Content introduction:
This book tells the history of the development of computers and the Internet from scratch, and vividly depicts the group of innovators in the digital age.
In the nearly 200 years of digitalization, the stars shine. Isaacson starts with Eda, the daughter of a computer program creator and poet Byron, and counts these innovators who stand at the intersection of science and humanities. They include Di Qili, the creator of general electronic computer, von Neumann, the scientist, the Eight Rebellions of Fairchild Semiconductor, Turing the genius, Grove of Intel, Bill Gates of Microsoft and Jobs of Apple. Innovators: How a group of technocrats and talented programmers subvert the world explores what makes them turn their foresight into a subversive reality and tells how they collaborate and innovate to achieve a creative leap.
In addition, Isaacson also discussed the social and cultural forces that provide the soil for innovation.
Innovators: How a Group of Technocrats and Ghost Programmers Subvert the World illustrates the core spirit of the Internet by depicting the magnificent innovation prospects in the digital age, so that we can better understand this beautiful and interconnected new world. These pioneers, hackers, geniuses and entrepreneurs with unrestrained creativity are not isolated. They even created the miracle of the integration of science and technology and humanities through intergenerational cooperation-this is the temperament of the digital age.
About the author:
Walter Isaacson, a Harvard graduate, is the CEO of AspenInstitute. He is the chairman of CNN and the editor-in-chief of Time magazine. His major works include Biography of Steve Jobs, Biography of Einstein, Biography of Founder Benjamin Franklin, etc.
The Innovator is Isaacson's work in 15, and was nominated for the National Book Award. ?