Otis Chandler's Reviews > Cryptonomicon
Cryptonomicon
by Neal Stephenson
by Neal Stephenson
Just re-read this for the first time, and it's still one of my favorites. This book is geek-heaven: cryptography, world war II, code-breaking, nazi gold, and modern day internet beginnings all tied together in one masterful story.
It also was largely lost on me, and I suspect many of my generation, that the second world war was won - or at least greatly accelerated - in great part due to the fact that we had cracked the German and Japanese codes. Learning more about the efforts of Bletchley Park, and Dr Alan Turing and huffduff and cribs, etc was fascinating.
I think the funniest part of the book is the page where Stephenson actually graphs out how productive Waterhouse is when he has recently had sex (very productive) and when he hasn't (not very productive).
The code-breaking and cryptography is not stuff I know a ton about, as modern day programmers largely don't have to worry about that stuff, but it's a good reminder to think about, as we don't have it on our brains nearly enough. Avi & Randy's paranoia and tendency to encrypt everything from their hard drives to their emails may be overkill, on the other hand, it also may be wise. I remember getting email from people who used public/private keys to encrypt their email before, but not in the last 5 years. Maybe we should request that Gmail Labs add that!
If there was a theme to this book, it's that cryptography is everything. It defined the second world war, and it also defines the modern internet. Information is king - not large caches of gold.
It also was largely lost on me, and I suspect many of my generation, that the second world war was won - or at least greatly accelerated - in great part due to the fact that we had cracked the German and Japanese codes. Learning more about the efforts of Bletchley Park, and Dr Alan Turing and huffduff and cribs, etc was fascinating.
I think the funniest part of the book is the page where Stephenson actually graphs out how productive Waterhouse is when he has recently had sex (very productive) and when he hasn't (not very productive).
The code-breaking and cryptography is not stuff I know a ton about, as modern day programmers largely don't have to worry about that stuff, but it's a good reminder to think about, as we don't have it on our brains nearly enough. Avi & Randy's paranoia and tendency to encrypt everything from their hard drives to their emails may be overkill, on the other hand, it also may be wise. I remember getting email from people who used public/private keys to encrypt their email before, but not in the last 5 years. Maybe we should request that Gmail Labs add that!
If there was a theme to this book, it's that cryptography is everything. It defined the second world war, and it also defines the modern internet. Information is king - not large caches of gold.
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Reading Progress
| 12/15/2009 | page 450 |
|
38.53% | "Forgot how much I love listening to Waterhouse geeking out about cryptanalysis..." 1 comment |
| 12/22/2009 | page 550 |
|
47.09% | "The chart of how Waterhouse stays productive by manual releases, etc is hilarious." |
Comments (showing 1-6 of 6) (6 new)
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ranjit
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rated it 5 stars
Dec 08, 2009 09:40pm
Cryptonomicon was cool, but Stephenson's Baroque Cycle books left me in awe of how much the guy knows. He's just ridiculous.
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I certainly hope you mean that you decided to start re-reading it this weekend. I can't imagine reading any Stephenson novel in one weekend.
Oh I don't think the Baroque cycle is a particularly easy read. Not like Snow Crash (that still has to be the most fun of his books). But somewhere in his discourse on semantic machines and what life was like amongst the French aristocracy and how banking arose among the Dutch and how to make steel I was like holy crap I'm learning a lot from this.
I had a hard time getting into the Baroque Cycle as well, yet I've absolutely adored everything else Stephenson has written. For a while, Cryptonomicon was my favorite of his, but then I read Anathem, which is now my favorite book—by any author. If you're ever in Seattle, stop by the science fiction museum (adjoining the rock and roll museum) to take a gander at Stephenson's manuscript for the Baroque Cycle, along with the dozens of fountain pen ink cartridges he consumed writing it!

