by Higgenbotham » Wed Jul 15, 2026 11:15 pm
Back to the history of Stacking.
Unlike Stacking in all its ugly forms that proliferate today like multiple gig jobs, side hustles, growing children compromising their health by getting 5 hours of sleep a night, empty refrigerators in homes that can afford food but don't have time to buy it, etc., Stacking at first seemed to follow a somewhat logical trajectory.
In the 1970s, as described, it was a concerted effort to get women into the workforce. That was followed in the 1980s by a push to make workaholic men seem noble and heroic.
To my recollection, that was first portrayed in a book called The Soul of New Machine by Tracy Kidder. Rather than look up reviews or summaries, I'm going to go by memory, then look later to see how accurate this is. The book was about a rivalry in the computer industry along Route 128 in Boston between DEC and the upstart Data General. Both were trying to come to market first with the fastest mid sized computer. The book describes a Data General skunk works of kids right out of college being led by Tom West, age 40, portrayed as a tough veteran of the computer wars who barely sleeps. He motivates the kids to work day and night, night and day, and they successfully bring the world's most advanced mid sized computer to market. The book hails them as modern day high tech heroes and people to emulate. That is my recollection. As in, if you know what is good for you, you need to start Stacking right now.
I think that was partly driven by Boston and San Francisco being about the only high cost areas in the country versus virtually all of it being high cost today and, of course, it was also driven by high tech product cycles and Moore's law, which also affected those areas disproportionately. So in those areas, if you were a good student and you could pretend that you were a true believer in Stacking, a job could be yours. Of course, if you didn't adhere to the cult of Stacking, then the job was no longer yours. The opposite was pretty much the case in most of the rest of the country where the Stacking mentality hadn't taken hold yet. I got a job that way. It was an internship and the company was in San Francisco. When I met the manager of the design group (it was not a computer company) we had this sort of idiotic conversation where I came around to saying I was open to Stacking in a roundabout way. That part ended with me asking if they meet their deadlines that they set for the completion of projects (everyone knows that companies that have a Stacking mentality set very aggressive deadlines that have to be pushed back). His answer was, "You bet your bippy we do," and I nodded as if that was the best news I had heard all month. I got the job. While at the job, managers talked about how they never took their vacation and stuff like that. Because I wasn't really a true believer in Stacking, they didn't hire me back. But they did hire a guy back who had been there the year before who was a true believer in Stacking and he is someone high up in the company now. OK, I just read he is now retired after decades of "outstanding performance." Awesome.
Back to the history of Stacking.
Unlike Stacking in all its ugly forms that proliferate today like multiple gig jobs, side hustles, growing children compromising their health by getting 5 hours of sleep a night, empty refrigerators in homes that can afford food but don't have time to buy it, etc., Stacking at first seemed to follow a somewhat logical trajectory.
In the 1970s, as described, it was a concerted effort to get women into the workforce. That was followed in the 1980s by a push to make workaholic men seem noble and heroic.
To my recollection, that was first portrayed in a book called The Soul of New Machine by Tracy Kidder. Rather than look up reviews or summaries, I'm going to go by memory, then look later to see how accurate this is. The book was about a rivalry in the computer industry along Route 128 in Boston between DEC and the upstart Data General. Both were trying to come to market first with the fastest mid sized computer. The book describes a Data General skunk works of kids right out of college being led by Tom West, age 40, portrayed as a tough veteran of the computer wars who barely sleeps. He motivates the kids to work day and night, night and day, and they successfully bring the world's most advanced mid sized computer to market. The book hails them as modern day high tech heroes and people to emulate. That is my recollection. As in, if you know what is good for you, you need to start Stacking right now.
I think that was partly driven by Boston and San Francisco being about the only high cost areas in the country versus virtually all of it being high cost today and, of course, it was also driven by high tech product cycles and Moore's law, which also affected those areas disproportionately. So in those areas, if you were a good student and you could pretend that you were a true believer in Stacking, a job could be yours. Of course, if you didn't adhere to the cult of Stacking, then the job was no longer yours. The opposite was pretty much the case in most of the rest of the country where the Stacking mentality hadn't taken hold yet. I got a job that way. It was an internship and the company was in San Francisco. When I met the manager of the design group (it was not a computer company) we had this sort of idiotic conversation where I came around to saying I was open to Stacking in a roundabout way. That part ended with me asking if they meet their deadlines that they set for the completion of projects (everyone knows that companies that have a Stacking mentality set very aggressive deadlines that have to be pushed back). His answer was, "You bet your bippy we do," and I nodded as if that was the best news I had heard all month. I got the job. While at the job, managers talked about how they never took their vacation and stuff like that. Because I wasn't really a true believer in Stacking, they didn't hire me back. But they did hire a guy back who had been there the year before who was a true believer in Stacking and he is someone high up in the company now. OK, I just read he is now retired after decades of "outstanding performance." Awesome.