AUDIOBOOK

ENIAC

The Triumphs and Tragedies of the World's First Computer

Scott McCartney
4
(9)
Duration
6h 19m
Year
2012
Language
English

About

The true father of the modern computer was not John von Neumann, as he is generally credited. That honor belongs to the two men, John Mauchly and Presper Eckert, who built the world's first programmable computer: the legendary ENIAC (Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer). Mauchly and Eckert developed a revolutionary vision: to make electricity "think." Funded by the U.S. Army, the team they led constructed a behemoth weighing thirty tons with eighteen thousand vacuum tubes and miles of wiring that blazed a trail to the next generation of computers that quickly followed. Based on original interviews with surviving participants and the first study of Mauchly and Eckert's personal papers, ENIAC is a dramatic human story and a vital contribution to the history of technology that restores to the two inventors the legacy they deserve.

Related Subjects

Reviews

"McCartney has performed an important service by rescuing this tale from obscurity."
Philadelphia Inquirer
"[ENIAC] tells an absorbing story and sheds light on a moment when our world was transformed."
New York Times
"This lively account of the computer pioneers of another era not only fills a black hole in the history of technology, but demonstrates that the same chaotic and unpredictable creative processes that gave birth to the PC led, decades earlier, to the creation of the first mainframes. Without ENIAC, there could have been no Apple II, no IBMPC, no Macintosh."
Wall Street Journal

Artists