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Tubes: Behind the Scenes at the Internet Paperback – 7 Jun 2012

3.6 out of 5 stars 78 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Paperback: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Viking (7 Jun. 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0670918989
  • ISBN-13: 978-0670918980
  • Product Dimensions: 15.3 x 2.2 x 21.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (78 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 514,447 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

The year's most original and stimulating 'travel' book ... utterly engrossing ... really does make the world more legible ... even the most geek-wary of readers will enjoy (Independent, Book of the Week )

Excels at rooting the internet in real-world locations ... Full of memorable images that make the internet's complex architecture easier to comprehend ... entertaining and illuminating (Guardian )

All too awesome to behold. Andrew Blum's fascinating book demystifies the earthly geography of this most ethereal terra incognita (Joshua Foer, Author Of Moonwalking With Einstein )

Compelling and profound. You will never open an e-mail in quite the same way again (Tom Vanderbilt, Author Of The New York Times Bestseller Traffic )

An engaging reminder that, cyber-Utopianism aside, the internet is as much a thing of flesh and steel as any industrial-age lumber mill or factory ... It is also an excellent introduction to the nuts and bolts of how exactly it all works (Economist )

Makes hard-to-grasp concepts easy to understand, even obvious. The history, in particular, is one of the best and most memorable I have ever read (New Scientist )

A Quixotic and winning book ... with a knack for bundling packets of data into memorable observations ... This valuable book leaves you with its share of unsettling visions, but there are comic ones too (The New York Times )

A great, playful, wondrous read (ArsTechnica )

One of our best writers ... a compelling story of an altogether new realm where the virtual world meets the physical (Paul Goldberger, Pulitzer Prize-Winning New Yorker Critic )

In this thrilling adventure book, Blum takes us inside the infrastructure (Jonah Lehrer )

For a full understanding of the Internet on every level, this book is a must-read (Techzone )

At once funny, prosaic, sinister and wise, Blum's tale is a beautifully written account of the true human cost of all our remote connectivity (Bella Bathurst, Author Of The Lighthouse Stevensons )

With infectious wonder, Andrew Blum introduces us to the Internet's geeky wizards and takes us on an amiably guided tour of the world they've created ... the Internet that Blum's beautifully lucid prose makes real turns out to be if anything a more marvelous place than the cloudy dreamland we'd imagined (Donovan Hohn, Author Of Moby Duck )

From the Back Cover

Design Observer Best Book of the Year

Tubes looks behind the scenes of our digital lives at the physical heart of the Internet itself. This is a book about real places on the map: their sounds and smells, their storied pasts, their physical details, and the people who live there. Sharing tales of his on-the-ground reporting, along with lucid explanations about how the Internet works, Blum's eye-opening travelogue offers a unique perspective on the role of technology in our lives.

--This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

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Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

By G. Wylie TOP 1000 REVIEWERVINE VOICE on 22 May 2012
Format: Paperback Vine Customer Review of Free Product ( What's this? )
I have been using the internet now for the past decade. Rarely a day passes without my spending time on it. I bank on it, shop on it, research on it, download all sorts of stuff from it, watch films on it, catch TV shows on it, etc., etc. And an increasing number of people each year make use of it for an increasing number of personal reasons yet, if they are anything like myself, they do not have a clue as to how it really works.

After managing to get to grips with the basics of using it, I did try to learn something of its nature. Apart from finding out that it seemed to have been created for the purpose of providing some for of basic communication in the event of a nuclear war, I found most of the information available a bit beyond me. Blum's book has been a godsend! Using straighforward language, it has proved most helpful in broadening my understanding of the mechanics of the World Wide Web. It has helped explain how I can, almost seamlessly, shop on-line in the Far East, the USA, Australia, Canada and most parts of Europe and have my shopping delivered sometimes faster than I can be achieved in the UK.

If, like me, you would like to dip a little bit deeper into the fascinating mysteries of the internet I would highly recommend 'Tubes'.
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Format: Paperback Vine Customer Review of Free Product ( What's this? )
Where, physically, is the internet? What does it look like? These are the questions that sent Andrew Blum on his quest. Fans of the 'IT Crowd' know the answer already - it's a small shoebox sized metal case with a blinking light on top - but for most others, the question remains intriguing.

We are so used to the idea of the internet being 'virtual', without geographical or physical location it comes as some surprise when we find internet exchanges, chosen for their proximty to where the traffic is busiest, data centres positioned where the air is cool and power cheap and undersea cables that have to be literally fused together by hand, fibre by fibre. We find that the data in the cloud rather than being everywhere and nowhere, is very definitely somewhere - Blum has been there and seen it for himself.

Blum is a fine writer and he does his best by concentrating on characters he meets to bring his story alive. Which is fortunate as, in the end, what he finds are large anonymous buildings full of routers and hard drives. While it is interesting to discover that in Oregon Google's data centre is as inpenetrable as Facebook's is open but we also know that if he did gain access to Google's secret centre it would not really look that different. And this is the downside of the book; however hard Blum tries when he actually finds the physical pieces of the internet they are all rather dull. We also are given little insight into the financial structure of the internet - who is it who actually pays for those vastly expensive transatlantic cables and the whole massive infrastructure of the internet itself?

All in all, a fascinating quest with rather disappointing results - a little like taking your Mac apart and finding beneath that seamless shiny exterior it's a mass of cables, generic computer parts and bits of sticky tape. What else did you expect?
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Format: Hardcover
I was strolling through my local independent bookstore when I came across this title. I actually had to read the sub-title ("A Journey To The Center Of The Internet") because, at first I said to myself, "Tubes...who would write a book about Tubes"? Then the proverbial light came on. I was actually looking for a book with a different take on the Internet, a legal one in my case. So, I bought it and settled in at home with a hopeful mindset. I wasn't disappointed.

The book takes you on a brief history of the beginnings on the "physical" Internet, all the while weaving in a number of interesting anecdotes. From Al Gore and the "Information Superhighway" right through the "Cloud", this book separates the "real" Internet from the "pretenders". The author, Andrew Blum, writes about Architecture, infrastructure and technology for many publications, including the New Yorker, The New York Times, Slate and Popular Science. He is also a correspondent for Wired and a contributing editor to Metropolis. As an avid reader of Wired, if you enjoy the magazine, you'll enjoy this book. Without giving away too much, I was immediately amused by something the author and I had in common. SQUIRRELS had chewed through our 'cable' connections to the Internet. In my case it merely initiated a repair call to Comcast. In Mr. Blum's case, it was thought-provoking enough that it prompted him to write a book!

Tubes is a quick read and an interesting blend of technology with a sprinkling of travelogue. You'll go on a brief tour around the globe to many of the Internet's largest data centers, a view not generally accessible to mere mortals. All-in-all it is well worth the time. I guarantee you'll never look at the Internet the same way again.
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Format: Paperback
Oh, what a tangled worldwide web Blum weaves. And he's not even practising to deceive. He's merely spinning out the story of all the travelling and interviewing he did for this book. Unfortunately, information on what he actually found out from the network engineers at the Internet exchanges he visited is thin on the ground (and underground and undersea and in the ceiling).

Here is a book about the physical connections and the geography of the Internet with no diagrams, no maps, and no photos. Anyone who is going to try to make this subject comprehensible using only words had better use very concrete language. But Blum often uses abstract language. The net result is that I couldn't visualise what he was talking about and got bored. There are occasional nuggets of information, but I had to resort to skimming whole sections and only slowing down when my nugget detector was set off. However, if you want to know what colour shirts the network engineers wear and what they have for lunch, this is the place to come.
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