Computers are the foundation of the information age, but communication technology is the foundation of the foundation. Without the theories and practical applications of theory brought to us by the pioneers of communication, the computer age would perhaps have remained in the back office, hidden away as infrastructure like electricity or running water - critical to modern life, but not as transforming as the combination of communications and computing. The information age exploded once machines were endowed with the ability to talk among themselves. The Signal connects everything to everything else, in both communication, and in the metaphorical sense as the link between and among people.
Features
Inhaltsverzeichnis
1. The Blasphemy of Zero
2. Most People Think I Am Dead
3. Elvis Has Left The Building
4. Butterflies and Bits
5. The Fountainhead
6. The Day The Music Died
7. Radio Is Dead - Long Live Radio
8. 128 Ears To Listen
9. Spooky Action At a Distance
10. Signals From Hell
"Lewis (emer. , Naval Postgraduate School) offers a personal view of the history of signal processing. The historical aspect is accessible, but the mathematics is not for beginners.
Still, this work provides a brief overview of important advanced concepts in approximately historical order and might serve well in advanced courses as a basis for understanding just how much there is to grasp about signal processing."
-- P. L. Kantor, Rockefeller College of Public Affairs & Policy
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