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Too soon to tell : essays for the end of the computer revolution / David Alan Grier.

By: Grier, David Alan, 1955-.
Contributor(s): IEEE Xplore (Online Service) [distributor.] | John Wiley & Sons [publisher.].
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Perspectives: 60Publisher: Hoboken, New Jersey : $bWiley, c2009Distributor: [Piscataqay, New Jersey] : IEEE Xplore, [2008]Description: 1 PDF (xiii, 238 pages).Content type: text Media type: electronic Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9780470422403; 0470422408.Subject(s): Computers -- History | Computers in literature | Literature and technology | Rocks | Satellites | Servers | Silicon | Sociology | Software | South America | Speech | Sports equipment | Springs | Standards | Standards organizations | Steel | Storage area networks | Sun | Supercomputers | Syntactics | Technological innovation | Text processing | Training | Vehicles | Weapons | Weaving | Whales | Wires | Writing | Aircraft | Ash | Atmospheric modeling | Automata | Automobiles | Benchmark testing | Best practices | Blogs | Boats | Buildings | Business | Calendars | Cameras | Chaos | Cities and towns | Clocks | Cloning | Color | Communities | Companies | Computational modeling | Computer bugs | Computer hacking | Computer industry | Computer science | Computer simulation | Computers | Contracts | Corporate acquisitions | Credit cards | Cyberspace | Database systems | Debugging | Educational institutions | Electricity | Electron tubes | Electronic mail | Electronics industry | Engineering profession | Engines | Europe | Fans | Force | Games | Government | Grippers | HTML | Hardware | Helium | Hospitals | Humans | Industries | Integrated circuits | Internet | Java | Laboratories | Libraries | Lifting equipment | Linear programming | Machinery | Magnetic cores | Manuals | Manufacturing | Marketing and sales | Materials | Microcomputers | Moment methods | Motion pictures | NIST | Nominations and elections | Object oriented modeling | Oceans | Operating systems | Organizations | Pediatrics | Personnel | Pervasive computing | Petroleum industry | Printers | Production | Production facilities | Program processors | Prototypes | Radar tracking | Radiation detectors | Registers | RoadsGenre/Form: Electronic books.Additional physical formats: Print version:: No titleOnline resources: Abstract with links to resource Also available in print.
Contents:
Preface: To Have Been Young in that Hour. -- Section I: The Computer Era (1946-1973). -- Out of Position. -- Seymour Cray's Cat. -- Songs of Comfort and Joy. -- Life on the Frontier. -- Museum Pieces. -- The Curve of Innovation. -- Public Image. -- The Enduring Myth of Hardware. -- Choosing Our Way. -- Friend of the Band. -- Family Portrait. -- Section II: The Age of Information (1974-1987). -- Coming of Age. -- Riding with Bohannon. -- The Language of Bad Love. -- Common Knowledge. -- Conflict-Free Memories. -- On the Right Side of the Road. -- Fork in the Path. -- The Best Deal in Town. -- Crossing the Divide. -- Auditions. -- Annie and the Boys. -- Mergers and Divestitures. -- Old Bottles. -- Section III: The Days of Cyberspace: (1986-2007). -- Alley Life. -- On the Camino Real. -- Dirty Electricity. -- Because We Were Different. -- A Winter of Hope and a Spring of Despair. -- Coming into the Country. -- Outposts. -- The Captured Imagination. -- Shutdown. -- Force of Nature. -- Ever Onward! Thanks for Asking! -- Emailing from Armenia. -- The Boundaries of Time. -- Counting Beans. -- The Eyes of the World. -- The Lay of the Land. -- Circle of Light. -- Beyond the Horizon. -- Epilogue: Indicator Lamps. -- Disclaimers, References and Notes. -- Index.
Summary: A rich collection of essays that explores enduring themes of the computer eraToo Soon to Tell is a revised and expanded collection of David Alan Grier's popular monthly column "In Our Time" for Computer magazine. In forty-three personal essays-twenty of which are entirely new for this publication-the author draws upon the experiences of everyday people, their companies, and their interactions to reveal how computers moved from the drawing table and into our offices and living rooms. The result is a book that offers a singular portrait of the computer revolution that has yet to be told.Written in a simple, easy-to-follow style that is free of industry jargon, each essay begins with a short introduction that recounts the author's experiences with his students or those of the author's father and his generation of computer scientists-which seamlessly connect the themes that are explored throughout the book. Set against a backdrop that spans more than half a century, this poignant book allows readers to gain an intimate and meaningful understanding of the relationship between humans and machines, the connections between fathers and sons, the impact of rapid technological change on the family, and the revolutionary nature of a technology that has rebuilt human institutions in its own image.Too Soon to Tell is an original and starkly human portrait of the computer era that will entice readers from all walks of life.
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Preface: To Have Been Young in that Hour. -- Section I: The Computer Era (1946-1973). -- Out of Position. -- Seymour Cray's Cat. -- Songs of Comfort and Joy. -- Life on the Frontier. -- Museum Pieces. -- The Curve of Innovation. -- Public Image. -- The Enduring Myth of Hardware. -- Choosing Our Way. -- Friend of the Band. -- Family Portrait. -- Section II: The Age of Information (1974-1987). -- Coming of Age. -- Riding with Bohannon. -- The Language of Bad Love. -- Common Knowledge. -- Conflict-Free Memories. -- On the Right Side of the Road. -- Fork in the Path. -- The Best Deal in Town. -- Crossing the Divide. -- Auditions. -- Annie and the Boys. -- Mergers and Divestitures. -- Old Bottles. -- Section III: The Days of Cyberspace: (1986-2007). -- Alley Life. -- On the Camino Real. -- Dirty Electricity. -- Because We Were Different. -- A Winter of Hope and a Spring of Despair. -- Coming into the Country. -- Outposts. -- The Captured Imagination. -- Shutdown. -- Force of Nature. -- Ever Onward! Thanks for Asking! -- Emailing from Armenia. -- The Boundaries of Time. -- Counting Beans. -- The Eyes of the World. -- The Lay of the Land. -- Circle of Light. -- Beyond the Horizon. -- Epilogue: Indicator Lamps. -- Disclaimers, References and Notes. -- Index.

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A rich collection of essays that explores enduring themes of the computer eraToo Soon to Tell is a revised and expanded collection of David Alan Grier's popular monthly column "In Our Time" for Computer magazine. In forty-three personal essays-twenty of which are entirely new for this publication-the author draws upon the experiences of everyday people, their companies, and their interactions to reveal how computers moved from the drawing table and into our offices and living rooms. The result is a book that offers a singular portrait of the computer revolution that has yet to be told.Written in a simple, easy-to-follow style that is free of industry jargon, each essay begins with a short introduction that recounts the author's experiences with his students or those of the author's father and his generation of computer scientists-which seamlessly connect the themes that are explored throughout the book. Set against a backdrop that spans more than half a century, this poignant book allows readers to gain an intimate and meaningful understanding of the relationship between humans and machines, the connections between fathers and sons, the impact of rapid technological change on the family, and the revolutionary nature of a technology that has rebuilt human institutions in its own image.Too Soon to Tell is an original and starkly human portrait of the computer era that will entice readers from all walks of life.

Also available in print.

Mode of access: World Wide Web

Description based on PDF viewed 12/22/2015.

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