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Tales of Electrologica - Computers, Software and People (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2022)
Loot Price: R1,065
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Tales of Electrologica - Computers, Software and People (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2022)
Series: History of Computing
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Manufacturing computers in series was quite a feat in the 1950s. As
mathematical as it gets, the machines discussed here were called X1
and X8. The industrial achievement combined with the background in
a mathematical research center made the company Electrologica a
legend in Dutch computing. The tales in this book are told by those
who have a right to tell. Highly engaged professionals take readers
back to their pioneering work with the machines and in retrospect
unveil some of the values, which went without saying in the 1960s.
To disagree, Paul Klint relates the contrasting views on software
in Dutch research traditions. ALGOL culture: Frans Kruseman Aretz
takes the reader along to the detailed decisions on constructing
compilers and shows the values of an ALGOL culture transpiring.
Signposts: Dirk Dekker for the first time 'owns' his algorithm for
mutual exclusion. In particle physics: Rene van Dantzig's use case
was an Electrologica X8 computer controlling two other computers in
three-dimensional detection of colliding particles. Early steps in
AI: Lambert Meertens' tale of the X8 machine composing a violin
quartet comes with his original presentation, as well as the code
in ALGOL 60. The reflections of first hand experiences combine well
with the second thoughts of historical research into archival
sources. Historians Huub de Beer and Gerard Alberts offer a view
into the boardrooms of the local enterprise Electrologica, and of
the electronics multinational Philips. Where pioneers and
historians meet in an inspiring dialogue, the reader gains a view
on the often implicit decisions constituting the field.
Fortuitously, a copy of the X8 was retrieved from Kiel, Germany,
and put on display at Rijksmuseum Boerhaave, Leiden. Sparked by the
very material presence of an X8, the present book takes stock of
the state of historiography of Electrologica. Gerard Alberts is an
associate professor in History of Digital Cultures, retired from
the University of Amsterdam. Jan Friso Groote is a full professor
of Formal Methods at the Eindhoven University of Technology.
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