
Contents
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Two Guys in a Garage? Two Guys in a Garage?
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Microcomputers and Markets Microcomputers and Markets
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How to Make Markets Modern: Technology and the Rise of Neoliberalism How to Make Markets Modern: Technology and the Rise of Neoliberalism
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Technology in the Law and Economics Movement Technology in the Law and Economics Movement
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Information Society Theory Information Society Theory
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Synthesis: Digital Convergence and the Construction of Digital Information as Property Synthesis: Digital Convergence and the Construction of Digital Information as Property
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The Political Economic Meaning of the Microcomputer The Political Economic Meaning of the Microcomputer
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Microcomputers as Anticonsumer Products Microcomputers as Anticonsumer Products
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Use Value and Utopia Use Value and Utopia
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The Feeling of the Market: Lone Individuals Exercising Mastery over Objects The Feeling of the Market: Lone Individuals Exercising Mastery over Objects
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Beyond Utilitarianism: The Invention of the Hacker as Romantic Hero Beyond Utilitarianism: The Invention of the Hacker as Romantic Hero
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Conclusion Conclusion
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3 Missing the Net: The 1980s, Microcomputers, and the Rise of Neoliberalism
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Published:December 2010
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Abstract
This chapter focuses on the rise of the microcomputer in the 1980s. The microcomputer was envisioned as an icon of neoliberal marketplace enthusiasms, which helped justify the radical market-oriented policies of the Reagan era. The microcomputer revolution for the first time brought large numbers of Americans into direct contact with interactive computers, an experience framed by the historical accident of the stand-alone technical design of the machines and the entrepreneurial character of many of the businesses involved. Networking was ignored in part because the dominant culture was seeing things through free-market lenses and thus imagined that microcomputers were about isolated individuals buying and selling objects; this obscured the broader social relations like networking that both produced microcomputers and that could be enabled by them. The experience of first-generation microcomputers as distinct commodities thus helped articulate in the popular imagination a new sense of how a market vision reminiscent of the seventeenth-century philosophies of John Locke might be relevant to a modern, high-tech world.
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