The Dawn of Counting. Representation of Numbers. Rational and Irrational Numbers. Prime Numbers. Euclid's Elements. Diophantus of Alexandria and Arithmetica. Secret Writing in Ancient Civilization. The Abacus. Book of Calculation by Fibonacci. Decimal Fractions and Logarithms. Calculating Machines. Solutions to Algebraic Equations. Real and Complex Numbers. Cardinality. Boolean Algebras and Applications. Computability and Its Limitations. Cryptography from the Medieval to the Modern Ages. Electronic Computers. Numerical Methods. Modular Arithmetic. Cybernetics and Information Theory. Error-Detecting and -Correcting Codes. Automata and Formal Languages. Artificial Intelligence. Programming Languages. Algorithms and Computational Complexity. The Design of Computer Algorithms. Parallel and Distributed Computing. Computer Networks. Public-Key Cryptography. Quantum Computing. Index.
Yoshihide Igarashi, Tom Altman, Mariko Funada, Barbara Kamiyama
"This is a remarkable book. Written by four authors, it consists of
a collection of 31 self-contained papers that explain many
different concepts related to computing and place them in an
historical context. The papers are generally accessible for the
layman and relatively short … a compact encyclopedia of computing
involving all aspects, such as mathematics, software, and
hardware."
—A. Bultheel, The European Mathematical Society, June 2014"...
written at a reasonable level for undergraduates and some (or all)
of the chapters could be assigned as supplemental reading for a
variety of computer science courses. Summing Up: Recommended.
Lower-division undergraduates."
—P. Cull, Oregon State University in CHOICE Magazine, February 2015
Vol. 52 No. 6
Read the full review at
http://choiceconnect.org/webclipping/186232/2-2i7b4u54y72-zyzzdoi2_n2p6krpzhopqiqh3j_pe2o4nbqq
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