Jan van den Berg

The Soul of a New Machine - Tracy Kidder

The Soul of a New Machine by Tracy Kidder is one of those books that always seems to pop up when *'*computer-people' share book recommendations. Exhibit A, exhibit B, exhibit C and so on -- you get the picture.

It is supposedly about computers, and I like computers! So I had to read it.

And the "Winner of the Pulitzer Price" notion on the cover also seemed promising!

The Soul of a New Machine - Tracy Kidder (1981) - 293 pages

I had assumed it was fiction, however when I started reading it became pretty clear this is a non-fiction book. The Soul of a New Machine, follows a Digital General Corporation team of two dozen engineers in the late 70s who design a 32 bit computer -- aka the Eagle -- in an 18 month period under enormous pressure and inspiring leadership with ever moving deadlines and increasing market pressure.

It's an amazing read.

These quotes from the authors' website pretty much cover what's so great about it.

Apart from being an exceptional book, here are specific things that stood out for me:

For me this book is a definitive must-read and I would personally really recommend this book to anyone. However I fully understand that this is not for everybody. It can come across as dry or too technical, but if you have ever engineered anything in or with a team or worked with strict but ever moving deadlines, you will recognize a lot and maybe even pick up a few things to put into perspective.

By the way, this is the machine they actually built (according to Google). The commercial name for the Eagle became the Data General Eclipse MV/8000. (picture is courtesy of the blog: The Soul of a Great Machine.)

books, favorites, management, tech, the-soul-of-a-new-machine, tracy-kidder

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