Kup nowe:
94,58 zł
Dostępny
94,58 zł () Obejmuje wybrane opcje. Obejmuje początkową miesięczną płatność i wybrane opcje. Szczegóły
Cena
Suma częściowa
94,58 zł
Suma częściowa
Wstępny podział płatności
Koszt wysyłki, data dostawy i suma zamówienia (łącznie z podatkiem) są wyświetlone przy finalizacji zakupu.
Wysyłka z
Amazon
Wysyłka z
Amazon
Sprzedawane przez
Amazon
Sprzedawane przez
Amazon
Zwroty
Ten produkt podlega zwrotowi
Produkt podlega zwrotowi
W większości przypadków produkty wysyłane z serwisu Amazon.com można zwrócić i uzyskać pełen zwrot kosztów.
Zwroty
Ten produkt podlega zwrotowi
W większości przypadków produkty wysyłane z serwisu Amazon.com można zwrócić i uzyskać pełen zwrot kosztów.
Płatność
Bezpieczna transakcja
Twoja transakcja jest bezpieczna
Dokładamy wszelkich starań, aby zadbać o Twoje bezpieczeństwo i prywatność. Nasz system bezpieczeństwa płatności szyfruje Twoje dane podczas ich przekazywania. Nie przekazujemy danych Twojej karty kredytowej sprzedawcom zewnętrznym i nie sprzedajemy Twoich danych innym podmiotom.
Płatność
Bezpieczna transakcja
Dokładamy wszelkich starań, aby zadbać o Twoje bezpieczeństwo i prywatność. Nasz system bezpieczeństwa płatności szyfruje Twoje dane podczas ich przekazywania. Nie przekazujemy danych Twojej karty kredytowej sprzedawcom zewnętrznym i nie sprzedajemy Twoich danych innym podmiotom. Dowiedz się więcej

Turing's Cathedral: The Origins of the Digital Universe Miękka oprawa – Ilustrowany, 11 grudnia 2012

4,3 4,3 z 5 gwiazdek Liczba ocen: 132

{"desktop_buybox_group_1":[{"displayPrice":"94,58 zł","priceAmount":94.58,"currencySymbol":"zł","integerValue":"94","decimalSeparator":",","fractionalValue":"58","symbolPosition":"right","hasSpace":true,"showFractionalPartIfEmpty":true,"offerListingId":"l1cCVNCSi1EmifL8u3OduHcLpDkYVZvCsRUYo%2BclrKkuGHPYrjGFobyeO2aq1PdYA5EjK%2FgKodfl541USXcWihKmh6RSBc4BXCAabpuLEMFi%2F6ekoWG%2BO7q31pJdxUQJc1yzFdSl82Nw2ImmnV27Ol%2B6tav5G5eP","locale":"pl-PL","buyingOptionType":"NEW","aapiBuyingOptionIndex":0}]}

Opcje zakupu i dodatki

A Wall Street Journal Best Business Book of 2012
A
Kirkus Reviews Best Book of 2012

In this revealing account of how the digital universe exploded in the aftermath of World War II, George Dyson illuminates the nature of digital computers, the lives of those who brought them into existence, and how code took over the world.
 
In the 1940s and ‘50s, a small group of men and women—led by John von Neumann—gathered in Princeton, New Jersey, to begin building one of the first computers to realize Alan Turing’s vision of a Universal Machine. The codes unleashed within this embryonic, 5-kilobyte universe—less memory than is allocated to displaying a single icon on a computer screen today—broke the distinction between numbers that
mean things and numbers that do things, and our universe would never be the same. Turing’s Cathedral is the story of how the most constructive and most destructive of twentieth-century inventions—the digital computer and the hydrogen bomb—emerged at the same time.

Opis produktu

Recenzja

“The best book I’ve read on the origins of the computer. . . not only learned, but brilliantly and surprisingly idiosyncratic and strange.”
The Boston Globe
 
“A groundbreaking history . . . the book brims with unexpected detail.”
The New York Times Book Review
 
“A technical, philosophical and sometimes personal account . . . wide-ranging and lyrical.”
The Economist
 
“The story of the [von Neumann] computer project and how it begat today’s digital universe has been told before, but no one has told it with such precision and narrative sweep.”
The New York Review of Books

“A fascinating combination of the technical and human stories behind the computing breakthroughs of the 1940s and ‘50s. . . . An important work.”
The Philadelphia Inquirer
 
“Vivid. . . . [A] detailed yet readable chronicle of the birth of modern computing. . . . Dyson’s book is one small step toward reminding us that behind all the touch screens, artificial intelligences and cerebellum implants lies not sorcery but a machine from the middle of New Jersey.”
The Oregonian
 
“Well-told. . . . Dyson tells his story as a sort of intellectual caper film. He gathers his cast of characters . . . and tracks their journey to Princeton. When they converge, it’s great fun, despite postwar food rationing and housing shortages. . . . Dyson is rightly as concerned with the machine’s inventors as with the technology itself."
The Wall Street Journal
 
“Charming. . . . Creation stories are always worth telling, especially when they center on the birth of world-changing powers. . . . Dyson creatively recounts the curious Faustian bargain that permitted mathematicians to experiment with building more powerful computers, which in turn helped others build more destructive bombs.”
San Francisco Chronicle
 
“The story of the invention of computers has been told many times, from many different points of view, but seldom as authoritatively and with as much detail as George Dyson has done. . . .
Turing’s Cathedral will enthrall computer enthusiasts. . . . Employing letters, memoirs, oral histories and personal interviews, Dyson organizes his book around the personalities of the men (and occasional woman) behind the computer, and does a splendid job in bringing them to life.”
The Seattle Times
 
 “A powerful story of the ethical dimension of scientific research, a story whose lessons apply as much today in an era of expanded military R&D as they did in the ENIAC and MANIAC era . . . Dyson closes the book with three absolutely, hair-on-neck-standing-up inspiring chapters on the present and future, a bracing reminder of the distance we have come on some of the paths envisioned by von Neumann, Turing, et al.”
—Cory Doctorow,
Boing Boing
 
“No other book about the beginnings of the digital age . . . makes the connections this one does between the lessons of the computer’s origin and the possible paths of its future.”
The Guardian
 
“If you want to be mentally prepared for the next revolution in computing, Dyson’s book is a must read. But it is also a must read if you just want a ripping yarn about the way real scientists (at least, some real scientists) work and think.”
Literary Review
 
“More than just a great book about science. It’s a great book, period.”
The Globe and Mail

O autorze

George Dyson is a science historian as well as a boat designer and builder. He is also the author of Baidarka, Project Orion, and Darwin Among the Machines.

Szczegóły produktu

  • Wydawca ‏ : ‎ Vintage; Edycja Illustrated (11 grudnia 2012)
  • Język ‏ : ‎ Angielski
  • Miękka oprawa ‏ : ‎ 464 str.
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1400075998
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1400075997
  • Wymiary ‏ : ‎ 13.31 x 2.54 x 20.19 cm
  • Recenzje klientów:
    4,3 4,3 z 5 gwiazdek Liczba ocen: 132

Opinie o produkcie

4,3 na 5 gwiazdek
4,3 na 5
132 oceny globalne

Najlepsze opinie o produkcie z Polski

0 dostępnych opinii o produkcie oraz 0 ocen/y produktu z Polski

Najlepsze opinie o produkcie

Przetłumacz wszystkie opinie na język polski
Miroslav Dobsicek
4,0 z 5 gwiazdek Great content of the book, to small font for comfortable reading
Recenzowane w Szwecji dnia 13 października 2022
The book content is great, highly recommend. Maybe only try to get a different edition. This edition has very small font and it is not a comfortable reading. I ended up reading it on Kindle.
Maria P
5,0 z 5 gwiazdek Gift
Opinia napisana w Wielkiej Brytanii dnia 27 kwietnia 2021
Present for someone who loves computer science history - went down well!
Agent Smith
5,0 z 5 gwiazdek Spannende Geschickte des elektronischen digitalen Computers
Opinia napisana w Niemczech dnia 19 kwietnia 2017
George Dyson versteht es, die vielen beteiligten Personen und deren z.T. etwas unübersichtlichen Lebensläufe in eine spannende Geschichte zu verweben, die ein auch für Laien noch verständliches Bild davon zeichnet, wie im Princeton der 40er und 50er Jahre die Entwicklung von Atomwaffen und die Entwicklung elektronischer digitaler Computer Hand in Hand ging – und wie die Konstruktionsprinzipien dieser Computer noch die Architektur unserer heutigen Rechner bestimmen. An vielen Stellen ein faszinierendes Porträt entscheidender Figuren, allen voran John von Neumann.
Jeden użytkownik uznał opinię za pomocną
Zgłoś
William Hanigsberg
5,0 z 5 gwiazdek I read it from the library and bought a copy ...
Opinia napisana w Kanadzie dnia 28 lipca 2016
I read it from the library and bought a copy to reread and lend to a friend. It is a fascinating book about events the boundary between cryptography and computer history.
Michael J
5,0 z 5 gwiazdek Breathtaking in scope, depth, and originality
Opinia napisana w Stanach Zjednoczonych dnia 6 maja 2016
The early history of computing is usually presented in a simple linear fashion: Atonsoff, Mauchley and Eckert, Turing and the Enigma project, Von Neumann, and the post war explosion. That's the way I learned it in college in the 70s, and the way just about every book presents it. It's correct, insofar as it goes, but it leaves out a tremendous amount of richness and detail that George Dyson relates in this book. His narrative consists of over a dozen parallel, interrelated, stories, each concentrating on one person or project, along with how they or it relates to the overall narrative. The story begins with the history of Princeton, New Jersey, and the two men most responsible for the creation of the Institute for Advanced Study: Abraham Flexner, and Oswald Veblen, son of economist Thorsten Veblen. Flexner and the younger Veblen shared a vision of creating a place in which the world's greatest thinkers, able to interact freely and freed from the mundane obligations of teaching and practical applications, would advance the world's knowledge on a heretofore unprecedented scale. In so doing they inadvertently created one of the era's greatest centers for applied research into computing.

Turing and von Neumann make their appearances here, of course, along with Mauchley, Eckert, Oppenheimer, Ulam, Freeman Dyson (the authors' father), and other notables of the era. But Dyson also tells the story of a number of pioneers and contributors to the design, construction, and most of all the theory of computation, who have been overlooked by history. Most remarkable, perhaps, is Nils Barricelli, who could justifiably be called the founder of computational biology. Working in the early 1950s with a computer having less computational power and memory than a modern day sewing machine, he created a one-dimensional, artificial,universe in order to explore the relative power of mutation and symbiosis is the evolution of organisms. His work led to a number of original discoveries and conclusions that would only be rediscovered or proposed decades later, such as the notion that genes originated as independent organism, like viruses, that combined to create more complex organisms.

There's an entire chapter on a vacuum tube, the lowly 6J6, a dual triode created during the war that combined several elements necessary for the creation of a large scale computer: Simplicity, ruggedness, and economy. It fulfilled one of von Neumann's guiding principals for ENIAC: Don't invent anything. That is, don't waste time inventing where solutions already exist. By the nature of its relative unreliability and wide production tolerances relative to project goals, it also helped stimulate a critical line of research, that of how to created reliable systems from unreliable components- something more important now than ever in this era of microprocessors and memory chips with millions and even billions of components on a chip.

The chapter on Alan Turing is particularly good, covering as it does much of his work that has been neglected in biographies and presenting a much more accurate description of his work and his contributions to computational science. The great importance of his conceptual computer- the "Turing Machine"- is not, as is commonly stated in popular works, that it can perform the work of any other computer. It is that it demonstrated how any possible computing machine can be represented as a number, and vice versa. This allowed him to construct a proof that there exist uncomputable strings, I.e., programs for which it could not be determined a priori whether they will eventually halt. This was strongly related to Godel's work on the completeness of formal systems, and part of a larger project to disprove Godel's incompleteness theorem.

What makes this a particularly exceptional book is the manner in which Dyson connects the stories of individuals involved in the birth of electronic computing with the science itself. He does an exceptional job of explaining difficult topics like Godel incompleteness, the problems of separating noise from data, and the notion of computability in a way that the intelligent read who may not have advanced math skills will understand. More importantly, he understands the material well enough to know what are the critical concepts and accomplishments of these pioneers of computing, and doesn't fall into the trap of repeating the errors of far too many popular science writers. The result is a thoroughly original, accurate, and tremendously enjoyable history. Strongly recommended to anyone curious about the origins of computers and more importantly, the science of computing itself.
9 użytkowników uznało opinię za pomocną
Zgłoś