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May 13, 2005 4:00 AM PDT

Perspective: Do we owe it all to the hippies?

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Do we owe it all to the hippies?
The '60s represent many things to many people, but did that same era of sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll also inspire the revolution in personal computing?

That remains an unconventional reading of contemporary history. You could just as easily argue that heavy investment in military research was the moving force. Same goes for pro-market tax policies. But a generation of pot smokers and draft dodgers?

Needless to say, it has the makings of a feisty barroom debate. Still, don't dismiss the argument out of hand. In fact, Whole Earth Catalog founder Stewart Brand made a convincing try a decade ago.

In an essay he wrote for Time magazine in 1995, Brand maintained that the communal and libertarian outlook espoused during the hippie era spawned the seeds that later bore fruit in the form of the modern cyberrevolution. "At the time, it all seemed dangerously anarchic (and still does to many), but the counterculture's scorn for centralized authority provided the philosophical foundations of not only the leaderless Internet but also the entire personal-computer revolution."

He wasn't talking about Vint Cerf doing bong loads. You can easily get lost in the caricatures of the counterculture's sometimes perverse opposition to authority and entirely miss the point. In fact, that very willingness to challenge convention led to leaps of imagination that got repackaged into a furious assault on mainframe centralization.

Power to the people = popular access to computers? Actually, it's not such a stretch. But how did the pieces fall into place? Explaining that is the hard task, and it's one ably taken up by John Markoff in "What the Dormouse Said: How the '60s Counterculture Shaped the Personal Computer Industry." Markoff, a Silicon Valley correspondent for The New York Times, has produced a fascinating read, uncovering the many threads that connected the counterculture with the pioneering computer research later carried out just south of San Francisco.

Why history works out the way it does always makes for a good story, especially when the outcome is unexpected. By rights, the East Coast should have bested the West Coast in the computer competition. The East Coast computing axis, which ran from just north of New York City, where IBM housed its headquarters, up to Cambridge and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was rich in talent, money and pedigree. But as Markoff recounts, most of the groundbreaking research was getting done in California.

"The East Coast computing culture didn't get it. The old computing world was hierarchical and conservative."

He's got that right. In a certain sense, the East Coast establishment was a victim of its own success. Unfortunately, it was also blind to the future because it had such an entrenched interest in the preservation of the status quo. Ken Olson, the founder of Digital Equipment Corp. and a leading figure of the East Coast computer establishment, once famously quipped in public that there was no need for a home PC. But the outside world was changing, and DEC would later pay the price for its management's myopia.

Meanwhile, Northern California had attracted the talents of brilliant thinkers such as Doug Engelbart, Fred Moore, Alan Kay and Ted Nelson--not to mention the sundry hobbyists who belonged to the now legendary Homebrew Computer Club.

The contrast between the West Coast and the Old Guard back East was stark--in some cases a parody of the difference between the two coasts. IBM was famous for sending its employees out into the business world with pressed suits and white shirts as mandatory battle fatigues. What would they have thought had they known their future nemeses were dropping serious amounts of acid?

LSD was hardly verboten. Just the opposite. Long before Ken Kesey's electric Kool-Aid acid tests, Engelbart belonged to a small band of computer researchers who tried LSD to test whether they could enhance their creative powers with psychedelic drugs. It's unclear whether this paved the way for later technology breakthroughs. (Engelbart was sufficiently inspired by one of his LSD trips to think up a training toy to teach little boys to urinate properly.)

Like the founding generation that led the United States to independence, this was a special cadre of thinkers and doers. Was their zeal fired by the '60s counterculture? Or was it due to sheer dumb luck that a collection of special talents came together at exactly the same time in exactly the same place? It's an argument that will go on for quite a long time.

Biography
Charles Cooper is CNET News.com's executive editor of commentary.

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See more CNET content tagged:
East Coast, centralization, revolution, Digital Equipment Corp., talent

Add a Comment (Log in or register) Showing 1 of 2 pages (62 Comments)
Hippies responsible for home computing? Gimme a break
by May 13, 2005 5:46 AM PDT
the only thing the hippies are good at is congratulating themselves for every positive development in the world since 1960. A 1954 issue of Popular Mechanics contains a picture of a "scientist" from the Rand Corporation standing in front of the concept of what a "home computer" (and yes, those are the exact words in the caption) would look like in 2004. (I would attach the picture if I could) The picture is pretty hilarious but it alone proves that "scientists" were figuring out how to put computers in homes while the future hippies were still taking pablum. To imply that the hippie ethic is responsible for the invention of the PC is completely absurd.
Reply to this comment
You're Kidding Right?
by May 13, 2005 6:12 AM PDT
I mean, are you joking or did you fall for that hoax picture of the RAND "Home Computer" of the future?
View all 2 replies
That picture is a well known hoax
by ChazzMatt May 13, 2005 12:52 PM PDT
That personal computer picture is a well-known hoax. That was a Pentagon submarine mockup (thus the steering wheel). Do a Google search for: Popular Mechanics PC hoax
Hippies responsible for home computing? Gimme a break
by May 13, 2005 5:46 AM PDT
the only thing the hippies are good at is congratulating themselves for every positive development in the world since 1960. A 1954 issue of Popular Mechanics contains a picture of a "scientist" from the Rand Corporation standing in front of the concept of what a "home computer" (and yes, those are the exact words in the caption) would look like in 2004. (I would attach the picture if I could) The picture is pretty hilarious but it alone proves that "scientists" were figuring out how to put computers in homes while the future hippies were still taking pablum. To imply that the hippie ethic is responsible for the invention of the PC is completely absurd.
Reply to this comment
You're Kidding Right?
by May 13, 2005 6:12 AM PDT
I mean, are you joking or did you fall for that hoax picture of the RAND "Home Computer" of the future?
View all 2 replies
That picture is a well known hoax
by ChazzMatt May 13, 2005 12:52 PM PDT
That personal computer picture is a well-known hoax. That was a Pentagon submarine mockup (thus the steering wheel). Do a Google search for: Popular Mechanics PC hoax
don't know about computers but...
by alx359 May 13, 2005 6:44 AM PDT
"make love not war" is a hippie invention they deserve full credit for. ;-)
Reply to this comment
don't know about computers but...
by alx359 May 13, 2005 6:44 AM PDT
"make love not war" is a hippie invention they deserve full credit for. ;-)
Reply to this comment
Markoff's Story is About Right
by May 13, 2005 6:59 AM PDT
That's about right. The only part that is off is that the hippie counterculture quickly became the dominant youth culture, so this was not an east-coast vs west-coast event. Flower power went national then global spread by the media news outlets as the dominant reaction of the youth of the period against the war, the excesses of consumerism, and that patriarchal white-man's burden style of government that has of late, come back into fashion. In the early 90s, when the web took off, it took off all over the world as those who had dreams of free and unfettered innovation and expression recognized instantly that this was the technology they had heard about becoming possible in the days of their youth.

The revisionism of history in the period is coming from the far right, and I suspect as in the case of the mayor in Washington state who has been outed after years of being anti-gay, many of the staunch revisionists had bongs and a stash before their heads began to bald. During the decade of greed, the Reagan era, these are the people who shod their leisure suits that replaced their tie-dyes and put on Izods. Now they want to claim the Internet, but all that is happening is that innovation is moving to other parts of the world along with their jobs.

The right keeps trying to catch mercury with their bare hands. It won't work and their brief contacts with the essence of creative thought is toxic to their agenda of traditionalism and backward glances toward the setting sun of their days of power.
Reply to this comment
Markoff's Story is About Right
by May 13, 2005 6:59 AM PDT
That's about right. The only part that is off is that the hippie counterculture quickly became the dominant youth culture, so this was not an east-coast vs west-coast event. Flower power went national then global spread by the media news outlets as the dominant reaction of the youth of the period against the war, the excesses of consumerism, and that patriarchal white-man's burden style of government that has of late, come back into fashion. In the early 90s, when the web took off, it took off all over the world as those who had dreams of free and unfettered innovation and expression recognized instantly that this was the technology they had heard about becoming possible in the days of their youth.

The revisionism of history in the period is coming from the far right, and I suspect as in the case of the mayor in Washington state who has been outed after years of being anti-gay, many of the staunch revisionists had bongs and a stash before their heads began to bald. During the decade of greed, the Reagan era, these are the people who shod their leisure suits that replaced their tie-dyes and put on Izods. Now they want to claim the Internet, but all that is happening is that innovation is moving to other parts of the world along with their jobs.

The right keeps trying to catch mercury with their bare hands. It won't work and their brief contacts with the essence of creative thought is toxic to their agenda of traditionalism and backward glances toward the setting sun of their days of power.
Reply to this comment
Hippies, yup, sure .... WHAT?
by May 13, 2005 8:34 AM PDT
There is no doubt that the counter-revolution played a large role in the values we hold dear, and to the ones that built the internet.

But these values were springing up everywhere, not just on college campuses, where long hairs were collecting.

Remember, in the end, the SQUARES built the internet, not hippies. And unlike the hippies they weren't in it for the BABES.

Most of us geek SQUARES just learned a few tricks from the hippies. But we weren't hippies and we were comfortable in a military uniform.

And when we wrote software it wasn't for "petyourdogonline.com".
Reply to this comment
Do the "straight people" ever refrain from re-writing history?
by pgh May 13, 2005 12:52 PM PDT
In 1971, I first began writing code as a high-school student. In the mid-1970s, I was a post-hippie-era electronics tech with a love of hi-fi who go sucked back into computers after reading about the mavericks who were "mis-applying" the process control hardware coming out of Intel, designing the first PCs. And while it's true that the "establishment" built the basic building blocks of PCs and the internet (microprocessors and the ARPANET), it was the wild-eyed free-thinkers who designed and built the first working, practical PCs. And it was they who dreamed of using them from everything from art to architecture. From our point of view, computing was about a hell of a lot more than keeping accounts straight. It was about doing the really cool things for ourselves. The PC revolution was already in full bloom by the time IBM got into the game in late 1981. At that time you could buy an Apple II with a music synthesizer, a graphics tablet, CAD software, etc.

The late 1970s were an incredible time. A hippie sub-genre (technophilic dreamers) saw opportunity to build the stuff that the computing powers of the time considered pure science fiction. Look where the old guard are now. Most are gone. Even IBM has embraced a purely hippie idea (open source) as a central component of it's business model.
View reply
In it for the BABES?
by oldmaven May 13, 2005 1:24 PM PDT
With a few exceptions (like the young lady who scandalized a Midwestern computer fair with a t-shirt that read "I have dual floppies," computers were a guy thing. To most of the computer geeks' girlfriends, computers weren't an attraction: they were competition. Had I paid less attention to the babes back then, I'd probably be an under-employed programmer by now, instead of an under-employed writer.
Hippies, yup, sure .... WHAT?
by May 13, 2005 8:34 AM PDT
There is no doubt that the counter-revolution played a large role in the values we hold dear, and to the ones that built the internet.

But these values were springing up everywhere, not just on college campuses, where long hairs were collecting.

Remember, in the end, the SQUARES built the internet, not hippies. And unlike the hippies they weren't in it for the BABES.

Most of us geek SQUARES just learned a few tricks from the hippies. But we weren't hippies and we were comfortable in a military uniform.

And when we wrote software it wasn't for "petyourdogonline.com".
Reply to this comment
Do the "straight people" ever refrain from re-writing history?
by pgh May 13, 2005 12:52 PM PDT
In 1971, I first began writing code as a high-school student. In the mid-1970s, I was a post-hippie-era electronics tech with a love of hi-fi who go sucked back into computers after reading about the mavericks who were "mis-applying" the process control hardware coming out of Intel, designing the first PCs. And while it's true that the "establishment" built the basic building blocks of PCs and the internet (microprocessors and the ARPANET), it was the wild-eyed free-thinkers who designed and built the first working, practical PCs. And it was they who dreamed of using them from everything from art to architecture. From our point of view, computing was about a hell of a lot more than keeping accounts straight. It was about doing the really cool things for ourselves. The PC revolution was already in full bloom by the time IBM got into the game in late 1981. At that time you could buy an Apple II with a music synthesizer, a graphics tablet, CAD software, etc.

The late 1970s were an incredible time. A hippie sub-genre (technophilic dreamers) saw opportunity to build the stuff that the computing powers of the time considered pure science fiction. Look where the old guard are now. Most are gone. Even IBM has embraced a purely hippie idea (open source) as a central component of it's business model.
View reply
In it for the BABES?
by oldmaven May 13, 2005 1:24 PM PDT
With a few exceptions (like the young lady who scandalized a Midwestern computer fair with a t-shirt that read "I have dual floppies," computers were a guy thing. To most of the computer geeks' girlfriends, computers weren't an attraction: they were competition. Had I paid less attention to the babes back then, I'd probably be an under-employed programmer by now, instead of an under-employed writer.
Get real!
by shanedr-1964330144520240703050 May 13, 2005 8:14 PM PDT
If anything the sex, drugs, etc. of the sixties, seventies, etc. could only have slowed down the advent of personal computing. That era and the hippies were renowned for its anti-establishment outlook. A good salesman can sell the gullible anything, including the ridiculous idea that an anti-establishment outlook could have any positive effect upon something such as personal computing.
Reply to this comment
Get real!
by shanedr-1964330144520240703050 May 13, 2005 8:14 PM PDT
If anything the sex, drugs, etc. of the sixties, seventies, etc. could only have slowed down the advent of personal computing. That era and the hippies were renowned for its anti-establishment outlook. A good salesman can sell the gullible anything, including the ridiculous idea that an anti-establishment outlook could have any positive effect upon something such as personal computing.
Reply to this comment
Critial mass
by CharlesJo.com May 14, 2005 7:54 AM PDT
Brilliant minds exist everywhere. However, culture, critical mass, and quick access to other brilliant minds is something different. As many actors migrate to Hollywood to seek fame, tech entrepreneurs still migrate to Silicon Valley so interesting tech companies like Google and eBay get started here. It's possible that the west coast had the critical mass in the 60s that gave way to thinking up something out of the ordinary as a PC on every desk.

CharlesJo.com
Silicon Valley & Beyond
Reply to this comment
Critial mass
by CharlesJo.com May 14, 2005 7:54 AM PDT
Brilliant minds exist everywhere. However, culture, critical mass, and quick access to other brilliant minds is something different. As many actors migrate to Hollywood to seek fame, tech entrepreneurs still migrate to Silicon Valley so interesting tech companies like Google and eBay get started here. It's possible that the west coast had the critical mass in the 60s that gave way to thinking up something out of the ordinary as a PC on every desk.

CharlesJo.com
Silicon Valley & Beyond
Reply to this comment
Linux is Next
by May 14, 2005 11:44 AM PDT
Linux is the logical next software chapters of this story, while www.mp3tunes.com and others like it are the next audio chapters.
Reply to this comment
Linux is Next
by May 14, 2005 11:44 AM PDT
Linux is the logical next software chapters of this story, while www.mp3tunes.com and others like it are the next audio chapters.
Reply to this comment
Woz was
by timpatco May 14, 2005 4:19 PM PDT
Woz was (is still)
Reply to this comment
Woz was
by timpatco May 14, 2005 4:19 PM PDT
Woz was (is still)
Reply to this comment
Do we owe it all to the hippies.......NO
by May 16, 2005 2:18 AM PDT
The question was - Do we owe it all to the hippies? THe answer is NO.

If "it" was to create popular access to computers, I'd say that that access is a byproduct of all the steps taking in computer development - including those that predate the hippie.

And guess what - the whole Left coast/Right coast argument is pointless - there have been innovators OUTSIDE the US - Charles Babbage, F.C. “Freddie” Williams, Clive Sinclair & Tim Berners-Lee all did their bit too, ya know.
Reply to this comment
Mea Culpa
by May 16, 2005 2:21 AM PDT
It was late, I was lazy, copy&paste seemed to do a good job, my bad - that should read

F.C. “Freddie” Williams

Once I remove the extraneous stuff.
View reply
Well - yes & no
by May 16, 2005 10:02 AM PDT
http://www.microsoft.com/billgates/bio.asp - see the group picture a few paragraphs down. I know this picture can be found elsewhere, bigger - but I thought I'd link to this particular website - seems like a form of self-admission, by the subject.

Which of these people do we blame/credit - the hippie-looking half or do we blame/credit the computer geek half ?
Do we owe it all to the hippies.......NO
by May 16, 2005 2:18 AM PDT
The question was - Do we owe it all to the hippies? THe answer is NO.

If "it" was to create popular access to computers, I'd say that that access is a byproduct of all the steps taking in computer development - including those that predate the hippie.

And guess what - the whole Left coast/Right coast argument is pointless - there have been innovators OUTSIDE the US - Charles Babbage, F.C. “Freddie” Williams, Clive Sinclair & Tim Berners-Lee all did their bit too, ya know.
Reply to this comment
Mea Culpa
by May 16, 2005 2:21 AM PDT
It was late, I was lazy, copy&paste seemed to do a good job, my bad - that should read

F.C. “Freddie” Williams

Once I remove the extraneous stuff.
View reply
Well - yes & no
by May 16, 2005 10:02 AM PDT
http://www.microsoft.com/billgates/bio.asp - see the group picture a few paragraphs down. I know this picture can be found elsewhere, bigger - but I thought I'd link to this particular website - seems like a form of self-admission, by the subject.

Which of these people do we blame/credit - the hippie-looking half or do we blame/credit the computer geek half ?
What we do owe the hippies
by Macsaresafer May 16, 2005 7:03 AM PDT
It's certain that the hippies of the sixties have had a profound
influence on our society, including computers. Their influence
hasen't been to help things though.

This is the "me first" generation of baby boomers we're talking
about after all. They're selfish to the point of running massive
deficits to improve their lifestyles at the expense of their
children. Every big fad of the last 35 years has been to cater to
their whims. In the eighties, it was their generation in charge as
it was decided to "standardize" on the Wintel PC platform,
setting the stage for easy development and transmission of
"computer" viruses by creating a homogenous system where one
weakness can be exploited everywhere.

Today, as this generation prepares for retirement it is
abandoning our educational system, virtually guaranteeing a
bleak outlook for more than just technology in this country.

It would be easier to argue that the Boomers have slowed the
growth of technology more than they've helped it. Unfortunately,
since they've got the political power, they'll write the history
books to flatter themselves.
Reply to this comment
What we do owe the hippies
by Macsaresafer May 16, 2005 7:03 AM PDT
It's certain that the hippies of the sixties have had a profound
influence on our society, including computers. Their influence
hasen't been to help things though.

This is the "me first" generation of baby boomers we're talking
about after all. They're selfish to the point of running massive
deficits to improve their lifestyles at the expense of their
children. Every big fad of the last 35 years has been to cater to
their whims. In the eighties, it was their generation in charge as
it was decided to "standardize" on the Wintel PC platform,
setting the stage for easy development and transmission of
"computer" viruses by creating a homogenous system where one
weakness can be exploited everywhere.

Today, as this generation prepares for retirement it is
abandoning our educational system, virtually guaranteeing a
bleak outlook for more than just technology in this country.

It would be easier to argue that the Boomers have slowed the
growth of technology more than they've helped it. Unfortunately,
since they've got the political power, they'll write the history
books to flatter themselves.
Reply to this comment
Showing 1 of 2 pages (62 Comments)
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