"In this entertaining, thought provoking and rich-in-metaphors book,
Rawlins explores and explains the computer, from its modest origins to
its most immodest potential relationship with humans. A pleasant
`must' for anyone who cares about the broader `what', `how' and `how
far' of these machines."
-- Michael L. Dertouzos, Director, MIT Laboratory
for Computer Science; Author of What Will Be
"Slaves of the Machine is a scintillatingly written
exploration of machines, of computers, of life, and of human nature.
Filled with original analogies and metaphors, crammed with humor and
cynicism, this book is both light and deep at the same time -- no
small achievement. Any thinking being who picks it up will find it
engrossing, disorienting, disturbing, and deliciously
provocative."
-- Douglas Hofstadter, author of Gödel,
Escher, Bach, Le Ton beau de Marot, and
Metamagical Themas
In Moths to the Flame, Gregory J. E. Rawlins took lay
readers on a tour of the exciting and sometimes scary world to which
compters are leading us. This new book is for those who are new to
computers and want to know what is "under the hood." It shows what
computers can do for us and to us. It tells the story of how we
became slaves to our machines and how our machines may one day become
slaves to us. Written in an accessible, anecdotal form, Slaves
of the Machine presents the birth of the computer, charts its
evolution, and envisions its development over the next fifty
years.
Each of the six chapters asks a simple question: What are computers?
How do we build them? How do we talk to them? How do we program them?
What can't they do? Could they think? After answering its question,
each chapter views its topic in terms of the state of the art as of
1997 and into the near future. Rawlins successfully demystifies the
computer -- the first step away from slavery to it.
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