Edmund C. Berkeley: Giant Brains, or Machines That Think (1949/1961)

9 April 2013, dusan

Giant Brains is one of the first books on electronic computers for a general audience.

In it, the co-founder Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) Edmund Berkeley described the principles behind computing machines (called then “mechanical brains”, “sequence-controlled calculators”, or various other terms), and then gave a technical but accessible survey of the most prominent examples of the time, including machines from MIT, Harvard, the Moore School, Bell Laboratories, and elsewhere.

Originally published by Wiley & Sons, 1949
Publisher Science Editions, New York, 1961
292 pages

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