Thomas Scoville

Thomas Scoville (b. 1960 (age 5960) Newport Beach, CA). American humorist, programmer, technologist and author who chronicled the rise and fall of Silicon Valley during the dot-com bubble.

Two works render a Silicon Valley insider's perspective based on two decades as a software engineer: The satirical Silicon Valley Tarot published in 1998 and Silicon Follies, an online serial novel running on Salon.com in 1999, eventually finding its way to hardcover publication by Pocket Books and a television pilot by Ron Howard's Imagine Television. Scoville also wrote technology essays including Howl.com (with apologies to Allen Ginsberg), The Elements Of Style: Unix As Literature, and Martin Luther, Meet Linus Torvalds as well as perspectives on open-source software for O'Reilly Media.

Two minor works demonstrate playful collisions of popular culture and occult spirituality: The Metrosexual Tarot, published in 2003, burlesqued urban male narcissism and consumer culture, while The Comic Bardo Thodol, published in 2008, recast the Tibetan Book Of The Dead in comic book form using imagery from mass-market entertainment.

Bibliography

  • The Silicon Valley Tarot (1999)
  • Silicon Follies (2001)
  • The Metrosexual Tarot (2003)
  • The Comic Bardo Thodol (2008)
gollark: There are a ton of weird quirks in HTTP which lead to vulnerabilities from proxies and backend things parsing them differently.
gollark: For example, imagine an HTML sanitization library for blogs or something which parses HTML differently to browsers.
gollark: *And* sometimes things interpret invalid things in different ways, which causes security issues.
gollark: And that means your thing has to keep including flaky backward compatibility hax to keep broken stuff working.
gollark: If you make bad behavior *work*, people will keep using it.
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