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Book Cover
Book
Author Campbell-Kelly, Martin.

Title Computer : a history of the information machine / Martin Campbell-Kelly and William Aspray
Edition First edition
Published New York : Basic Books, [1996]
©1996

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 MELB  004.9 Cam/Cah  AVAILABLE
Description ix, 342 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Series The Sloan technology series
Sloan technology series.
Contents 1. When Computers Were People -- 2. The Mechanical Office -- 3. Babbage's Dream Comes True -- 4. Inventing the Computer -- 5. The Computer Becomes a Business Machine -- 6. The Maturing of the Mainframe: The Rise and Fall of IBM -- 7. Real Time: Reaping the Whirlwind -- 8. Software -- 9. New Modes of Computing -- 10. The Shaping of the Personal Computer -- 11. The Shift to Software -- 12. From the World Brain to the World Wide Web
Summary Most interesting is the story of how the computer began to reshape broad segments of our society when the PC, or personal computer, enabled new modes of computing that liberated people from dependence on room-sized, enormously expensive mainframe computers. Oddly, the established computer companies initially missed the potential of the PC and ignored it, allowing upstart firms such as Apple and Microsoft to become the fastest growing firms of the twentieth century. Filled with lively insights - many about the world of computing in the 1990s, such as the strategy behind Microsoft Windows - as well as a discussion of the rise and creation of the World Wide Web, here is a book no one who owns or uses a computer will want to miss
Blending strong narrative history and a fascinating look at the interface of business and technology, Computer: A History of the Information Machine traces the dramatic story of the invention of the computer. Earlier histories of the computer have depicted it as a tool both created by and to be used by scientists to solve their own number-crunching problems - as late as 1949 it was thought by some that the world would never need more than a dozen machines. This book suggests a richer story behind the computer's creation, one that shows how business and government were the first to explore the unlimited potential of the machine as an information processor. Not surprisingly, at the heart of the business story is the name IBM
Analysis Computers -- History
Electronic data processing -- History
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 321-333) and index
Notes Also issued online
Subject Computers -- History.
Electronic data processing -- History.
Author Aspray, William.
LC no. 96002098
ISBN 0465029892
0465029906 (paperback)