From Publishers Weekly
Regis (Who Got Einstein's Office?) here explores the desert community of scientist-cum-entrepreneurs besotted with "intellectual excitement and chaos and seriousness and joy." Unlike Silicon Valley, Santa Fe's Info Mesa consists largely of academics channeling pure scientific ideas to business ends. Computer simulations and ever-increasing amounts of processing power help them tackle questions on an unprecedented scale. Take, for example, Stu Kauffman's BiosGroup, which used "fitness landscapes" to contemplate thousands of potential variations on an airline baggage-handling system in just a few days. The book's core is the immensely important transfer from "wet" (i.e. laboratory) chemistry to "virtual" (i.e. computerized) chemistry, which would yield enormous benefits to the pharmaceutical industry. Regis traces a few seemingly unrelated stories that eventually knit together, and seems to not be able to make up his mind on whether the book is primarily about the ideas or the personalities. But this is not a huge drawback, since his brisk account of important recent movements in science and business is highly entertaining and informative.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
A decade after Silicon Valley became known for its hard drives and mother boards, a different breed of innovators has turned the Santa Fe Plateau into a hotbed of creativity by using computer technology to harness new scientific theories. Science writer Regis tells the story of how these often eccentric innovators--partial to flying-saucer music and New Age mysticism--are developing complexity-theory programs to solve daunting scientific and business problems. One of Santa Fe's cutting-edge software groups has devised a program that in mere hours sifts through mountains of chemical data to identify potential medicines. Another is modeling fluid systems--from sewage in treatment plants to jet wings in turbulence--for perplexed engineers. In chronicling the remarkably diverse enterprises of Santa Fe's scientist-entrepreneurs, Regis unfolds two divergent themes: first, the astonishing success of daring theorists in reducing the entire natural world to computer information; second, the even more astonishing failure of any theory whatever in circumscribing these theorists' own maverick personalities.
Bryce ChristensenCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved