The video [here] shows our interview with George Dyson about his new book, Turing’s Cathedral.
The book is a fascinating, meticulously researched account of the effort to build the first universal Turing machine, under the leadership of the mercurial John von Neumann, at the Institute for Advanced Study during the second world war. The resulting computer, called the MANIAC, was used to perform thermonuclear calculations that fueled the development of the atomic bomb, and, in spare moments, to perform mathematical calculations on principles of symbiogenesis and evolution.
The story has a personal side for George, who spent his early years at the Institute, where his father Freeman Dyson worked as a professor, and he remembers playing with some of the parts discarded by the engineers working on the computer project.
via technology review
April 6, 2012
featured blogs
Apr 26, 2024
Biological-inspired developments result in LEDs that are 55% brighter, but 55% brighter than what?...