Digitized
The science of computers and how it shapes our world
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9 928 Ft
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 12 September 2013
- ISBN 9780199678761
- Binding Paperback
- No. of pages308 pages
- Size 195x139x19 mm
- Weight 236 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 7 black and white images 0
Categories
Short description:
Everyone uses computers today. But what do you really know about them? Using the voices of pioneers and leading experts, Peter J. Bentley tells the story of computer science; explaining how and why computers were invented, how they work, looking at real-world examples of computers in use, and considering what will happen in the future.
MoreLong description:
There's a hidden science that affects every part of your life. You are fluent in its terminology of email, WiFi, social networking, and encryption. You use its results when you make a telephone call, access the Internet, use any factory-produced product, or travel in any modern car.
The discipline is so new that some prefer to call it a branch of engineering or mathematics. But it is so powerful and world-changing that you would be hard-pressed to find a single human being on the planet unaffected by its achievements. The science of computers enables the supply and creation of power, food, water, medicine, transport, money, communication, entertainment, and most goods in shops. It has transformed societies with the Internet, the digitization of information, mobile phone networks and GPS technologies.
Here, Peter J. Bentley explores how this young discipline grew from its theoretical conception by pioneers such as Turing, through its growth spurts in the Internet, its difficult adolescent stage where the promises of AI were never achieved and dot-com bubble burst, to its current stage as a (semi)mature field, now capable of remarkable achievements. Charting the successes and failures of computer science through the years, Bentley discusses what innovations may change our world in the future.
I have always thought that no book deserved 10 out of 10, but for this one I make an exception.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
Can you compute?
Disposable computing
Your life in binary digits
Monkeys with world-spanning voices
My computer made me cry
Building bionic brains
A computer saved my life