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Discrete Charm of the Machine: Why the World Became Digital

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A few short decades ago, we were informed by the smooth signals of analog television and radio; we communicated using our analog telephones; and we even computed with analog computers.

Today our world is digital, built with zeros and ones.

Why did this revolution occur? 'The Discrete Charm of the Machine' explains, in an engaging and accessible manner, the varied physical and logical reasons behind this radical transformation.

The spark of individual genius shines through this story of innovation: the stored program of Jacquard's loom; Charles Babbage's logical branching; Alan Turing's brilliant abstraction of the discrete machine; Harry Nyquist's foundation for digital signal processing; Claude Shannon's breakthrough insights into the meaning of information and bandwidth; and Richard Feynman's prescient proposals for nanotechnology and quantum computing.

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Product Details
Princeton University Press
0691184178 / 9780691184173
eBook (Adobe Pdf, EPUB)
621.382
05/02/2019
English
247 pages
Copy: 100%; print: 100%