Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Harvard University Press, 1959
Da: BookDepart, Shepherdstown, WV, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condizione: UsedGood. Hardcover; Part 2 only; The Annals of the Computation Laboratory of Harvard University, Volume 30; surplus library copy with the usual stampings; scuf fing, light soiling, and shelf wear to exterior; corners bumped; fading to pages; in good condition with clean text, firm binding. No dust jacket.
Editore: Harvard University Press, 1951
Da: GuthrieBooks, Spring Branch, TX, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condizione: Very Good. Ex-Library hardcover (orange boards) with all the usual markings and attachments. Text block clean and unmarked. Tight binding.
Editore: HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS, CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS, 1959
Da: Princeton Antiques Bookshop / Ruffolo Enterprises, Atlantic City, NJ, U.S.A.
HARD BACK BLUE. Condizione: GIFT QUALITY. JACKET: GOOD DJ. Gold Gilt title on spine. Volume 1: Dust jacket has mild book shelf edge wear. Brown cover on the dust jacket moderate. Bookplate of previous owner pasted in on the paste-down. Light bowing. Volume 2: Bookplate of previous owner laid in with glue remains on the paste-down. Small spot on the back free endpaper and pastedown. Dust jacket is torn on top. Some discoloration on the fore edge from light shelf wear. to provide researchers an opportunity to evaluate the rapid changes in their field brought about by the advent of the electronic digital computer. "Prior to the advent of large-scale digital computers, switching theory was concerned primarily with the theory of relay-contact networks. Since that time the invention of many new switches, including rectifiers, transistors, and magnetic cores, and the burgeoning growth in both variety and number of applications have considerably broadened its scope" (p. v). Participants in the symposium included Arthur W. Burks ("The logic of fixed and growing automata"), Antonin Svoboda ("Some applications of contact grids"), Jan A. Rajchman ("Principles of transfluxor and core circuits") and Nobel Laureate John H. Van Vleck, who delivered the opening remarks. Origins of Cyberspace 421. DATE PUBLISHED: 1959 EDITION: 305.