Page 62 of The Innovators


  109. Daniel Pink, “The Buck Stops Here,” Wired, Mar. 2005; Tim Adams, “For Your Information,” Guardian, June 30, 2007; Lord Emsworth user page, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Lord_Emsworth; Peter Steiner, New Yorker cartoon, July 5, 1993, at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_the_Internet,_nobody_knows_you’re_a_dog.

  110. Jonathan Zittrain, The Future of the Internet and How to Stop It (Yale, 2008), 147.

  111. Author’s interview with Jimmy Wales.

  112. Author’s interview with Jimmy Wales.

  113. John Battelle, The Search (Portfolio, 2005; locations refer to the Kindle edition), 894.

  114. Battelle, The Search, 945; author’s visit with Srinija Srinivasan.

  115. In addition to the sources cited below, this section is based on my interview and conversations with Larry Page; Larry Page commencement address at the University of Michigan, May 2, 2009; Larry Page and Sergey Brin interviews, Academy of Achievement, Oct. 28, 2000; “The Lost Google Tapes,” interviews by John Ince with Sergey Brin, Larry Page, and others, Jan. 2000, http://www.podtech.net/home/?s=Lost+Google+Tapes; John Ince, “Google Flashback—My 2000 Interviews,” Huffington Post, Feb. 6, 2012; Ken Auletta, Googled (Penguin, 2009); Battelle, The Search; Richard Brandt, The Google Guys (Penguin, 2011); Steven Levy, In the Plex (Simon & Schuster, 2011); Randall Stross, Planet Google (Free Press, 2008); David Vise, The Google Story (Delacorte, 2005); Douglas Edwards, I’m Feeling Lucky: The Confessions of Google Employee Number 59 (Mariner, 2012); Brenna McBride, “The Ultimate Search,” College Park magazine, Spring 2000; Mark Malseed, “The Story of Sergey Brin,” Moment magazine, Feb. 2007.

  116. Author’s interview with Larry Page.

  117. Larry Page interview, Academy of Achievement.

  118. Larry Page interview, by Andy Serwer, Fortune, May 1, 2008.

  119. Author’s interview with Larry Page.

  120. Author’s interview with Larry Page.

  121. Author’s interview with Larry Page.

  122. Larry Page, Michigan commencement address.

  123. Author’s interview with Larry Page.

  124. Author’s interview with Larry Page.

  125. Author’s interview with Larry Page.

  126. Battelle, The Search, 1031.

  127. Auletta, Googled, 28.

  128. Interview with Larry Page and Sergey Brin, conducted by Barbara Walters, ABC News, Dec. 8, 2004.

  129. Sergey Brin talk, Breakthrough Learning conference, Google headquarters, Nov. 12, 2009.

  130. Malseed, “The Story of Sergey Brin.”

  131. Sergey Brin interview, Academy of Achievement.

  132. McBride, “The Ultimate Search.”

  133. Auletta, Googled, 31.

  134. Auletta, Googled, 32.

  135. Vise, The Google Story, 33.

  136. Auletta, Googled, 39.

  137. Author’s interview with Larry Page.

  138. Author’s interview with Larry Page.

  139. Terry Winograd interview, conducted by Bill Moggridge, http://www.designinginteractions.com/interviews/TerryWinograd.

  140. Author’s interview with Larry Page.

  141. Craig Silverstein, Sergey Brin, Rajeev Motwani, and Jeff Ullman, “Scalable Techniques for Mining Causal Structures,” Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery, July 2000.

  142. Author’s interview with Larry Page.

  143. Author’s interview with Larry Page.

  144. Larry Page, Michigan commencement address.

  145. Vise, The Google Story, 10.

  146. Larry Page, Michigan commencement address.

  147. Battelle, The Search, 1183.

  148. Battelle, The Search, 1114.

  149. Larry Page, Michigan commencement address.

  150. Author’s interview with Larry Page.

  151. Levy, In the Plex, 415, citing Page’s remarks at the 2001 PC Forum, held in Scottsdale, Arizona.

  152. Sergey Brin interview, conducted by John Ince, “The Lost Google Tapes,” part 2.

  153. Sergey Brin, Rajeev Motwani, Larry Page, Terry Winograd, “What Can You Do with a Web in Your Pocket?” Bulletin of the IEEE Computer Society Technical Committee on Data Engineering, 1998.

  154. Author’s interview with Larry Page.

  155. Levy, In the Plex, 358.

  156. Levy, In the Plex, 430.

  157. Sergey Brin interview, conducted by John Ince, “The Lost Google Tapes,” part 2, http://www.podtech.net/home/1728/podventurezone-lost-google-tapes-part-2-sergey-brin.

  158. Levy, In the Plex, 947.

  159. Author’s interview with Larry Page.

  160. Sergey Brin and Larry Page, “The Anatomy of a Large-Scale Hypertextual Web Search Engine,” seventh International World-Wide Web Conference, Apr. 1998, Brisbane, Australia.

  161. Vise, The Google Story, 30.

  162. Author’s interview with Larry Page.

  163. David Cheriton, Mike Moritz, and Sergey Brin interviews, conducted by John Ince, “The Lost Google Tapes”; Vise, The Google Story, 47; Levy, In the Plex, 547.

  164. Vise, The Google Story, 47; Battelle, The Search, 86.

  165. Sergey Brin interview, conducted by John Ince, “The Lost Google Tapes.”

  166. Larry Page interview, conducted by John Ince, “The Lost Google Tapes.”

  167. Auletta, Googled, 44.

  168. Sergey Brin interview, conducted by John Ince, “The Lost Google Tapes,” part 2.

  CHAPTER TWELVE: ADA FOREVER

  1. Dyson, Turing’s Cathedral, 6321; John von Neumann, The Computer and the Brain (Yale, 1958), 80.

  2. Gary Marcus, “Hyping Artificial Intelligence, Yet Again,” New Yorker, Jan. 1, 2014, citing “New Navy Device Learns by Doing” (UPI wire story), New York Times, July 8, 1958; “Rival,” New Yorker, Dec. 6, 1958.

  3. Marvin Minsky and Seymour Papert, the original gurus of artificial intelligence, challenged some of Rosenblatt’s premises, after which the excitement surrounding the Perceptron faded and the entire field entered a decline known as the “AI winter.” See Danny Wilson, “Tantalizingly Close to a Mechanized Mind: The Perceptrons Controversy and the Pursuit of Artificial Intelligence,” undergraduate thesis, Harvard, December 2012; Frank Rosenblatt, “The Perceptron: A Probabilistic Model for Information Storage and Organization in the Brain,” Psychological Review, Fall 1958; Marvin Minsky and Seymour Papert, Perceptrons (MIT, 1969).

  4. Author’s interview with Ginni Rometty.

  5. Garry Kasparov, “The Chess Master and the Computer,” New York Review of Books, Feb. 11, 2010; Clive Thompson, Smarter Than You Think (Penguin, 2013), 3.

  6. “Watson on Jeopardy,” IBM’s Smarter Planet website, Feb. 14, 2011, http://asmarterplanet.com/blog/2011/02/watson-on-jeopardy-day-one-man-vs-machine-for-global-bragging-rights.html.

  7. John Searle, “Watson Doesn’t Know It Won on Jeopardy,” Wall Street Journal, Feb. 23, 2011.

  8. John E. Kelly III and Steve Hamm, Smart Machines (Columbia, 2013), 4. Steve Hamm is a technology journalist now working as a writer and communications strategist at IBM. I have attributed the opinions in the book to Kelly, who is the director of IBM research.

  9. Larry Hardesty, “Artificial-Intelligence Research Revives Its Old Ambitions,” MIT News, Sept. 9, 2013.

  10. James Somers, “The Man Who Would Teach Computers to Think,” Atlantic, Nov. 2013.

  11. Gary Marcus, “Why Can’t My Computer Understand Me,” New Yorker, Aug. 16, 2013.

  12. Steven Pinker, The Language Instinct (Harper, 1994), 191.

  13. Stuart Russell and Peter Norvig, Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach (Prentice Hall, 1995), 566.

  14. Author’s interview with Bill Gates.

  15. Nicholas Wade, “In Tiny Worm, Unlocking Secrets of the Brain,” New York Times, June 20, 2011; “The Connectome of a Decision-Making Neural Network,” Science, July 27, 2012; The Dana Foundation, https://www.dana.org/News/Details.aspx?id=43512.

  16. John Markoff, “Brainlike Computers, Learning from
Experience,” New York Times, Dec. 28, 2013. Markoff, who has long done thoughtful reporting on this field, is writing a book that explores the implications of machines that can replace human labor.

  17. “Neuromorphic Computing Platform,” the Human Brain Project, https://www.humanbrainproject.eu/neuromorphic-computing-platform1; Bennie Mols, “Brainy Computer Chip Ditches Digital for Analog,” Communications of the ACM, Feb. 27, 2014; Klint Finley, “Computer Chips That Work Like a Brain Are Coming—Just Not Yet,” Wired, Dec. 31, 2013. Beau Cronin of O’Reilly Media has proposed a drinking game: “take a shot every time you find a news article or blog post that describes a new AI system as working or thinking ‘like the brain’ ” (http://radar.oreilly.com/2014/05/it-works-like-the-brain-so.html), and he maintains a pinboard of stories making such claims (https://pinboard.in/u:beaucronin/t:like-the-brain/#).

  18. Author’s interview with Tim Berners-Lee.

  19. Vernor Vinge, “The Coming Technological Singularity,” Whole Earth Review, Winter 1993. See also Ray Kurzweil, “Accelerating Intelligence,” http://www.kurzweilai.net/.

  20. J. C. R. Licklider, “Man-Computer Symbiosis,” IRE Transactions on Human Factors in Electronics, Mar. 1960.

  21. Kelly and Hamm, Smart Machines, 7.

  22. Kasparov, “The Chess Master and the Computer.”

  23. Kelly and Hamm, Smart Machines, 2.

  24. “Why Cognitive Systems?” IBM Research website, http://www.research.ibm.com/cognitive-computing/why-cognitive-systems.shtml.

  25. Author’s interview with David McQueeney.

  26. Author’s interview with Ginni Rometty.

  27. Author’s interview with Ginni Rometty.

  28. Kelly and Hamm, Smart Machines, 3.

  29. “Accelerating the Co-Evolution,” Doug Engelbart Institute, http://www.dougengelbart.org/about/co-evolution.html; Thierry Bardini, Bootstrapping: Douglas Engelbart, Coevolution, and the Origins of Personal Computing (Stanford, 2000).

  30. Nick Bilton, Hatching Twitter (Portfolio, 2013), 203.

  31. Usually misattributed to Thomas Edison, although there is no evidence he ever said it. Often used by Steve Case.

  32. Yochai Benkler, “Coase’s Penguin, or, Linux and the Nature of the Firm,” Yale Law Journal (2002).

  33. Steven Johnson, “The Internet? We Built That,” New York Times, Sept. 21, 2012.

  34. Author’s interview with Larry Page. The quote form Steve Jobs comes from an interview I did with him for my previous book.

  35. Kelly and Hamm, Smart Machines, 7.

  PHOTO CREDITS

  Lovelace: Hulton Archive/Getty Images

  Lord Byron: © The Print Collector/Corbis

  Babbage: Popperfoto/Getty Images

  Difference Engine: Allan J. Cronin

  Analytical Engine: Science Photo Library/Getty Images

  Jacquard loom: David Monniaux

  Jacquard portrait: © Corbis

  Bush: © Bettmann/Corbis

  Turing: Wikimedia Commons/Original at the Archives Centre, King’s College, Cambridge

  Shannon: Alfred Eisenstaedt/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

  Stibitz: Denison University, Department of Math and Computer Science

  Zuse: Courtesy of Horst Zuse

  Atanasoff: Special Collections Department/Iowa State University

  Atanasoff-Berry Computer: Special Collections Department/Iowa State University

  Aiken: Harvard University Archives, UAV 362.7295.8p, B 1, F 11, S 109

  Mauchly: Apic/Contributor/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

  Eckert: © Bettmann/Corbis

  ENIAC in 1946: University of Pennsylvania Archives

  Aiken and Hopper: By a staff photographer / © 1946 The Christian Science Monitor (www.CSMonitor.com). Reprinted with permission. Also courtesy of the Grace Murray Hopper Collection, Archives Center, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution.

  Jennings and Bilas with ENIAC: U.S. Army photo

  Jennings: Copyright © Jean Jennings Bartik Computing Museum—Northwest Missouri State University. All rights reserved. Used with permission.

  Snyder: Copyright © Jean Jennings Bartik Computing Museum—Northwest Missouri State University. All rights reserved. Used with permission.

  Von Neumann: © Bettmann/Corbis

  Goldstine: Courtesy of the Computer History Museum

  Eckert and Cronkite with UNIVAC: U.S. Census Bureau

  Bardeen, Shockley, Brattain: Lucent Technologies/Agence France-Presse/Newscom

  First transistor: Reprinted with permission of Alcatel-Lucent USA Inc.

  Shockley Nobel toast: Courtesy of Bo Lojek and the Computer History Museum

  Noyce: © Wayne Miller/Magnum Photos

  Moore: Intel Corporation

  Fairchild Semiconductor: © Wayne Miller/Magnum Photos

  Kilby: Fritz Goro/ The LIFE Picture Collection/ Getty Images

  Kilby’s microchip: Image courtesy of Texas Instruments

  Rock: Louis Fabian Bachrach

  Grove, Noyce, Moore: Intel Corporation

  Spacewar: Courtesy of the Computer History Museum

  Bushnell: © Ed Kashi/VII/Corbis

  Licklider: Karen Tweedy-Holmes

  Taylor: Courtesy of Bob Taylor

  Larry Roberts: Courtesy of Larry Roberts

  Davies: National Physical Laboratory © Crown Copyright / Science Source Images

  Baran: Courtesy of RAND Corp.

  Kleinrock: Courtesy of Len Kleinrock

  Cerf and Kahn: © Louie Psihoyos/Corbis

  Kesey: © Joe Rosenthal/San Francisco Chronicle/Corbis

  Brand: © Bill Young/San Francisco Chronicle/Corbis

  Whole Earth Catalog cover: Whole Earth Catalog

  Engelbart: SRI International

  First mouse: SRI International

  Brand: SRI International

  Kay: Courtesy of the Computer History Museum

  Dynabook: Courtesy of Alan Kay

  Felsenstein: Cindy Charles

  People’s Computer Company cover: DigiBarn Computer Museum

  Ed Roberts: Courtesy of the Computer History Museum

  Popular Electronics cover: DigiBarn Computer Museum

  Allen and Gates: Bruce Burgess, courtesy of Lakeside School, Bill Gates, Paul Allen, and Fredrica Rice

  Gates: Wikimedia Commons/Albuquerque, NM police department

  Microsoft team: Courtesy of the Microsoft Archives

  Jobs and Wozniak: © DB Apple/dpa/Corbis

  Jobs screenshot: YouTube

  Stallman: Sam Ogden

  Torvalds: © Jim Sugar/Corbis

  Brand and Brilliant: © Winni Wintermeyer

  Von Meister: The Washington Post/Getty Images

  Case: Courtesy of Steve Case

  Berners-Lee: CERN

  Andreessen: © Louie Psihoyos/Corbis

  Hall and Rheingold: Courtesy of Justin Hall

  Bricklin and Williams: Don Bulens

  Wales: Terry Foote via Wikimedia Commons

  Brin and Page: Associated Press

  Lovelace: Hulton Archive/Getty Images

  Vitruvian Man: © The Gallery Collection/Corbis

  TIMELINE CREDITS (IN CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER)

  Lovelace: Hulton Archive/Getty Images

  Hollerith: Library of Congress via Wikimedia Commons

  Bush (first image): © Bettmann/Corbis

  Vacuum tube: Ted Kinsman/Science Source

  Turing: Wikimedia Commons/Original at the Archives Centre, King’s College, Cambridge

  Shannon: Alfred Eisenstaedt/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

  Aiken: Harvard University Archives, UAV 362.7295.8p, B 1, F 11, S 109

  Atanasoff: Special Collections Department/Iowa State University

  Bletchley Park: Draco2008 via Wikimedia Commons

  Zuse: Courtesy of Horst Zuse

  Mauchly: Apic/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

  Atanasoff-Berry Computer: Special Collections Department/Iowa State Universi
ty

  Colossus: Bletchley Park Trust/SSPL via Getty Images

  Harvard Mark I: Harvard University

  Von Neumann: © Bettmann/Corbis

  ENIAC: U.S. Army photo

  Bush (second image): © Corbis

  Transistor invention at Bell Labs: Lucent Technologies/Agence France-Presse/Newscom

  Hopper: Defense Visual Information Center

  UNIVAC: U.S. Census Bureau

  Regency radio: © Mark Richards/CHM

  Shockley: Emilio Segrè Visual Archives / American Institute of Physics / Science Source

  Fairchild Semiconductor: © Wayne Miller/Magnum Photos

  Sputnik: NASA

  Kilby: Fritz Goro/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

  Licklider: MIT Museum

  Baran: Courtesy of RAND Corp.

  Spacewar: Courtesy of the Computer History Museum

  First mouse: SRI International

  Kesey: © Hulton-Deutsch Collection/Corbis

  Moore: Intel Corporation

  Brand: © Bill Young/San Francisco Chronicle/Corbis

  Taylor: Courtesy of Bob Taylor

  Larry Roberts: Courtesy of Larry Roberts

  Noyce, Moore, Grove: Intel Corporation

  Whole Earth Catalog cover: Whole Earth Catalog

  Engelbart: SRI International

  ARPANET nodes: Courtesy of Raytheon BBN Technologies

  4004: Intel Corporation

  Tomlinson: Courtesy of Raytheon BBN Technologies

  Bushnell: © Ed Kashi/VII/Corbis

  Kay: Courtesy of the Computer History Museum

  Community Memory: Courtesy of the Computer History Museum

  Cerf and Kahn: © Louie Psihoyos/Corbis

  Popular Mechanics cover: DigiBarn Computer Museum

  Gates and Allen: Bruce Burgess, courtesy of Lakeside School, Bill Gates, Paul Allen, and Fredrica Rice

  Apple I: Ed Uthman

  Apple II: © Mark Richards/CHM

  IBM PC: IBM/Science Source

  Gates with Windows disc: © Deborah Feingold/Corbis

  Stallman: Sam Ogden

  Jobs with Macintosh: Diana Walker/Contour By Getty Images

  WELL logo: Image courtesy of The WELL at www.well.com. The logo is a registered trademark of the Well Group Incorporated.

  Torvalds: © Jim Sugar/Corbis

  Berners-Lee: CERN

  Andreessen: © Louie Psihoyos/Corbis