Books

  1. The Computer from Pascal to Von Neumann
    The Computer from Pascal to Von Neumann

  2. The New Turing Omnibus: 66 Excursions in Computer Science
    The New Turing Omnibus: 66 Excursions in Computer Science

  3. Computer Algorithms: CC+ Version
    Computer Algorithms: CC+ Version

  4. Understanding COM+
    Understanding COM+

  5. Building Profitable Solutions Around Backoffice Small Business Server 4.5
    Building Profitable Solutions Around Backoffice Small Business Server 4.5

  6. A+ Training Kit
    A+ Training Kit

  7. Designing Solutions with COM+ Technologies
    Designing Solutions with COM+ Technologies

  8. Under Pressure and on Time
    Under Pressure and on Time

  9. Manual of Style for Technical Publications
    Manual of Style for Technical Publications

  10. Nr Official WWW Yellow Pages
    Nr Official WWW Yellow Pages

  11. A+ Complete Version 1.1
    A+ Complete Version 1.1

  12. Artificial Worlds: Computers Complexity and the Riddle of Life
    Artificial Worlds: Computers Complexity and the Riddle of Life

  13. Enchanted Valley and Worlds Beyond: A Southerner's Memoirs
    Enchanted Valley and Worlds Beyond: A Southerner's Memoirs

  14. CareersIT 2000: A New Guide to Computer Occupations
    CareersIT 2000: A New Guide to Computer Occupations

  15. Digital Biology
    Digital Biology

  16. Deductive Databases and Their Applications
    Deductive Databases and Their Applications

  17. Software Engineering Mathematics
    Software Engineering Mathematics

  18. Understanding Computing A2 for AQA: A2 Level
    Understanding Computing A2 for AQA: A2 Level

  19. Maxwell's Demon: Entropy, Information, Computing
    Maxwell's Demon: Entropy, Information, Computing

  20. ECDL/ICDL 3.0 Made Simple: Office 2000 Edition (Made Simple Computer Books S.)
    ECDL/ICDL 3.0 Made Simple: Office 2000 Edition (Made Simple Computer Books S.)

  21. Neural and Fuzzy Logic Control of Drives and Power Systems
    Neural and Fuzzy Logic Control of Drives and Power Systems

  22. Essential Java for Scientists and Engineers
    Essential Java for Scientists and Engineers

  23. Hardware/Software Co-Verification for Soc Design
    Hardware/Software Co-Verification for Soc Design

  24. Manage It as a Business: How to Achieve Alignment and Add Value to the Company
    Manage It as a Business: How to Achieve Alignment and Add Value to the Company

  25. Critical Technology: A Social Theory of Personal Computing
    Critical Technology: A Social Theory of Personal Computing

The Computer from Pascal to von Neumann
Average customer rating: 3 out of 5 stars
  • A dry look at the history of computers
  • The Computer from Pascal to Von Neumann - review by F.A.Ware
The Computer from Pascal to von Neumann
Herman H. Goldstine
Manufacturer: Princeton University Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback

Computer ScienceComputer Science | Computers & Internet | Subjects | Books | Algorithms | Artificial Intelligence | Circuitry | General | Human-Computer Interaction | Information Theory | Modeling & Simulation | Research | Software Design | Software Engineering | Systems Analysis & Design
HistoryHistory | Business & Culture | Computers & Internet | Subjects | Books
Digital DesignDigital Design | System Architecture | Hardware | Computers & Internet | Subjects | Books
PeripheralsPeripherals | Hardware | Computers & Internet | Subjects | Books
PascalPascal | Languages & Tools | Programming | Computers & Internet | Subjects | Books
GeneralGeneral | Computers & Internet | Subjects | Books
GeneralGeneral | Science | Subjects | Books
History of ScienceHistory of Science | History & Philosophy | Science | Subjects | Books
EngineeringEngineering | Professional & Technical | Subjects | Books | Aerospace | Automotive | Bioengineering | Chemical | Civil | Computer Technology | Design | Economics | Education | Electrical & Electronics | Energy | General | Industrial, Manufacturing & Operational Systems | Management | Marine | Materials | Materials Science | Mechanical | Nuclear | Patents & Inventions | Petroleum, Mining & Geological | Power Systems | Reference | Research | Special Topics | Telecommunications | Welding
EngineeringEngineering | Specialty Stores | Books | Aerospace | Automotive | Bioengineering | Chemical | Civil | Computer Technology | Design | Economics | Education | Electrical & Electronics | Energy | General | Industrial, Manufacturing & Operational Systems | Management | Materials | Materials Science | Mechanical | Nuclear | Patents & Inventions | Petroleum, Mining & Geological | Power Systems | Reference | Research | Special Topics | Telecommunications | Welding
Look Inside Computer BooksLook Inside Computer Books | Trip | Specialty Stores | Books
Qualifying Textbooks - Spring 2007Qualifying Textbooks - Spring 2007 | Stores | Books
Similar Items:
  1. A History of Modern Computing, 2nd Edition (History of Computing)
  2. The First Computers--History and Architectures (History of Computing)
  3. The Universal History of Computing: From the Abacus to the Quantum Computer
  4. Computer: A History of the Information Machine (The Sloan Technology Series)
  5. A History of Computing Technology, 2nd Edition

ASIN: 0691023670

Book Description

In 1942, Lt. Herman H. Goldstine, a former mathematics professor, was stationed at the Moore School of Electrical Engineering at the University of Pennsylvania. It was there that he assisted in the creation of the ENIAC, the first electronic digital computer. The ENIAC was operational in 1945, but plans for a new computer were already underway. The principal source of ideas for the new computer was John von Neumann, who became Goldstine's chief collaborator. Together they developed EDVAC, successor to ENIAC. After World War II, at the Institute for Advanced Study, they built what was to become the prototype of the present-day computer. Herman Goldstine writes as both historian and scientist in this first examination of the development of computing machinery, from the seventeenth century through the early 1950s. His personal involvement lends a special authenticity to his narrative, as he sprinkles anecdotes and stories liberally through his text.

Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars A dry look at the history of computers.......2006-08-07

Herman Goldstine was there when modern computers were born, that is at Princeton's IAS working under the great John von Neumann, who he had met while working on the development of another computer for Aberdeen Proving Ground.

Goldstine recounts the history of computers, from Pascal to Babbage to Hollerith and others. It quickly becomes apparent that he is wary of lacing the book with the sort of technical detail that would appeal to hard-core computer scientists, lest the average reader be turned off, but also that he was reluctant to write in the sort of entertaining style that authors of scientific books aimed at lay audiences generally adopt.

The result is a book that probably appeals largely to those who need the book for academic purposes, such as to write a term-paper.

I cannot speak to the controversy about who first invented programming a computer electronically other than to say that von Neumann, the man generally deemed to have invented it, was known to be very generous with his ideas, and not known to appropriate others' ideas.

The few truly wonderful pages in this book are Goldstine's reminiscences of what it was like to work with John von Neumann, one of the most interesting people there ever was.

3 out of 5 stars The Computer from Pascal to Von Neumann - review by F.A.Ware.......2000-04-10

The Computer from Pascal to Von Neumann Herman H. Goldstine

A review by Frederick A. Ware

This book contains a great deal of computer history, particularly of the period during and shorty after World War II when the critical details of stored program digital computers were finally worked out and implemented. Goldstine also has a unique perspective on these developments because of his work as a senior programmer on the ENIAC.

Unfortunately, major areas of controvesy arose once the ENIAC was completed. One had to do with the credit for the concept of placing a computer's program in the main store along with the data it was to use. This would permit a program to be easily and quickly modified - the ENIAC required cables to be moved in order to change the sequencing of its arithmetic units when a new set of ballistic tables were to be generated. This would also permit a program to process other programs, leading to the development of assemblers and compilers.

History gives sole credit for this idea to John von Neumann because most people prefer history to be simple and events to be tied to single individuals. The details of the ENIAC project support the position that Mauchly and Eckert (the ENIAC developers) should be given equal credit for the stored program concept. Other historians (and computer scientists of the period) share this view.

Goldstine professes to be neutral, but in fact is significantly biased toward von Neumann in this matter (the title of the book speaks for itself), and that detracts from what is otherwise a very readable and very entertaining book.

The book divides computer history into three eras - pre-WWII, WWII, and post-WWII. Again, this division is probably due more to the fact that the period in which the author made his most significant contributions was World War II.

The first section begins with the development of mechanical adding machines. Pascal invented one of the first such machines, hence the rest of the book's title. Other computing intruments included the planimeter, built from the two-disk integrator.

Some of the first section is also devoted to Babbage's difference engine, designed to the generation of tables from difference equations, and of his analytical engine. Boole and his development of boolean algebra (with its eventual application to digital computer design) is also covered.

Beginning in about 1900, significant computing machines were developed. The book describes Hollerith's card tabulating machines, first used in the 1890 census. It also covers the differential analyzer, an analog computer used to solve ordinary differential equations developed by Vannivar Bush at MIT in the 1930s.

The Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator (also called the Harvard Mark I) is a digital computer with mechanical arithmetic units and a paper tape driven sequencer. Of all the early machines, this one is probably comes closest to implementing the Babbage's analytical engine.

Stibitz of Bell Labs built a series of digital computers using relays as the logic elements. The largest has 9000 relays. These machines are about six times faster than the mechanical machines.

The second section is principally a discussion of the ENIAC development. All of these early computers were really just souped-up calculaters with some kind of automatic sequencing capability). The ENIAC was the first vacuum tube digital computer. The Eniac was the most significant because of its blinding speed - the electronic components gave it a 1000x performance advantage over the other technologies. The key contribution of Mauchley and Eckert was to prove that large numbers of vacuum tubes could be operated reliably. The architecture of the machine was not significant, except to serve as an example of how not to do it in the furure.

The third section covers the post-war era. The development of large, fast main storage is the critical problem to be addressed in the late 1940s. The two principle alternatives to vacuum tube flipflops are mercury delay lines and electrostatic storage on a CRT . Both are volatile and require refreshing techniques. Both go on to be used in a number of computers in the next five years until ferrite core memory is developed.

THE COMPUTER FROM PASCAL TO VON NEUMANN
Average customer rating: Not rated
    THE COMPUTER FROM PASCAL TO VON NEUMANN
    Herman H Goldstine
    Manufacturer: Princeton University Press
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Hardcover
    ASIN: B000IG1CBC
    The Computer From Pascal to Von Neumann
    Average customer rating: Not rated
      The Computer From Pascal to Von Neumann
      Herman H. Goldstine
      Manufacturer: Princeton University Press
      ProductGroup: Book
      Binding: Paperback
      ASIN: B000IY8I9S
      The Computer from Pascal to Von Neumann
      Average customer rating: Not rated
        The Computer from Pascal to Von Neumann
        Herman H. Goldstine
        Manufacturer: Princeton University Press
        ProductGroup: Book
        Binding: Hardcover
        ASIN: B000H7OBMO
        The COMPUTER From Pascal to von Neumann.
        Average customer rating: Not rated
          The COMPUTER From Pascal to von Neumann.
          Herman H. Goldstine
          Manufacturer: Princeton University Press,
          ProductGroup: Book
          Binding: Hardcover
          ASIN: B000NYIJCO

          Books:

          1. Encyclopedia of Computer Science
          2. Programming the Finite Element Method
          3. Doing Data Analysis with SPSS 10.0
          4. The Computer from Pascal to Von Neumann
          5. Ethnographically Speaking: Autoethnography, Literature and Aesthetics (Ethnographic Alternatives Series)
          6. Number Theoretic Methods in Cryptography: Complexity Lower Bounds (Progress in Computer Science & Applied Logic)
          7. A+ Exam Cram 2 Lab Manual (Exam Cram 2 S.)
          8. The Dynamics of Control (Systems & Control: Foundations & Applications)
          9. Transactions of the Ninth Prague Conference on Information Theory, Statistical Decision Functions, Random Processes, Volume B
          10. Computing and Information Technologies: Exploring Emerging Technologies - Proceedings of the International Conference Montclair State University, NJ, USA 12 October 2001

          Books