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Hardcover Computer: A History of the Information Machine Book

ISBN: 0465029892

ISBN13: 9780465029891

Computer: A History of the Information Machine

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

Computer: A History of the Information Machine traces the history of the computer and shows how business and government were the first to explore its unlimited, information-processing potential.... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Well-written and quite comprehensive

This book is a very well-written history of the essential phases of how computing and computers developed into what dominates today. It shows not only the "Museum" aspects of the inventions but gives also good deal of information about the settings of the situations in which the developments took place. One slight drawback might be some missing focal points to the European part of the history.

An Excellent Read

There are countless books covering the PC revolution from about the 1970's and onwards, but not very many that carefully cover the saga of the 1800's and onward! This book does an excellent job at capturing what happened in the realm of computing from Babbage's work all the way up to what began the downfall of the mainframe to the minis.

The Companies and Economics behind the PC

I recently finished this book and "Engines of the Mind : The Evolution of the Computer from Mainframes to Microprocessors" by Joel N. Shurkin. Both are attempts at writing a detailed history of the development of the computer and the events surrounding it, and I must admit that I found "Computer" much more entertaining than Shurkin's text.The difference between the two books is very slight, however, it is significant. "Computer" walks us through the work of Charles Babbage and carries us through the backrooms of large businesses at the turn of the 19th century. The authors discuss the work and lives of the people that were the first 'computers' working all day long to finish calculations that were used in business, and then for the calculation of artillery tables in the world wars. It was the replacement of these workers and their omissive errors and necessarily slow speed and development time that drove the development of the huge mainframes that would be developed by the military. The authors do a great job of walking through the history of the early computer companies, especially Hollerith's Tabulating Machine Co., now IBM, and National Cash Register. The role that these two companies played in increasing the public's reliance and trust in machines was a key enabler of the computer revolution. The authors then take us through to modern times and we follow the ultra-competitive computer industry through wave after wave of consolidation and rapid technological innovation. This book also shows us a slight glimpse of the business forces behind the development of the transistor, and how this invention would wind up changing the world. I could not have enjoyed this book more. Of the two, it definitely did the best job of focusing on the industry and economic changes that have led us to the modern computer age. The annecdotes and writing style of the authors is well-suited to the material and I very highly recommend this book. I also recommend the other book as well - I believe that if read together (with some time to digest in between them) they do a great job of painting the picture of a fascinating development of one of the most important technological changes in the history of man.

A "must read" in the history of computers

This is an important book: it is written at a (reasonably) accessible level for non-specialists, but emphasises the evolution of the ideas involved , rather than emphasising the personalities and the "gee whizz" as so many non-technical books do. Some gentle debunking in here too, and some refutations (or clarifications) of popular myths. And lots of material not covered in most histories of the computer.

the best single-volume history of the computer

Outstanding! Finally, someone has clarified and capsulized the vague beginnings of the most important invention of the 20th century. Presented in an incredibly easy-to-read style, the story is both informative and entertaining (it's the first book I've read nonstop in years). My highest adulations to the authors
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