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Toying around with science
Wired just published a profile I wrote of Bram Cohen, the incredibly smart creator of Bittorrent — the filesharing application that makes it possible to download entire TV shows and movies in a blink. Here’s the intro:
“That was a bad move,” Bram Cohen tells me. We’re huddled over a table in his Bellevue, Washington, house playing a board game called Amazons. Cohen picked it up two weeks ago and has already mastered it. The 29-year-old programmer consumes logic puzzles at the same rate most of us buy magazines. Behind his desk he keeps an enormous plastic bin filled with dozens of Rubik’s Cube-style twisting gewgaws that he periodically scrambles and solves throughout the day. Cohen says he loves Amazons, a cross between chess and the Japanese game Go, because it is pure strategy. Players take turns dropping more and more tokens on a grid, trying to box in their opponent. As I ponder my next move, Cohen studies the board, his jet-black hair hanging in front of his face, and tells me his philosophy of the perfect game.”The best strategy games are the ones where you put a piece down and it stays there for the whole game,” he explains. “You say, OK, I’m staking out this area. But you can’t always figure out if that’s going to work for you or against you. You just have to wait and see. You might be right, might be wrong.” It’s only later, when I look over these words in my notes, that I realize he could just as easily be talking about his life.
The rest of the story is online here! Though of course, you’re also going to rush out and buy a print copy of Wired, too, aren’t you? Heh.
By the way, can you spot the howling, forehead-slapping error in that first paragraph? The game Go is not Japanese; it’s Chinese. D’oh.
I'm Clive Thompson, the author of Smarter Than You Think: How Technology is Changing Our Minds for the Better (Penguin Press). You can order the book now at Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Powells, Indiebound, or through your local bookstore! I'm also a contributing writer for the New York Times Magazine and a columnist for Wired magazine. Email is here or ping me via the antiquated form of AOL IM (pomeranian99).
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