Show Stopper!: The Breakneck Race to Create Windows NT and the Next Generation at Microsoft
by G. Pascal Zachary
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Showstopper is the dramatic, inside story of the creation of Windows NT, told by Wall Street Journal reporter G. Pascal Zachary. Driven by the legendary Bruce Cutler, a picked band of software engineers sacrifices almost everything in their lives to build a new, stable, operating system aimed at giving Microsoft a platform for growth through the next decade of development in the computing business.Comparable in many ways to the Pulitzer Prize-winning book The Soul of a New Machine by Tracy show more Kidder, Showstopper gets deep inside the process of software development, the lives and motivations of co show lessTags
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What does it take to make great software? A focus on quality boarding on obsession, brilliance, long hours, personal sacrifice, and a leaving of that intangible called leadership. Showstopper stands besides The Mythical Man Month and The Soul of a New Machine in it's depiction of programming and technology around the creation of The Last Great OS.
Lead Engineer David Cutler and his team had a ambitious job, to make the first 'platform-independent operating system', a piece of software which would revolutionize personal computing by adding reliability and backwards compatibility, and make Microsoft very very wealthy. Over 4 years, they transformed a vague idea into working software, at the cost of $150 million, many broken marriages, and show more constant abuse and bullying. The sense I got from this book is that Cutler was a maniac, but perhaps the only type of person who could make something like NT work. I can only hope that the massive stock options the team got compensated for the emotional trauma. The human side is paramount in this story, but able analogies explain the inner workings of the PC.
These days, post-Zune, Windows phone, and the resurgence of Apple it's easy to mock Microsoft as a has been-a dinosaur limping along on monopoly market power and tech lock-in. But it serves us to remember that they were agile and innovative once. Cutler's messianic vision may have been justified, because 20 years later his code is still at the heart of the versions of Windows that we use.
*Disclosure: Gregg Zachary is a friend and colleague. show less
Lead Engineer David Cutler and his team had a ambitious job, to make the first 'platform-independent operating system', a piece of software which would revolutionize personal computing by adding reliability and backwards compatibility, and make Microsoft very very wealthy. Over 4 years, they transformed a vague idea into working software, at the cost of $150 million, many broken marriages, and show more constant abuse and bullying. The sense I got from this book is that Cutler was a maniac, but perhaps the only type of person who could make something like NT work. I can only hope that the massive stock options the team got compensated for the emotional trauma. The human side is paramount in this story, but able analogies explain the inner workings of the PC.
These days, post-Zune, Windows phone, and the resurgence of Apple it's easy to mock Microsoft as a has been-a dinosaur limping along on monopoly market power and tech lock-in. But it serves us to remember that they were agile and innovative once. Cutler's messianic vision may have been justified, because 20 years later his code is still at the heart of the versions of Windows that we use.
*Disclosure: Gregg Zachary is a friend and colleague. show less
This cast of unpleasant, hypercompetitive, aggressive, unfeeling sociopaths working at BigCorp goes a long way to explaining why Windows NT (later XP) is the way it is.
The contrast with the idealistic soi disant "revolutionaries" at Apple (best told in Folklore) is huge.
The contrast with the idealistic soi disant "revolutionaries" at Apple (best told in Folklore) is huge.
As a folkloristic book, it does a poor job of telling the aspects of the story that would actually be interesting. It digresses into irrelevant biographies all over the place, which convey little more than rap sheet facts. It doesn't have a conception of what is interesting about technology. The writer is clearly very thin on the subject, presenting analogies about the functions of software in strangely distant and awkward terms. He thinks he's throwing in a little secret sauce by posting occasional snippets of source code or shell commands that don't mean anything to anyone, cargo cult style.
Written by a programmer intent to expose some of the key technical points about Windows NT, this could actually have been an interesting book from show more a historical perspective. In its present form it succeeds at stating little more than that the development of NT was an immense chaos and saw many clashes between individuals. It conveys some of the atmosphere in which the process took place. And despite the constant blustering about how monumental NT supposedly is for its time, it offers precious little technical information to explain this.
This edition of the book also suffers from very poor production, with various misprints and errors around the place as if no one had proofread it. show less
Written by a programmer intent to expose some of the key technical points about Windows NT, this could actually have been an interesting book from show more a historical perspective. In its present form it succeeds at stating little more than that the development of NT was an immense chaos and saw many clashes between individuals. It conveys some of the atmosphere in which the process took place. And despite the constant blustering about how monumental NT supposedly is for its time, it offers precious little technical information to explain this.
This edition of the book also suffers from very poor production, with various misprints and errors around the place as if no one had proofread it. show less
Excellent story on how a revolutionary operating system was developed and delivered. This tells all the hurdles and sacrifice that the team that developed Windows NT went through. David Cutler was the leader of the team that brought about the revolutionary changes that resulted from the innovation of NT. As a side note, the story includes a look back into the early 90's PC industry. It was fun to note that it was considered extraordinary that NT required 16 Megabytes of RAM. In today's terms this isn't very much but back in the 90's, with RAM prices high, it made the computer needed to run NT very expensive.
Overall, really enjoyed the walk through time and all the issues that were faced by a team of 250+ people. The way that the show more development was brought together and the bugs finalized. It is a really good story if you are interested in the history of the computer industry. show less
Overall, really enjoyed the walk through time and all the issues that were faced by a team of 250+ people. The way that the show more development was brought together and the bugs finalized. It is a really good story if you are interested in the history of the computer industry. show less
Zachary, G. Pascal. Showstopper!. Macmillan, 1994. I liked this because so many people I know through work are profiled in it---LouP, RobS, DaveC, etc. Is it good for the technology side of things? No bloody way.
The struggle to birth NT.
This book has all the classic refrains of software development: It's difficult, complex, drudgery.
Cutler (the chief designer) didn't seem like someone I'd like to work for.
This book has all the classic refrains of software development: It's difficult, complex, drudgery.
Cutler (the chief designer) didn't seem like someone I'd like to work for.
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8+ Works 472 Members
G. Pascal Zachary is a professor of practice at Arizona State University where he teaches on the history and future of innovation, technological change, and science in society. Endless Frontier won the Institute of Electronics and Electrical Engineers' first literary award. He is also the author of Showstopper, on the making of a software program, show more and The Diversity Advantage: Multicultural Identity in the New World Economy. show less
Common Knowledge
- People/Characters
- Bill Gates
- Blurbers
- Fallows, James; Stoll, Cliff; Levy, Steven; Peters, Tom
Classifications
- Genres
- Technology, Nonfiction, General Nonfiction, Business, History, Biography & Memoir
- DDC/MDS
- 005.4469 — Computer science, information & general works Computer science, knowledge & systems Artificial Intelligence/Virtual Reality Systems programming and programs Operating systems for specific types of computers for personal computers For specific user interfaces
- LCC
- QA76.76 .O63 .Z32 — Science Mathematics Mathematics Instruments and machines Calculating machines Electronic computers. Computer science Computer software
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- 282
- Popularity
- 114,230
- Reviews
- 6
- Rating
- (3.71)
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- English, German
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- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
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