Special Report: Software Goes Extreme
Charles Simonyi and Mitch Kapor invented the software that helped kick-start the PC revolution. Now they’re at it again, investing their fortunes in ventures aimed at finally creating programs that do what you want them to and never crash. In a future envisioned by these iconoclasts and a growing body of companies, including IBM and Sun Microsystems, programs repair themselves, and the desktop metaphor is replaced by computer interfaces that put information at your fingertips depending on what job needs doing, not what application you’re running.
The days when it was feasible to build a bridge, trade a stock, or prepare a report without software are long gone. But that doesn’t mean we have to settle for today’s typical applications, which have an infuriating tendency to fail when we need them most. Indeed, it’s hard not to share Kapor’s view that the average software user “really gets screwed.” And once you’ve read what he and his fellow radicals plan to do about that, you may share their impatience. Welcome to the new software revolution.
Everyone’s A Programmer
Software is collapsing under the weight of its own complexity. Charles Simonyi’s simplicity solution: Let programmers design code and leave the details to computers.
Trash Your Desktop
Mitch Kapor’s new interface will put all the information we need to manage our digital lives at our fingertips.
Extreme Programming: The Zero G Experience
How a software company saved itself by overhauling its development process–and trusting its engineers’ instincts.
From Artificial Intelligence to Artificial Biology?
The ultimate goal for programming: software that heals itself.
Keep Reading
Most Popular
Geoffrey Hinton tells us why he’s now scared of the tech he helped build
“I have suddenly switched my views on whether these things are going to be more intelligent than us.”
ChatGPT is going to change education, not destroy it
The narrative around cheating students doesn’t tell the whole story. Meet the teachers who think generative AI could actually make learning better.
Meet the people who use Notion to plan their whole lives
The workplace tool’s appeal extends far beyond organizing work projects. Many users find it’s just as useful for managing their free time.
Learning to code isn’t enough
Historically, learn-to-code efforts have provided opportunities for the few, but new efforts are aiming to be inclusive.
Stay connected
Get the latest updates from
MIT Technology Review
Discover special offers, top stories, upcoming events, and more.