Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
Transparent Designs : Personal Computing and the Politics of User-Friendliness - Michael L. Black

Transparent Designs

Personal Computing and the Politics of User-Friendliness

By: Michael L. Black

Hardcover | 1 March 2022

At a Glance

Hardcover


RRP $106.00

$100.99

or 4 interest-free payments of $25.25 with

 or 

Ships in 5 to 7 business days

This fascinating cultural history of the personal computer explains how user-friendly design allows tech companies to build systems that we cannot understand.

Modern personal computers are easy to use, and their welcoming, user-friendly interfaces encourage us to see them as designed for our individual benefit. Rarely, however, do these interfaces invite us to consider how our individual uses support the broader political and economic strategies of their designers.

In Transparent Designs, Michael L. Black revisits early debates from hobbyist newsletters, computing magazines, user manuals, and advertisements about how personal computers could be seen as usable and useful by the average person. Black examines how early personal computers from the Tandy TRS-80 and Commodore PET to the IBM PC and Apple Macintosh were marketed to an American public that was high on the bold promises of the computing revolution but also skeptical about their ability to participate in it. Through this careful archival study, he shows how many of the foundational principles of usability theory were shaped through disagreements over the languages and business strategies developed in response to this skepticism. In short, this book asks us to consider the consequences of a computational culture that is based on the assumption that the average person does not need to know anything about the internal operations of the computers we've come to depend on for everything.

Expanding our definition of usability, Transparent Designs examines how popular and technical rhetoric shapes user expectations about what counts as usable and useful as much as or even more so than hardware and software interfaces. Offering a fresh look at the first decade of personal computing, Black highlights how the concept of usability has been leveraged historically to smooth over conflicts between the rhetoric of computing and its material experience. Readers interested in vintage computing, the history of technology, digital rhetoric, or American culture will be fascinated in this book.

More in History of Engineering & Technology

Apple : The First 50 Years - David Pogue

RRP $80.00

$58.99

26%
OFF
The Fabric of Civilization : How Textiles Made the World - Virginia Postrel
How a Game Lives - Jacob Geller

RRP $49.99

$37.75

24%
OFF
Breakneck : China's Quest to Engineer the Future - Dan Wang

RRP $55.00

$42.75

22%
OFF
A Handheld History : A Celebration of Portable Gaming - Lost in Cult
Leonardo da Vinci - Walter Isaacson

RRP $49.99

$38.75

22%
OFF
Melbourne Airport Tullamarine : A history - Arun Chandu

RRP $49.99

$40.75

18%
OFF
The Train Book : The Definitive Visual History - DK

RRP $65.00

$48.99

25%
OFF
Joysticks to Haptics : A Visual History of Video Game Controllers - Lost in Cult
The Bomber Mafia : A Story Set in War - Malcolm Gladwell

RRP $26.99

$22.99

15%
OFF
The Pattern Seekers : A New Theory of Human Invention - Simon Baron-Cohen
Bauhaus : Updated Edition - Magdalena Droste

RRP $49.99

$38.75

22%
OFF
The Technology Book : Big Ideas Simply Explained - DK

RRP $45.00

$35.75

21%
OFF
Superbloom : How Technologies of Connection Tear Us Apart - Nicholas Carr
Man-Made : How the bias of the past is being built into the future - Tracey Spicer
Burn Book : A tech love story - Kara Swisher

RRP $34.99

$28.75

18%
OFF
Ford Mustang 60 Years : 60 Years - Donald Farr

RRP $95.00

$67.99

28%
OFF