Hardcover: 248 pages
Publisher: Princeton University Press (October 28, 2012)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0691151008
ISBN-13: 978-0691151007
Product Dimensions: 6.4 x 0.9 x 9.3 inches
Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars See all reviews (15 customer reviews)
Best Sellers Rank: #160,826 in Books (See Top 100 in Books) #38 in Books > Biographies & Memoirs > Professionals & Academics > Computers & Technology #61 in Books > Computers & Technology > History & Culture > History #160 in Books > Science & Math > Mathematics > History
I found this book interesting and easy to read. It is written in a sort of drive by, essay style. There are many noteworthy (but sort of random) facts I did not know in this book. I checked it out of my local library, and I enjoyed reading it, but I was not looking for anything other than entertainment (infotainment?). I would not own it, however, because it warrants only one reading. It does not present anything in enough detail to justify buying it. It does not really live up to its title, either, but is more of a smattering of tidbits, facts, and reminiscences than a focused treatise on the 'creation of the information age' as it purports to be. Never mind that it is not a biography by any stretch. Still, I think the book would be fun (if you hang out with mathematicians, engineers, or programmers) as a conversation starter, or a list of topics to discuss. It is definitely entertaining, but probably not so much to non-techies.Should you trust a book about logic when itself contains muddled reasoning? I found one section of this book where the author apparently did not read what he wrote. In section 8.1 p 139 ff the author is explaining 'states' with the classic example problem of the two adults and two children on one side of a river, with a boat that holds only one adult or two children, the problem being how to get everyone over to the other side when anyone can row. Fair enough, he shows 10 'states' where everyone ends up safely on the other side of the river.
Paul Nahin's book, "The Logician and the Engineer," is deficientin several ways.Its first deficiency is that Nahin has relatively little to sayabout the putative subjects of his book, filling in with acongeries of topics of interest to himself. In spite of thebook's sub-title -- "How George Boole and Claude Shannon Createdthe Information Age" -- Boole and Shannon are minor actors inthis book. Of its more than 220 pages, one 24-page chapterprovides brief biographies of Boole and Shannon, and anotherchapter of the same length discusses Boolean algebra. The bulk ofthe book, however, is given over to digital circuit-design,probability, Turing machines, logic puzzles, and speculationsabout future computers.The reader gets a warning of strange things to come in Chapter 1,entitled "What You Need to Know to Read This Book." The chapterfocuses heavily, and weirdly, on potentiometers, ending with ademonstration of the parabolic shape of the resistance-functionof two ganged potentiometers. Oddly for an electrical engineer,Nahin states that the term "rheostat" is "a rather old-fashionedword" for a potentiometer. Potentiometers and rheostats areactually quite different devices. Although both are three-terminal variable resistors, a potentiometer is a voltage-dividerthat uses all three terminals, whereas a rheostat uses twoterminals (the slider and one other terminal) to control currentby connecting a variable resistance in series with the load.A second deficiency of this book is its pervasive carelessness.
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