In the Beginning 2.0: Personal Recollections of Software Pioneers

Author:   Robert L Glass ,  P Edward Presson
Publisher:   Developer.* Books
ISBN:  

9780977213368


Pages:   690
Publication Date:   07 December 2020
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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In the Beginning 2.0: Personal Recollections of Software Pioneers


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Overview

Author Robert L. Glass has prepared a guided tour through the personal historical recollections of 18 software pioneers-himself counted among them--including three female pioneers added for this new edition. In the Beginning 2.0: Personal Recollections of Software Pioneers is a history of early computing and software engineering, covering decades and spanning continents. These stories fill in important details of how the age we are living in now was made possible through the ideas and innovations of software practitioners, researchers, and businesspeople. People are at the center of these stories. Every one of the pioneering contributors recognizes by name what amounts to 243 separate people mentioned in this book, many of them more than once by different contributors. Scientists, programmers, designers, clerks, managers, sales people, consultants, professors, investors, generals, inventors, collaborators, innovators, competitors, and nemeses--all these stories are here. The stories also cover a full scope of early computing contexts: business, scientific, laboratory, service computing, and time sharing. On the earth, flying above it, and outside the atmosphere. The Index of this book records 83 companies, 36 organizations, 30 government entities, and 46 schools and universities. Nearly every one of these software stories is intertwined with at least one hardware story, if not several. At least 27 different programming languages are discussed in this book, but also 80 distinct computers and computer models, plus 45 computing technologies. Showing this is no mere collection of yarns, many contributors provide detailed technical explanations that include formulas, diagrams, and examples. The Index records 116 distinct computing concepts and 89 entries for coinage, invention, and early use. The book is tied together and guided along by the well-informed perspective of Robert L. Glass, who gathered these recollections from his fellow pioneers and organized them into a conceptual framework of computing eras and contexts. Glass introduces each chapter and contributes several recollections of his own. The book is illustrated throughout with figures provided by the contributors and with original drawings by P.Edward Presson. In the Beginning 2.0 should stand the test of time as an important contribution to computing and software history. Full list of contributing software pioneers: Robert L. Baber John M. Bennett Bruce I. Blum Barry W. Boehm Robert N. Britcher Peter J. Denning Robert L. Glass Harold Joseph Highland Raymond C. Houghton, Jr. Watts S. Humphrey Frank Land Ben G. Matley Ann Moffatt David Myers Donald J. Reifer Linda Rising Norman F. Schneidewind Jennifer Seberry A detailed biographical sketch of each contributor is included.

Full Product Details

Author:   Robert L Glass ,  P Edward Presson
Publisher:   Developer.* Books
Imprint:   Developer.* Books
Dimensions:   Width: 12.70cm , Height: 3.70cm , Length: 20.30cm
Weight:   0.794kg
ISBN:  

9780977213368


ISBN 10:   0977213366
Pages:   690
Publication Date:   07 December 2020
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Robert L. Glass meandered the halls of computing and software for over 45 years, beginning in 1954. He is proud to say he was not only a software pioneer but a space applications pioneer, having spent his early years doing software applications and system software for U.S. aerospace companies. After a transition into academic life, he was on the faculty of the pioneering software engineering graduate program at Seattle University and spent a year trying to fit a practitioner's background and knowledge into the academic-oriented Software Engineering Institute. His proudest moments were receiving an honorary PhD from Linkoping University in Sweden in 1995 and being named an ACM Fellow in 1999.

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