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Turing

Pioneer of the Information Age

Hardcover

Published: 29th November 2012
Ships: 7 to 10 business days
RRP $28.95
$26.50

In 1999,Time magazine named Alan Turing one of the twentieth century's 100 greatest minds, alongside the Wright brothers, Albert Einstein, and Watson and Crick. Who was Turing, and what did he achieve during his tragically short life? Marking the centenary of Turing's birth, here is a short, highly accessible introduction to this brilliant scientist and his work, written by leading authority Jack Copeland. Copeland describes Alan Turing's revolutionary ideas about Artificial Intelligence and his pioneering work on Artificial Life, his all-important code-breaking work during World War II, and his contributions to mathematics, philosophy, and the foundations of computer science. To him we owe the brilliant innovation of storing applications and programs inside the computer's memory, ready to be opened when we wish. With this single invention (known as the "stored-program" concept), Turing changed the world. A distinctive feature of the book is the extensive system of hyperlinks to The Turing Archive for the History of Computing, an on-line library of facsimiles of typewritten documents by Turing and his fellow pioneers of the electronic computer.

This book is a worthy tribute to [Turing's] genius Irish Examiner

1: Click to Open 2: Turing's Universal Machine 3: Sinking Hilbert 4: The Intuitive Mathematician 5: Breaking Enigma 6: Tunny - Hitler's BlackBerry 7: The Colossus of Computers 8: ACE- A Month's Work in a Minute 9: The Manchester "Electronic Brain" 10: Artificial Intelligence 11: The Imitation Game 12: Educating Machinery 13: Computer Chess 14: Artificial Life 15: Epilogue

ISBN: 9780199639793
ISBN-10: 0199639795
Audience: General
Format: Hardcover
Language: English
Number Of Pages: 320
Published: 29th November 2012
Dimensions (cm): 22.2 x 14.7  x 3.08
Weight (kg): 0.51