Preface to the Third Edition
It's five years after the first publication of TNHD, and the Internet
seems to be taking over the world. The immense popularity of the World Wide
Web has created an exploding demand for Internet services and guides to the
Internet's peculiar culture, and Web or Internet-mail addresses now routinely
appear on TV and in major print media. The startling success of Linux has
made cheap UNIX systems accessible as never before, and the promise of
technologies like Java and VRML beckons hackers all over the world to feats of
inventiveness that will undoubtedly stand comparison to any in its
history.
Curiously, Linux and mass access to the Internet haven't given rise to
the huge efflorescence of entirely new jargon one might expect; instead, many
existing jargon terms have acquired new spins and become more widely known
outside of hackerdom proper. Perhaps this reflects the fact that, startling
though their impact on the general public is, the new technologies have so far
mostly changed relative costs and scales of activity rather than opening up
domains of possibility fundamentally new to the imaginations of hard-core
hackers.
Accordingly, this third edition of TNHD mainly deepens rather than
broadens the lexicon; there are about a hundred new entries, but many more
changes adding new meanings, background, and etymological history. One very
notable such addition is divided between the entries for
kluge and kludge and may settle
in a rather startling way the longstanding culture wars over the spelling of
these words.
The culture of hackerdom continues to be a fascinating scene to observe
and be part of. One of the most interesting things to watch is how it is
responding to the massive wave of popular interest in the Internet, and how
popular culture itself is beginning to be subtly reshaped by the technology of
the Internet and the culture of the hackers who maintain
it. In the age of the “information superhighway” TNHD is more relevant, and
more needed, than ever before. The next five years should be very
interesting.