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How the World got into the Computer
Details
Around 1950, computers learned how to sort numbers and words. Immediately, many questions arose. What could be done with such a machine? How should its space be set up and governed? Moving the world into the computer meant rethinking many things. Bank transactions, spa guests, and terrorists, to name but a few, had to be formatted so that they could be dealt with in the machine. In doing so, managers, programmers, and users created a digital world that offered new ways of classifying things and organizing complex relations. Some people even linked machines, combined data, and shared programs. And computers designed to sort personnel unexpectedly became personal computers. This elegant essay explores how and why.
Autorentext
David Gugerli is professor of the history of technology at ETH Zurich. He has made many contributions to the history of computing including, most recently, Simulation for All: The Politics of Supercomputing in Stuttgart, published with Ricky Wichum.
Inhalt
1 Switching on 2 Computing, programming, and formatting 3 Sharing and operating 4 Synchronizing 5 Production and setting up 6 Connecting, differentiating, and storing 7 Switching off Acknowledgments Postscript Photo credits Notes Bibliography
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09783034016711
- Genre Information Technology
- Auflage Übersetzung der deutschsprachi
- Lesemotiv Verstehen
- Anzahl Seiten 208
- Größe H125mm x B210mm x T20mm
- Jahr 2022
- EAN 9783034016711
- Format Fester Einband
- ISBN 978-3-0340-1671-1
- Veröffentlichung 22.02.2022
- Titel How the World got into the Computer
- Autor David Gugerli
- Untertitel The Emergence of Digital Reality
- Gewicht 408g
- Herausgeber Chronos Verlag
- Sprache Englisch