The Pattern On The Stone: The Simple Ideas That Make Computers Work
Autor W. Daniel Hillisen Limba Engleză Paperback – 10 feb 2015
Most
people
are
baffled
by
how
computers
work
and
assume
that
they
will
never
understand
them.
What
they
don't
realize—and
what
Daniel
Hillis's
short
book
brilliantly
demonstrates—is
that
computers'
seemingly
complex
operations
can
be
broken
down
into
a
few
simple
parts
that
perform
the
same
simple
procedures
over
and
over
again.
Computer
wizard
Hillis
offers
an
easy-to-follow
explanation
of
how
data
is
processed
that
makes
the
operations
of
a
computer
seem
as
straightforward
as
those
of
a
bicycle.Avoiding
technobabble
or
discussions
of
advanced
hardware,
the
lucid
explanations
and
colorful
anecdotes
inThe
Pattern
on
the
Stonego
straight
to
the
heart
of
what
computers
really
do.
Hillis
proceeds
from
an
outline
of
basic
logic
to
clear
descriptions
of
programming
languages,
algorithms,
and
memory.
He
then
takes
readers
in
simple
steps
up
to
the
most
exciting
developments
in
computing
today—quantum
computing,
parallel
computing,
neural
networks,
and
self-organizing
systems.Written
clearly
and
succinctly
by
one
of
the
world's
leading
computer
scientists,The
Pattern
on
the
Stoneis
an
indispensable
guide
to
understanding
the
workings
of
that
most
ubiquitous
and
important
of
machines:
the
computer.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780465066933
ISBN-10: 0465066933
Pagini: 192
Dimensiuni: 140 x 210 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.11 kg
Ediția:Revizuită
Editura: BASIC BOOKS
Colecția Basic Books
ISBN-10: 0465066933
Pagini: 192
Dimensiuni: 140 x 210 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.11 kg
Ediția:Revizuită
Editura: BASIC BOOKS
Colecția Basic Books
Notă biografică
As
an
MIT
graduate
student,W.
Daniel
Hillisdesigned
the
first
practical
massively
parallel
computer,
the
Connection
Machine,
and
in
1983
co-founded
the
world-famous
Thinking
Machines
Corporation
to
produce
and
market
this
device.
The
co-founder
of
the
Long
Now
Foundation,
Applied
Minds,
Applied
Invention,
and
other
technology
companies,
Hillis
lives
in
Los
Angeles,
California.
Recenzii
Peter
Thomas,New
Scientist
“This is the best book on computers I have ever read. Hillis takes us on a lightening tour of the fundamentals of computing.... Nowhere does [he] lose sight of the fact that what is important is not the detail of these issues, but the story that flows through them and rationality of thought that connects them.”
Dan Brekke,WIRED
“[Hillis'] conclusion is thoughtfully optimistic—and appealing even to a skeptic.”
Bill Brazell,The Industry Standard
“The Pattern on the Stoneillustrates basic computing concepts with line drawings of Tinkertoys in various positions—a surprisingly helpful approach.... The book's gradual pace, low-tech design and gentle title are meant to bring hope to those who feel swamped by a tidal wave of computer-wrought change. And the approach succeeds, by showing the reader how humans, not magicians, discovered a few basic principles and built these amazing machines.”
Publisher's Weekly
“Hillis…provides an almost philosophical approach to the machine that has changed our lives.... [He] writes with the authority of an expert and the rigor of a logician.... A helpful and succinct volume.”
“This is the best book on computers I have ever read. Hillis takes us on a lightening tour of the fundamentals of computing.... Nowhere does [he] lose sight of the fact that what is important is not the detail of these issues, but the story that flows through them and rationality of thought that connects them.”
Dan Brekke,WIRED
“[Hillis'] conclusion is thoughtfully optimistic—and appealing even to a skeptic.”
Bill Brazell,The Industry Standard
“The Pattern on the Stoneillustrates basic computing concepts with line drawings of Tinkertoys in various positions—a surprisingly helpful approach.... The book's gradual pace, low-tech design and gentle title are meant to bring hope to those who feel swamped by a tidal wave of computer-wrought change. And the approach succeeds, by showing the reader how humans, not magicians, discovered a few basic principles and built these amazing machines.”
Publisher's Weekly
“Hillis…provides an almost philosophical approach to the machine that has changed our lives.... [He] writes with the authority of an expert and the rigor of a logician.... A helpful and succinct volume.”