“A vivid, precise, and challenging history of the inventors and technicians who taught computers a different way to write. The Chinese Computer deprovincializes the history of computing.”
Anthony Grafton, Princeton University
“Mullaney's fascinating and dexterously researched book illuminates the breadth of ingenuity it took to make Western computers compatible with Chinese characters. By asking what it means to write in the computer age, this important work opens new directions in computer history.”
Eden Medina, MIT Program in Science, Technology, and Society
“Mullaney rewrites the script of global computing history through this riveting account of Chinese input in the digital age. Cleverly conceived and exquisitely researched, The Chinese Computer is a triumph.”
Victor Seow, author of Carbon Technocracy
“Mullaney's gripping narrative, brimming with historical and technological insights, makes the bold claim that Chinese-language computing has already changed the very nature of writing itself.”
Zev Handel, author of Sinography
“This wonderful book chronicles events that would have otherwise been lost: how the computer enabled Chinese input to evolve into today's highly efficient forms.”
Ken Lunde, author of CJKV Information Processing
“The book unveils a captivating history of inventions for Chinese computer input, previously unknown to even experts in human-computer interaction, now revealed for the first time.”
Shumin Zhai, Principal Scientist and Director of Gboard, Google
“At a time when Chinese quantum computers and Chinese AI systems and Chinese electric vehicles absorb all headline buzz and pundit bloviation, Professor Thomas S. Mullaney's text draws our attention to a humbler and arguably more important technology: the Chinese input method editor (IME).... This is essential reading.”
ChinAI
“Mullaney's careful documenting of the typing machines of the last century.... reveals a story that's tumultuous and chaotic.... An endless unfurling of something always in the process of becoming a fuller version of itself.”
MIT Technology Review
"The Chinese Typewriter and The Chinese Computer are two of the best books I've read in a very long time. And they're not just good and interesting, but important to read, for the history they tell and the ideas and arguments they present—I can't recommend them and Professor Mullaney's other work enough."
The Gradient
"Mullaney has written an informative and enjoyable history.... Whoever thought that a book about 'hypographic semiotics' could be so absorbing? Geeks will enjoy the computing conundrums and Sinophiles will love the history; laymen, too, will learn plenty."
The Economist
"Mullaney's spirited narrative, half detective story, half history of technology, is a sequel to his equally fascinating book on the invention of the Chinese typewriter."
Foreign Affairs
"There's no shortage of books out there on China, but Thomas Mullaney's The Chinese Computer: A Global History of the Information Age really is something different.... A superbly-researched and original tale."
Engelsberg Ideas
"Thick with technical details, but Mullaney's judicious use of illustrations, charts and anecdotes makes this a thrill for anyone interested in the past—and future—of language and technology."
China Books Review