Hoover Dam, or an Emerson radio circa 1930. In contrast, too many contemporary technologists run out of ideas and resort to gimmicks and features; they are rarely capable of real, structural ingenuity. Nowhere is this more evident than in the world of computers. You don't have to look far to see how oblivious most computer technologists are to the idea of beauty. Just look at how ugly your computer cabinet is, how unwieldy and out of sync if feels with the manner and speed with which you process thought. The best designers, however, are obsessed with beauty. Both hardware and software should afford us the greatest opportunity to achieve deep beauty, the kind of beauty that happens when many types of loveliness reinforce one another, when design expresses an underlying technology, a machine logic. Program software ought to be transparent: it should engage what Gelernter calls "a thought-amplifying feedback loop," a creative symbiosis with its user. These principles, beautiful in themselves, will set the stage for the next technological revolution, in which the pursuit of elegance will lead to extraordinary innovations.
Series Statement
  • The MasterMinds series
  • Science masters series
Uniform Title
  • Science masters series.
  • MasterMinds
Subject
  • Human-computer interaction
  • Computer software > Human factors
  • Computer engineering
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. 145-155) and index.
Contents
1. Deep Beauty -- 2. The Paradox of Beauty -- 3. The Aesthetics of Computer Science -- 4. Rise of the Desktop -- 5. Beyond the Desktop -- 6. Computer Ugliness -- 7. Unseen Beauty.
ISBN
0465045162
LCCN
^^^97014613^
OCLC
  • 36841471
  • SCSB-9897978
Owning Institutions
Harvard Library