Nightwork: A History of Hacks and Pranks at MIT

Nightwork: A History of Hacks and Pranks at MIT

by TFPeterson (Author)

Synopsis

Before the term hacking became associated with computers, MIT undergraduates used it to describe any activity that took their minds off studying, suggested an unusual solution to a technical problem, or generally fostered nondestructive mischief. The MIT hacking culture has given us such treasures as police cars and cows on the Great Dome, a disappearing door to the President's office, and the commencement game of Al Gore Buzzword Bingo. Hacks can be technical, physical, virtual, or verbal. Often the underlying motivation is to conquer the inaccessible and make possible the improbable. Hacks can express dissatisfaction with local culture or with administrative decisions, but mostly they are remarkably good-spirited. They are also by definition ephemeral. Fortunately, the MIT Museum has amassed a unique collection of hack-related pictures, reports, and remnants. Nightwork collects the best materials from this collection, to entertain innocent bystanders and inspire new generations of practitioners.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 190
Edition: illustrated edition
Publisher: MIT Press
Published: 01 Apr 2003

ISBN 10: 0262661373
ISBN 13: 9780262661379

Media Reviews
A reminder that it is up to each generation to go where no man has gone before. Joanna Pawel New York Sun Nightwork...shows that students just want to have fun, especially engineering and technology students. Publishers Weekly
Author Bio
Institute Historian T. F. Peterson has spent many years lurking in the corridors of MIT picking up gossip and monitoring hacks in progress.