Quite soon, the world's information infrastructure is going to reach a
level of scale and complexity that will force scientists and engineers
to approach it in an entirely new way. The familiar notions of command
and control are being thwarted by realities of a faster, denser world of
communication where choice, variety, and indeterminism rule. The myth of
the machine that does exactly what we tell it has come to an end.
What makes us think we can rely on all this technology? What keeps it
together today, and how might it work tomorrow? Will we know how to
build the next generation--or will we be lulled into a stupor of
dependence brought about by its conveniences?
In this book, Mark Burgess focuses on the impact of computers and
information on our modern infrastructure by taking you from the roots of
science to the principles behind system operation and design. To shape
the future of technology, we need to understand how it works--or else
what we don't understand will end up shaping us.
This book explores this subject in three parts:
- Part I, Stability: describes the fundamentals of predictability,
and why we have to give up the idea of control in its classical
meaning
- Part II, Certainty: describes the science of what we can know,
when we don't control everything, and how we make the best of life
with only imperfect information
- Part III, Promises: explains how the concepts of stability and
certainty may be combined to approach information infrastructure as a
new kind of virtual material, restoring a continuity to human-computer
systems so that society can rely on them.