It has been upon the shoulders of giants that the modern world has been
forged.
This accessible compendium presents an insight into the great minds
responsible for the technology which has transformed our lives. Each
pioneer is introduced with a brief biography, followed by a concise
account of their key contributions to their discipline. The selection
covers a broad spread of historical and contemporary figures from
theoreticians to entrepreneurs, highlighting the richness of the field
of computing.
Topics and features: describes the lives and machines built by Hermann
Hollerith, Vannevar Bush, Howard Aiken, John Atanasoff, Tommy Flowers,
John Mauchly, and Konrad Zuse; examines the contributions made by Claude
Shannon, John Von Neumann, Alan Turing, and Sir Frederick Williams;
reviews such pioneers of commercial computing as John Backus, Fred
Brooks, Gordon Moore, William Shockley, Vint Cerf, Don Estridge, Gary
Kildall, and Tim Berners-Lee; surveys pivotal software engineers,
including Robert Floyd, C.A.R Hoare, Dines Bjorner, Edger Dijkstra, Tom
DeMarco, Michael Fagan, Watt Humphries, Ivor Jacobson, David Parnas, and
Ed Yourdan; discusses important characters in theoretical computing,
such as James Gosling, Grace Murray Hopper, Kenneth Iverson, Donald
Knuth, Dennis Ritchie, Ken Thompson, Dana Scott, Christopher Strachey,
Bjarne Stroustrup, and Niklaus Wirth; includes significant contributors
to the field of artificial intelligence, including John McCarthy, Marvin
Minsky, John Searle, and Joseph Weizenbaum; presents a selection of
computer entrepreneurs, including Larry Ellison, Bill Gates, Steve Jobs,
Ken Olsen, and Thomas Watson Sr. and Jr.
Suitable for the general reader, this concise and easy-to-read reference
will be of interest to anyone curious about the inspiring men and women
who have shaped the field of computer science.