Showstopper!: The breakneck race to create Windows NT and the next generation at Microsoft - Couverture rigide

Zachary, G. Pascal

 
9798993755366: Showstopper!: The breakneck race to create Windows NT and the next generation at Microsoft

Synopsis

Republished by 8080 Books in 2026 with a new introduction by the author and a new foreword written by one of the characters in the story.

G. Pascal Zachary managed to get total access to the formerly unseen programming catacombs of Microsoft and has made the most of it with this riveting look inside one of the world’s most fascinating corporations. He traces the tumultuous creation of Windows NT, capturing not only the technical ambition but the human drama at its core. By illuminating the passions, conflicts, and relentless drive of Dave Cutler’s team, Zachary offers a rare window into a crucible where modern computing was forged.

Windows NT was one of the most important pieces of software ever written for the personal computer.  When Microsoft introduced Windows NT in 1993, historians took little note of it-- we thought it was just another incremental product. Now, decades later, we realize that Windows NT, along with the Intel Pentium processor introduced at the same time, transformed the place of the personal computer in the computing world. G. Pascal Zachary takes us inside Microsoft to observe the drama and creativity that brought this piece of code to life. Zachary managed to get total access to the formerly unseen programming catacombs of Microsoft and has made the most of it with this riveting look inside this fascinating technology titans.

Like the software whose creation it chronicles, Zachary’s book is an exercise in persistence and detail. We learn every twist and turn in the lives of the people who sacrificed family and friends to create Windows NT. We sweat over every major bug that threatens to undo the program. More than anything else, we come to appreciate what a miracle software really is: a unique blend of artistry and drudgery, mathematical order and creative chaos.

Often compared favorably to the better-known digital creation story, Soul of the New Machine, Showstopper has its own fervent fans. One such admirer, the prize-winner economics writer David Warsh, insists, “I remain very enthusiastic about Showstopper, which is better than Soul of a New Machine. Zachary’s unique book richly deserves a new edition.”

Part of the uniqueness of Zachary’s software creation story: he had incredible access to the actors in this drama. He was able to interview all of the major players involved in NT development, including David Cutler, the project’s lead, and Bill Gates, the CEO of Microsoft at the time. It provides real insight into the market landscape at the time, the challenges that Windows NT faced, and what it was like for regular software developers and management to laboriously crank out NT over many sleepless nights throughout a period of roughly four years.

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À propos de l?auteur

G. Pascal Zachary is a journalist, historian and specialist in the structure and logic of technological change. Zachary covered Microsoft and Silicon Valley in the 1990s for The Wall Street Journal. He later wrote the “Ping” column on innovation for The New York Times. His essays and reportage on technology have appeared in Wired, Technology ReviewSpectrum magazineThe San Jose Mercury and many other publications. Zachary is also the author of Endless Frontier: Vannevar Bush, Engineer of the American Century (1997) and the editor of The Essential Writings of Vannevar Bush (2022). 

Zachary has taught technology journalism at Stanford University and the University of California at Berkeley. At Arizona State University, he taught courses on the history of nuclear weapons and the history of consciousness, from the Greeks to Google. His research on digital innovation in sub-Saharan Africa was supported by the Gates foundation and the National Science Foundation. For the PBS network, he co-wrote Code Rush, with director David Winton, about the rise and fall of Netscape.

Zachary lives in northern California with his wife, Constance Okon. He chronicled their early adventures together in his memoir, Married to Africa: a love story

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