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A contributor to Wired magazine since its inception, Steven Levy joined the staff as a fulltime writer in 2008. He moved there from Newsweek, where he had been a senior editor and the chief technology correspondent, and he wrote a column called the Technologist.
Levy is a graduate of Temple University and Penn State. Having received his M.A. in literature at the latter, he was chosen to receive the English Department's first Distinguished Alumni Award.
Levy is also the author of several books, including Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution, which was voted the best sci-tech nonfiction book of the last twenty years by readers of PC Magazine; The Unicorn's Secret, about Ira Einhorn and his participation in and conviction for the murder of Holly Maddux; Artificial Life, which delves into the new science that creates the behaviors of biology in the computer and in robotic actions; and Insanely Great, the definitive account of the Macintosh computer. His book Crypto, about the revolution in cryptography, won the grand eBook prize at the 2001 Frankfurt Book Festival. Levy's latest book is The Perfect Thing, about the iPod and its effects on the worlds of business and culture, as well as on the human ear.
Levy's website address is: www.stevenlevy.com.
Twitter: stevenjayl
Last updated: October 15, 2009.




