描述
开 本: 16开纸 张: 胶版纸包 装: 精装是否套装: 否国际标准书号ISBN: 9780385527132
From one of our most acclaimed novelists, a
David-and-Goliath biography for the digital age.
One night in the late 1930s, in a bar on the Illinois–Iowa
border, John Vincent Atanasoff, a professor of physics at Iowa
State University, after a frustrating day performing tedious
mathematical calculations in his lab, hit on the idea that the
binary number system and electronic switches, com?bined with an
array of capacitors on a moving drum to serve as memory, could
yield a computing machine that would make his life and the lives of
other similarly burdened scientists easier. Then he went back and
built the machine. It worked. The whole world changed.
Why don’t we know the name of John Atanasoff as well as we know
those of Alan Turing and John von Neumann? Because he never
patented the device, and because the developers of the
far-better-known ENIAC almost certainly stole critical ideas from
him. But in 1973 a court declared that the patent on that Sperry
Rand device was invalid, opening the intellectual property gates to
the computer revolution.
Jane Smiley tells the quintessentially American story of the
child of immigrants John Atanasoff with technical clarity and
narrative drive, making the race to develop digital computing as
gripping as a real-life techno-thriller.
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