As far as this paper goes, the main idea is pluralism. Much software lore leans quite heavily on grand narratives about how things "should be done". The "postmodern" view is a reaction against that: in favour of multiple, coexisting, smaller stories. These do not have to be mutually consistent.
Of course there are lots of other overlaps between software and postmodernism in other culture, and that was the wider observation of the Noble & Biddle essay... true that it is a bit oblique. You might enjoy this a bit better: https://www.se-radio.net/2006/11/episode-38-interview-james-... -- it's now slightly dated, e.g. how "programming by Google / StackOverflow" was a much newer idea then than it is now.
Of course there are lots of other overlaps between software and postmodernism in other culture, and that was the wider observation of the Noble & Biddle essay... true that it is a bit oblique. You might enjoy this a bit better: https://www.se-radio.net/2006/11/episode-38-interview-james-... -- it's now slightly dated, e.g. how "programming by Google / StackOverflow" was a much newer idea then than it is now.