Computer: A History of the Information Machine (Sloan Technology Series) Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

Computer: A History of the Information Machine (Sloan Technology Series) Book

This history of the computer explores the roots of the industry's phenomenal development, tracing not only the development of the machine itself--beginning with Charles Babbage's well-known 1883 mechanical prototype--but also chronicling the effects of manufacturing and sales innovations by such companies as Remington and National Cash Register that made the boom possible. The authors recount the transition from slow mechanical computers to the vacuum-tubed electronic computers, ENIAC and EDVAC, pioneered by a team led by mathematician John von Neumann during World War II. Later innovations made the computer a mass-market item, and now, the authors suggest, freedom of access to the technology is constrained only by the imperative of computer companies to make money.Read More

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  • Product Description

    Most people trace the origins of the computer to three people: Alan Turing, the World War II cryptologist; John von Neumann, the father of scientific computing; and Steve Jobs, the popularizer of the personal computer. They're wrong. The true story is much more complex, and infinitely more interesting.

    It begins at a time when computers were people, when women numbering in the hundreds sat together in a crowded room performing simple tasks and functioning as a whole, as a giant information-processing machine. From this humble beginning, the digital electronic marvel of today began to take shape. Here is the story of such early pioneers as William Mauchley, who tried to build a machine that would enable racetracks to post up-to-the-last-minute odds, and the riveting tale of Jay Forrester, whose determination to build a flight simulator led to the development of the first successful real-time computer. Flowing like a page-turning thriller, with each unlikely piece of the computer's development falling into place, this fully documented, myth-breaking history finally sets the record straight and gives proper credit to the unsung heroes of the computer revolution.

  • 0465029906
  • 9780465029907
  • William Aspray, Martin Campbell-Kelly
  • 1 July 1997
  • Basic Books
  • Paperback (Book)
  • 368
  • Reprint
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