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Tubes: A Journey to the Center of the Internet with a New Introduction by the Author Paperback – June 25, 2019

4.1 out of 5 stars 772 ratings

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An engaging, narrative tour behind the scenes of our everyday lives to see the dark beating heart of the Internet itself.

We are all connected now. But connected to what, exactly? In
Tubes, journalist Andrew Blum takes readers on a fascinating journey to find out.

When former Senator Ted Stevens of Alaska famously described the Internet as “a series of tubes,” he seemed hopelessly, foolishly trapped in an old way of knowing the world. But he wasn’t wrong. After all, as Blum writes, the Internet exists: for all the talk of the “placelessness” of our digital age, the Internet is as fixed in real, physical places as any railroad or telephone ever was. It fills enormous buildings, converges in some places and avoids others, and it flows through tubes under ground, up in the air, and under the oceans all over the world. You can map it, you can smell it, and you can even visit it―and that’s just what Blum does in Tubes.

From the room in Berkeley where the Internet flickered to life to the busiest streets in Manhattan as new fiber optic cable is laid down; from the coast of Portugal as a 10,000-mile undersea cable just two thumbs’ wide is laid down to connect Europe and West Africa to the wilds of the Pacific Northwest, where Google, Microsoft and Facebook have built monumental data centers―Blum visits them all to chronicle the dramatic story of the Internet’s development, explain how it all works, and capture the spirit of the place/

Like Tracy Kidder’s classic The Soul of a New Machine or Tom Vanderbilt’s recent bestseller Traffic, Tubes combines deep reporting and lucid explanation into an engaging quest to understand the everyday world we live in.

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Customer reviews

4.1 out of 5 stars
772 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book deeply insightful and easy to understand, making it a worthwhile read that provides a great appreciation for the physical internet. The writing style receives positive feedback for being written in non-technical language. While some customers describe it as an enjoyable journey with fascinating stories about people, others find it boring with too much information. The book's pace and content depth receive mixed reactions, with some finding it quick to read while others say it's slow, and some appreciating the physical descriptions while others find them lacking.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

75 customers mention "Information quality"75 positive0 negative

Customers find the information in the book deeply insightful and educational, with one customer describing it as an entertaining exploration of the Internet's underbelly.

"...Blum's ability to converge technology and wit, data and philosophy, and dare I say, humanity with the Internet, transcends information security or..." Read more

"...Blum shares lots of details, as many as he's been allowed to see...." Read more

"...This book provides a tour, accessible to all readers, of where the Internet comes together, and how counterintuitive its physical realisation is..." Read more

"I thought "Tubes" was a great book. It's loaded with tons of useful information about the physical layout of the Internet...." Read more

56 customers mention "Readability"56 positive0 negative

Customers find the book highly readable and fascinating, describing it as a must-read for anyone who uses the internet.

"...In this extraordinarily well-written exploration of the Internet's physical infrastructure he acknowledges that "one thing it most certainly is,..." Read more

"...A worthwhile read if you ever wondered about this stuff." Read more

"I thought "Tubes" was a great book. It's loaded with tons of useful information about the physical layout of the Internet...." Read more

"...If you don't know anything about the internet. This book is the best, most easy introduction to get...." Read more

49 customers mention "Writing style"41 positive8 negative

Customers appreciate the writing style of the book, finding it easy to understand and cleverly written, with one customer noting that the author takes a non-technical approach to explaining complex concepts.

"...Finally, although this book was written for the layman, a little knowledge of the Internet and its architecture would certainly be helpful in..." Read more

"...This book is the best, most easy introduction to get. That's good, because it's also one of the only introductions that's not a textbook...." Read more

"...The author is an experienced journalist, so his content rolls along smoothly ( with the faint New Yorker "air" still about it)...." Read more

"...Well written and accessible also to non-experts, If I had to summarize in one word the feeling I've got after reading it, It would be: reassuring...." Read more

9 customers mention "Internet connection"9 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's coverage of internet connectivity, with one customer noting how it makes the workings understandable, while another describes it as a real trip through cyberspace.

"...for granted that, as this book forces you to recognize, the Internet is a physical, living thing and does indeed flow through tubes...." Read more

"This book got me into computers and networking...." Read more

"...Broken into several overarching sections the book takes the reader through internet exchanges, transoceanic cables and data storage in an attempt to..." Read more

"Isn't it amazing how EVERYONE is using the Internet and not that many know how it really works...." Read more

32 customers mention "Content depth"16 positive16 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the content depth of the book, with some finding it too detailed while others note there is little information provided.

"...These also have a physical realisation in the form of huge data centres, sited based upon the availability of inexpensive electricity and cooling..." Read more

"...There's just way too much information. But I can say this, I loved "Tubes," and I have no reservation about giving it five stars." Read more

"...Instead, it captures the physicality behind the magic that delivers all those digital pieces to us through and examination of how the physical layer..." Read more

"...It mysteriously lacks photos or diagrams. Too much of the prose is focused on the author's musings and not the topic at hand...." Read more

22 customers mention "Enjoyment"14 positive8 negative

Customers have mixed feelings about the book's entertainment value, with some finding it an enjoyable journey and exciting, while others describe it as boring.

"...of the world's largest Internet presences I found Blum's book extremely refreshing and deeply insightful...." Read more

"...There were a few interesting observations. But not much thought or content about what all of this means and where we are going...." Read more

"...As it turns out, a lot, and Blum does so in an engaging and accessible way...." Read more

"...important technology of the 20th/21st century (i.e. the Internet) exciting and luminous, hoping that his readers will imagine themselves falling..." Read more

19 customers mention "Storytelling quality"11 positive8 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the storytelling quality of the book, with some appreciating the fascinating stories about people and good interviews, while others find it meandering and repetitive.

"...Blum is a gifted writer whose eloquent storytelling and turn of phrase bring many positive returns...." Read more

"...The author has a really great topic, but it is executed in a flawed fashion...." Read more

"...The stories are good, but not excessive like in Malcolm Gladwell's books...." Read more

"...of the journey promised by the title I was taken on a rambling trip to nowhere...." Read more

5 customers mention "Pace"3 positive2 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the pace of the book, with some saying it reads very quickly while others find it slow.

"...Very enjoyable to read, very approachable and a quick read, because it's hard to put down...." Read more

"very informative and interesting, but rather a slow read...." Read more

"...Although it is generally well written and reads at a good pace, I was slowed down a number of times by the technical references...." Read more

"I found this book to be very slow and borderline boring...." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on January 12, 2014
    While not immediately or obviously related to information security, I was so profoundly affected by my recent read of Andrew Blum's (@ajblum) Tubes, A Journey to the Center of the Internet, I believe it warrants a review for the Internet Storm Center readership. Remember an Internet ice age ago (2006) when Senator Ted Stevens described the Internet as "a series of tubes?" To this day it's a well recognized Internet meme, but Blum's Tubes goes a long way towards establishing discernible credibility for the good Senator's declaration. In this extraordinarily well-written exploration of the Internet's physical infrastructure he acknowledges that "one thing it most certainly is, nearly everywhere, is, in fact, a series of tubes."
    Even as an engineer and analyst who has spent many years helping defend one of the world's largest Internet presences I found Blum's book extremely refreshing and deeply insightful. I've been in some of the very datacenters and Internet exchanges he describes and yet sadly have taken for granted that, as this book forces you to recognize, the Internet is a physical, living thing and does indeed flow through tubes.
    Blum manages to convey a true sense of the physicality of the Internet while asking lucid questions regarding its core nodes and links. Of a router he ponders that which is invisible to the naked eye. "What was the physical path in there? And what might that tell me about how everything else is connected? What was the reductio ad absurdum of the tubes?" Heady stuff to be sure, but he continues a few pages later indicating that on his journey to the center of the Internet his bare common turned out to be the router lab, and that what he saw "was not the essence of the Internet but its quintessence-not the tubes, but the light." That light, that quintessence, is all about the fiber, the glass tendrils, that make up our incredibly connected world. What Blum's book requires of you to consider and always rememeber is how physical that connectivity really is.
    Blum's exploration of the Internet is an actual walk through major network exchanges (PAIX, LINX) and providers (Equinix), to the cable landing station near Land's End in the UK where endless fiber connections terminate before their transoceanic journey via cables to points world wide. He spends time in datacenters near and dear to my heart in the Columbia River Valley while encapsulating the work of visionary people whose work I've long admired, such as Michael Manos.
    Blum's digital safari even occasionally wanders into the darker corners of the Internet where much of my worry focuses.
    First, he expresses nervousness regarding the "concentrated" nature of the exchanges and datacenters that serve as the core hubs of our Internet and wonders if it's responsible to explore and describe their physicality at such length. Yet, he discovers and concludes that there is an openness derived from the Internet's legendary robustness. "Well designed networks have redundancies built in; in the event of a failure at a single point, traffic would quickly route around it." He points out that one of the more significant threats to the Internet "is an errant construction backhoe." I can't tell you how many times we've lost connections due to fiber cuts while unrelated construction was underway that directly intersected our physical paths, or an anchor dragged the ocean floor in just the right (wrong) spot.
    Second, Blum calls into question some of the "disingenuous" and "feigned obscurity" of the cloud "which asks us to believe that our data is an abstraction, not a physical reality." He voices his frustration further referring to that "feigned obscurity" as a malignant advantage of the cloud as it practically demands our ignorance with a "we'll take care of that for you" attitude. Blum points out that our data is always somewhere, often in two or more places, and that we should know where it is. He asserts that a basic tenet of today's Internet is that if "we're entrusting so much of who we are to large companies, they should entrust us with a sense of where they're keeping it all, and what it looks like."
    Weigh this premise against revelations brought to light via Snowden's disclosures and you've got some deeper thinking to do as to the true nature of your data and expectations of privacy.
    Tubes, A Journey to the Center of the Internet, is quite simply the best book I've read in a very long time. Blum's ability to converge technology and wit, data and philosophy, and dare I say, humanity with the Internet, transcends information security or network engineering. Blum is a gifted writer whose eloquent storytelling and turn of phrase bring many positive returns.
    Tubes reminds us that the "Internet is made up of pulses of light" and while those pulses might seem miraculous, they're not magic. Blum asks that we remember that the Internet exists, that it has a physical reality and an essential infrastructure. In his effort to "wash away the technogical alluvium of contemporary life in order to see - fresh in the sunlight - the physical essence of our digital world", Blum succeeds well beyond words that my simple review can convey.
    Treat yourself to Tubes and enjoy; you will experience the Internet in a wholly different light.
    8 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on August 8, 2012
    I teach 'IT Infrastructure & Security' and am always looking for more details to share with my students. 'Tubes' was a jackpot for me. Where some folks ridicule Sen. Stevens for his view of The Internet as a lot of 'tubes' that go everywhere, Blum sees that the elder gentleman is accurate in his description and tracks down the tubes wherever they go.

    Blum shares lots of details, as many as he's been allowed to see. Used with Google Earth we can get our eye on several of the internet exchanges and transoceanic cable facilities around the world.

    He's got interviews and observations of every way that the 'tubes' interconnect. He's visited the connection points of fiber-optic jumpers connecting routers in IXs (internet exchanges), fiber-optic cables connecting the IXs on the land, and fiber-optic cables under the oceans. He shares details of installation of each of these, interviewing and observing installers from under New York streets to coastal cable facilities and in between.

    He explains the business side of The Internet's tubes and gives a good history of its speedy evolution. Toward the end he compares and contrasts the data centers of Google & Facebook, explains why I've never been able to find pictures of a Google data center to show in class.

    I've outlined the book and added lots of links to supply some 'eye candy' in lectures. Now I have a much better presentation than before when introducing 'IT Infrastructure' to noobish students who need their consciousness raised about the physical connections of The Web and the social networking at which they're so adept.
    3 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on June 29, 2012
    I am apparently right up the alley of the target market, as I didn't find it boring or overly technical, but if anything too surface and narrowly-focused. I'd like to have seen some him tag along on more infrastructure work. How about a week on a cable laying ship? They are massive and weird compared to even other ships, so that would be fun. Or go all the way to the other end, and watch fiber being pushed through neighborhoods, as the world gets increasingly wired up with the last mile. Not just for NYC businesses, but somewhere there's grass. Or actually talk to not just important leaders in the industry, or past engineers, but some of those guys strung out on coffee in a cage, or installing the cable modem in your house. A more complete story could have been told with not too much extra effort.

    Oh, and just not a thing about wireless. In this day and age? More people have wireless connections, so a discussion of how they are linked in might have been nice. Maybe visit not just the local telecom, but a remote, diesel-powered cellsite in Africa, following the wire all the way.

    The other issue is that the author appears to truly not have a grasp of network technologies. Which is fine, if the publisher had found him a technical editor. A bit of it could have been better organized to tie the parts together, but there were specifics that felt odd, or were just in error. One example: He refers to the "typology" of a network at one point. Yes, even with the quotes, as it's apparently a made up word. because he got it wrong. It's "topology," a whole field of mathematics as well. And, only mentioned once, even though it's a key topic that would have fit neatly into the narrative (physical vs. information layout, and their close relationship).

    Still, if you are remotely connected to the internet, professionally especially, it's the best you can do or expect for a long time. A worthwhile read if you ever wondered about this stuff.
    6 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

Translate all reviews to English
  • M.D. Diaz Toledano
    3.0 out of 5 stars Tubos y cables
    Reviewed in Spain on September 29, 2015
    Interesante conocer la infraestructura hardware que soporta internet y a muchas de la personas que trabajan en este tema y hacen que funcione.
    A mitad del libro se me hizo algo repetitivo y largo.
    Por cierto, está traducido al español pero a un precio muy superior:
    http://www.amazon.es/Tubos-estropeado-descubr%C3%AD-interioridades-Internet-ebook/dp/B00EKQYA1K/ref=sr_1_2?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1443528847&sr=1-2
    Report
  • Laura
    5.0 out of 5 stars The Internet is "right here" not "out there": loved it!
    Reviewed in Canada on September 7, 2013
    Tubes is a terrific book about the "real" internet. It dispels the fantasy of the "cloud" and brings the internet down to earth. If you love geography, telecommunications, and history, this will be a great addition to your bookshelf (wherever it's stored)!

    Blum writes beautifully and this is as much fun to read as anything else you might choose. If you like Bill Bryson, you'll love this!
  • Enselo
    5.0 out of 5 stars L'internet se passe dans les tubes et non dans le nuage
    Reviewed in France on December 27, 2012
    Cet ouvrage est une enquête sur le fonctionnement de l'internet. Si le terme de Cloud fait les titres aujourd'hui, internet n'est en réalité pas dématérialisé. Il se construit sur un maillage de tubes au niveau mondial.
    Andrew Blum construit son enquête judicieusement et vulgarise au maximum.
    Il est dommage qu'aucune traduction française ne soit encore sortie.
  • Alexander
    5.0 out of 5 stars Sehr aufschlussreich
    Reviewed in Germany on August 19, 2014
    Wer das gelesen hat, sieht das Internet mit anderen Augen und versteht auch ein kleines bisschen mehr von Net Neutrality.
  • gargi saha
    1.0 out of 5 stars Inappropriate informations are given.
    Reviewed in India on April 18, 2017
    Internet security and usage of Internet is discussed here with inappropriate usage of words. Practically it was just about internet and its usage which is given in any standard beginner's guide to computer book.