Excerpted from the Hardcovoer EditionKiller AppSam Elling was filling out his online dating profile  and trying to decide whether to laugh or cry. On the one hand, he had  just described himself as “quick to laugh” and had answered the  question, “How macho do you consider yourself?” eight on a scale of ten.  But on the other hand, the whole thing was really quite frustrating,  and no one, he knew, ever admitted to anything less than an eight on the  masculinity scale anyway. Sam was trying to come up with five things he  couldn’t live without. He knew that many would-be daters cheekily  wrote: air, food, water, shelter, plus something else vaguely amusing.  (He was thinking Swiss cheese would be a clever addition to that list,  or possibly vitamin D, though since he was in Seattle, he seemed, in  fact, to be living quite nicely without it.) He could go the techie  route—laptop, other laptop, tablet, wifi connection, iPhone—but they’d  think he was a computer geek. Never mind that he was; he didn’t want  them to know that right away. He could go the sentimental route—framed  photo from parents’ wedding, grandfather’s lucky penny, program from his  star turn in his middle school production of Grease, acceptance letter  to MIT, first mix tape ever made for him by a girl—but he suspected that  would belie his reported macho factor. He could go the lactose route:  Swiss cheese again (he was clearly craving Swiss cheese for no apparent  reason) plus chocolate ice cream, cream cheese, Pagliacci’s pizza, and  double tall lattes. It wasn’t really true though. He could live without  those; he just wouldn’t like it very much.
The point was this  exercise was five things: annoying, prying, cloying, embarrassing, and  totally pointless. He didn’t have any hobbies because he worked all the  time which was the reason he couldn’t find a date. If he didn’t work all  the time (or weren’t a software engineer and so also worked with some  women), he would have time for hobbies he could list, but then he  wouldn’t need to because he wouldn’t need online dating in order to meet  people. Yes, he was a computer geek, but he was also, he thought, smart  and funny and reasonably good-looking. He just didn’t have five hobbies  or five witty things he couldn’t live without or five interesting  things on his bedside table (truthful answer would have been: half-full  water glass, quarter-full water glass, empty water glass, crumpled used  Kleenex, crumpled used Kleenex) or five revealing hopes for the future  (never to have to do this again, repeat times five). Nor did he care  about anyone else’s reported hobbies or five requirements for life,  bedside tables, or futures. He had already answered variations of these  inane questions with another service, dated their dates, and saw what  all of this nonsense came to. It came to nonsense. If you picked the  ones who seemed pretty down-to-earth (books, writing implement, reading  lamp, clock radio, cell phone), you got boring. If you picked the ones  who seemed eccentric (yellow rain hat, Polaroid camera, lime seltzer,  photo of Gertrude Stein, plastic model of Chairman Mao), you got really  weird and full of themselves. If you picked the one who seemed like a  good fit (“Laptop and honestly nothing else because that has all I  need”), you got a computer geek so much like your college roommate that  you wondered if he’d had an unconvincing sex change operation without  telling you. So you had your pick of boring, weird, or Trevor Anderson.
Five things Sam couldn’t live without: sarcasm, mockery, scorn, derision, cynicism.
That  was not the whole picture, of course. If it were, he wouldn’t be online  dating. He would be holed up in a basement apartment somewhere  contentedly crotchety on his own (Xbox, Wii, PlayStation, fifty-two-inch  plasma flat-screen, microwave nachos). Instead, he was putting himself  out there again. Did this not indicate optimism re: love? (hope, good  cheer, warmth, generosity, the promise of someone to kiss good night).  Maybe, but it was way too cheesy to write on the stupid form.
The  problem with the stupid form was this: it wasn’t just that people  didn’t tell the truth—though they didn’t. It was that there was no way  to tell the truth, even if you wanted to. Things on a bedside table do  not reveal a soul. Hopes for the future cannot be distilled for forms or  strangers. Fill-in-the-blank questions are fun but not really  indicative of the long-term future of a relationship. (They aren’t  really that fun either.) Even the stuff with straightforward answers  fails to reveal what you need to know. For instance, Sam wanted to date a  woman who could and would cook and enjoy it, but it couldn’t be because  she was some kind of domestic goddess who required a clean house all  the time (Sam was not neat), and it couldn’t be because she believed a  woman’s place was in the home and she should cater to her man (Sam was a  feminist), and it couldn’t be because she was one of those people who  ate only organic, sustainable, locally grown, chemical-free,  ecologically responsible, whole, raw, vegan food (see above re: Sam’s  love of dairy). It had to be because Sam didn’t cook and she did and  they both needed to eat, and he would take on some other household chore  like dish washing or clothes folding or bathroom scrubbing in exchange.  There was no place for all that on the form or even a place to indicate  that he was the kind of man who considered such bizarre minutiae  relevant.
And yet, a man has needs. And not the ones you think.  Well, those too, but they weren’t foremost on Sam’s mind. Foremost on  Sam’s mind was it would be nice to have someone to go out to dinner with  on Friday nights and to wake up with on Saturday mornings and to go  with him to museums and movies and plays and parties and restaurants and  ball games and on long weekends away, day hikes, ski trips, parental  visits, wine tastings, and work functions. It was this last which was  especially pressing for Sam, who worked at the online dating company  whose form was causing him so much grief. It employed many swank and  high-powered people—most of them male—who brought many swank and  high-powered people—most of them female—to their many swank and  high-powered black-tie galas. Sam did not own a tie of any color until  he got this job, was himself neither swank nor high-powered, and felt  strongly that a job as a software engineer in a three-walled cubicle  surrounded by other software engineers with their obscure math T-shirts  and Star Trek action figures and seven-sided Rubik’s cubes should have  absolved him from these sorts of work pressures. But the lawyers and VPs  and CFOs and VIPs and investors wrecked the curve, and besides, it was  an online dating company—showing up to these functions solo was a bad  career move. Sam spent these evenings in his too-stiff tuxedo making  awkward private jokes with his awkward single software engineering  compatriots, sipping free vodka tonics and worrying that he’d never find  true love.
In high school in Baltimore, when Holly Palentine saw  through his geeky exterior to the cool heart that beat beneath and  agreed first to dance with him at homecoming and then to let him take  her to dinner and a movie and then to hang out in his basement most  afternoons after school making out, Sam had assumed he would marry his  high school sweetheart. He remembered dancing close with her at the  spring formal and imagining what they’d look like on their wedding day.  Then she sent him a letter from the Girl Scout camp where she was a  counselor asking if they could still be friends. Still? Sam hadn’t  realized this had ever been in question. In college at MIT, he had tried  late-night hookups in the dorm and girls who flirted with him at  parties and falling madly in love with the barista at Shot Through the  Heart (though he had not tried talking to her) and a year-and-a-half  real, adult relationship with Della Bassette, who then graduated and  left for three years of volunteer corps in Zimbabwe, and another year  and a half of true rock-solid start-thinking-about-engagement-rings love  with Jenny O’Dowd, who really did love him and want to be with him  forever except she accidentally also hooked up with his roommate the  semester before graduation. Twice. Then Sam tried being alone, being  alone far less likely to result in the crushing of his soul and  atom-splitting of his heart. He tried not caring and not risking and not  looking, hanging out with guy friends, solo vacations, self-growth, and  canceling cable. None of that worked either. Not being in love did mean  he was less likely to get hurt. But he honestly didn’t see the point.
He  didn’t see the point not because he was one of those people who always,  always had to be paired up, and not because he didn’t think of himself  as whole without a partner, and not because otherwise it was too hard to  have sex, but because when he wasn’t spending time with people he  loved, Sam found he was spending a lot of time with people he didn’t.  His work colleagues were fine at work, but they didn’t have much to talk  about when they went out afterward. Happy hour with friends he’d lost  touch with since college reminded him why he’d lost touch with them.  Small talk at parties held by friends of friends meant a lot of  pretending to think interesting a lot of things he didn’t think were  interesting.
When he left the East Coast for Seattle, Sam tried  internet dating and couldn’t believe he’d been alive for thirty-two and a  half years and never thought to before. Sam believed in computers and  programming, in codable information, in algorithms and numbers and  logic. His father was also a software engineer as well as a computer  science professor at Johns Hopkins University, so Sam was raised to  believe: computers were his religion. Everyone else pitched online  dating as the only option after not meeting anyone in the vast ocean of  college. But Sam liked online dating because it took away the mystery.  Maybe you met someone and liked her and she liked you and you hit it off  and you started dating and that went pretty well and you got closer and  closer, shared more and more, starting building lives around each  other, fell deeply in love, and still she slept with your roommate when  you went home for the weekend. Computers would never allow for such  outlying variance.
Online dating had yet to work for Sam. But it  did pay well. And that came in a close second as it turned out. One  too-pretty-to-go-to-work morning in June, Sam’s whole team got a  sheepish text from their boss. “Fair warning,” Jamie wrote. “BB’s agenda  for OOF today: Quantify the Human Heart.” Jamie referred to the  company’s enormously important CEO, his boss’s boss, as BB. Sam loved  him for this. BB had recently decreed that each team would begin every  morning with a stand-up meeting, the idea being that the company wasn’t  wasting its brilliant programmers’ time with a real meeting but only a  brief encounter in the hallway. Generally, this meant it was the length  of an actual meeting but without the comfort of chairs and a Danish.  Jamie therefore called it OOF, theoretically for On Our Feet, though  actually for how those feet felt at the end of the meeting. Sam loved  Jamie for this too. Also because he wasn’t a superstickler for  punctuality, which gave Sam time to run back inside his apartment and  change into more comfortable shoes.
“So here’s the story,” Jamie  began when Sam got there. “BB thinks we need a better bottom line. Some  online matchmaking sites promise ‘most fun dates.’ Some boast ‘highest  percentage of marriages.’ BB wants to up the ante. Too many dates end in  failure. Too many marriages end in divorce. What’s better than dating  and better than marriage?”
“Friends with benefits?” guessed Nigel from Australia.
“Soul  mates,” said Jamie. “BB wants an algorithm that will find your soul  mate. Therefore I turn to you. Love is a tricky thing. All that human  variable. The soul is not logical. The heart wants what the heart wants.  Hard to nail down. Hard to quantify and program. But we are computer  programmers, and this is our job. So we must. Tell me how.”
“Increase  the odds of getting laid,” said Nigel. “Looser dates lead to more and  earlier hooking up. The farther you go on a first date, the more  information you have about sexual compatibility.”
“Won’t work,” objected Rajiv from New Delhi. “Dating sucks.” On this, the software engineers, save Nigel, were in agreement.
“It’s not fun,” said Gaurav from Mumbai.
“It’s very awkward,” said Arnab from Assam.
“And  it’s all lies,” said Jayaraj from Chennai. Five Indian states Sam had  become an expert on since beginning work as a software engineer: Delhi,  Assam, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal. “You are so much worse on a  date than you are in real life,” Jayaraj continued. “You can’t string  two sentences together without sounding like some kind of idiot. You  stammer and bring up awkward topics and embarrass yourself a lot. You’re  not really like that in real life.”
“Or you present yourself as  better than you really are,” Sam added, “which is also a lie. You get  all dressed up and do your hair and put on makeup when really you’re  going to walk around the house in yoga clothes and a scrunchie all day.”
“Makeup?” Jamie raised an eyebrow at him.
“Scrunchie?” wondered Jayaraj.
“We  need a third party,” offered Arnab, “like the Hindu astrologers who  know everyone in the village for generations and thus make marriages at  birth that last until death.”
“Many cultures have matchmakers.  Japanese nakodos. Jewish shadchens.” Gaurav had been an anthropology  major at UC Santa Cruz. “There are aeons of precedent. They realize a  truth.”
“Which is?” asked Jamie.
“Who people think they  are and what people think they want is not really who they are or what  they want,” said Gaurav sagely. “Wise and sometimes magical elders set  you up based on who you really are and who would be good for you  instead.”
“I have no magical elders,” said Jamie.
“No, you  have something better,” said Sam. “Computer programmers. We could dig a  little deeper into the data users provide. See what it says about them  rather than what they say about themselves.”
Everyone’s feet were  getting tired, so digging deeper seemed worth a shot. “Accusing our  customers of lying,” Jamie said. “I’m sure BB will love it.”
Sam  stopped for coffee on the way back to his desk. (Five places within  seven hundred feet of Sam’s desk to get a world-class double tall latte:  the espresso stand on the second floor, the espresso stand on the  fourteenth floor, the cafeteria, the coffee shop in the lobby of the  Fifth Avenue entrance, the coffee shop in the lobby of the Fourth Avenue  entrance. Sam loved Seattle.) Then he sat down and considered where, if  not on online dating forms, people revealed the truth about themselves.  He messaged Jamie: “Can I have access to clients’ financial records?”
Jamie wrote back right away. “Accusing our customers of lying and invading their privacy. BB’s going to love that too.”
First  surefire proof Sam had that users were lying about themselves: everyone  everywhere was always having a fit over internet privacy concerns, but  promise to find them love or at least sex, and they signed access to  their financial records, credit card statements, e-mail accounts, and  everything else over to Sam just because he asked nicely. There he saw  them not as they represented themselves but as they really were. He saw  that they said their five favorite foods were organic blueberries,  wheatgrass smoothies, red quinoa, tempeh Reubens, and beluga caviar, but  they spent an average of $47.40 a month last year at the 7-Eleven. He  saw that the five things they listed on their nightstand were all  foreign film DVDs, but they saw Shrek Forever After in 3-D twice in  theaters and spent the week of the foreign film festival hanging out  with their old college roommates at a dude ranch in Wyoming. He noted  that they said they liked to write poetry and short stories and even  included a quote from Ulysses in their profile, but Sam analyzed their  e-mails and knew they were in the bottom twelve percent of adjective  users and had no idea how to use a semicolon. Everyone lied. It wasn’t  malicious or even on purpose usually. They weren’t so much  misrepresenting themselves as just plain wrong. How they saw themselves  and how they really were turned out to be pretty far apart.
Sam  was a romantic, yes, but he was also a software engineer, and since he  was better at the latter, he played to his strengths. For two weeks  straight, he worked obsessively on an algorithm that figured out who you  really were. It ignored the form you filled out yourself in favor of  reading your spending reports and bank statements and e-mails. It read  your chat histories and text messages, your posts and status updates. It  read your blog and what you posted on other people’s blogs. It looked  at what you bought online, what you read online, what you studiously  avoided online. It ignored who you said you were and who you said you  wanted in favor of who you really were and who you really wanted. Sam  mixed the ancient traditions of the matchmakers plus the truths users  revealed but did not admit about themselves combined with the power of  modern data processors and made the algorithm that changed the dating  world. He cracked the code to your heart.
His teammates were  impressed. Jamie was pleased. But BB was thrilled with the algorithm,  especially once he saw the proof of concept demos and how incredibly,  unbelievably well it would work.
“We’ll get you down to just one date!” BB enthused. “That’s all it will take. Talk about killer apps!”								
									 Copyright © 2013 by Laurie Frankel. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.