81 research outputs found
Complejidad y dimensiones en los estudios sobre Babbage: la máquina analítica. Un análisis del fracaso cultural del primer proyecto de calculadora digital programable secuencialmente.
En este artículo se analiza el caso histórico de la máquina analítica de Babbage junto con algunos otros ejemplos relacionados, con la intención de comprender qué tipo de condiciones retrasaron el advenimiento de la > hasta un siglo después de los primeros diseños de calculadoras programables multi-propósito. La respuesta a este interrogante proviene de una hibridación entre el enfoque socioeconómico de los estudios de ciencia, tecnología y sociedad y la teoría de la complejidad aplicada a los fenómenos sociales en la historia de la técnica. Como conclusión se prueba que el propio Babbage pudo ser consciente de estas constricciones en la estructura social de los medios de producción que retrasarían la emergencia del cálculo automático durante un siglo.This article analyses the historical case of the Babbage's machine
and other related examples in order to understand the conditions delaying the
coming of the •computer revolution· during one century since the first designs
of programmable calculators. The response derives from the joining of both
che STS socioeconomic approach and the complexity theory applied to social
phenomena in the history of technology. As a result, it is showed that Babbage
could be conscious of these constrictions in the social structure, which would
be responsible for the delay of the emergence of automatic calculus during
one century
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The development of a computer literacy curriculum for California charter schools
To develop leaders for the 21st century, schools must be able to prepare students to meet the high academic, technical and workforce challenges. Charter schools are increasingly attempting to meet these challenges by educating students through innovative means and by creating effectual educational programs that are more conducive to the needs of the student. This document provides a computer literacy curriculum, which will facilitate student learning of computer literacy skills
The ingenuity of common workmen: and the invention of the computer
Since World War II, state support for scientific research has been assumed crucial to technological and economic progress. Governments accordingly spent tremendous sums to that end. Nothing epitomizes the alleged fruits of that involvement better than the electronic digital computer. The first such computer has been widely reputed to be the ENIAC, financed by the U.S. Army for the war but finished afterwards. Vastly improved computers followed, initially paid for in good share by the Federal Government of the United States, but with the private sector then dominating, both in development and use, and computers are of major significance.;Despite the supposed success of public-supported science, evidence is that computers would have evolved much the same without it but at less expense. Indeed, the foundations of modern computer theory and technology were articulated before World War II, both as a tool of applied mathematics and for information processing, and the computer was itself on the cusp of reality. Contrary to popular understanding, the ENIAC actually represented a movement backwards and a dead end.;Rather, modern computation derived more directly, for example, from the prewar work of John Vincent Atanasoff and Clifford Berry, a physics professor and graduate student, respectively, at Iowa State College (now University) in Ames, Iowa. They built the Atanasoff Berry Computer (ABC), which, although special purpose and inexpensive, heralded the efficient and elegant design of modern computers. Moreover, while no one foresaw commercialization of computers based on the ungainly and costly ENIAC, the commercial possibilities of the ABC were immediately evident, although unrealized due to war. Evidence indicates, furthermore, that the private sector was willing and able to develop computers beyond the ABC and could have done so more effectively than government, to the most sophisticated machines.;A full and inclusive history of computers suggests that Adam Smith, the eighteenth century Scottish philosopher, had it right. He believed that minimal and aloof government best served society, and that the inherent genius of citizens was itself enough to ensure the general prosperity
Artificial intelligence : a heuristic search for commercial and management science applications
Thesis (M.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, 1984.MICROFICHE COPY AVAILABLE IN ARCHIVES AND DEWEY.Bibliography: leaves 185-188.by Philip A. Cooper.M.S
Mirrors of the past : versions of history in science fiction and fantasy
The primary argument of this Thesis is that Science Fiction (SF) is a form of Historical Fiction, one which speculatively appropriates elements of the past in fulfilment of the ideological expectations of its genre readership. Chapter One presents this definition, reconciling it with some earlier definitions of SF and justifying it by means of a comparison between SF and the Historical Novel. Chapter One also identifies SF's three modes of historical appropriation (historical extension, imitation and modification) and the forms of fictive History these construct, including Future History and Alternate History; theories of history, and SF's own ideological changes over time, have helped shape the genre's varied borrowings from the past. Some works of Historical Fantasy share the characteristics of SF set out in Chapter One. The remaining Chapters analyse the textual products of SF's imitation and modification of history, i.e. Future and Alternate Histories. Chapter Two discusses various Future Histories completed or at least commenced before 1960, demonstrating their consistent optimism, their celebration of Science and of heroic individualism, and their tendency to resolve the cyclical pattern of history through an ideal linear simplification or 'theodicy'. Chapter Three shows the much greater ideological and technical diversity of Future Histories after 1960, their division into competing traditional (Libertarian), Posthistoric (pessimistic), and critical utopian categories, an indication of SF's increasing complexity and fragmentation
Artificial Intelligence Through the Eyes of the Public
Artificial Intelligence is becoming a popular field in computer science. In this report we explored its history, major accomplishments and the visions of its creators. We looked at how Artificial Intelligence experts influence reporting and engineered a survey to gauge public opinion. We also examined expert predictions concerning the future of the field as well as media coverage of its recent accomplishments. These results were then used to explore the links between expert opinion, public opinion and media coverage
Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution, showing the operations, expenditures, and condition of the institution for the year 1873
Annual Report of the Smithsonian Institution. [1585] Research related the the American Indian; acient mounds in America; etc
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