This is actually the fourth edition of this book, which I have been writing and rewriting for 20 years now.
Living With Moore's Law: Past, Present and Future is a collection of essays I have been working toward all my working life. It describes what Moore's Law is, how it developed, and how it extended into every area of computing through the 20th century.
Then it does more. I take the story into the present and explain just what we need to do, as a society, to take advantage of these miracles.
Then it does more. I have written an extra chapter about what comes next, the miracles that await us by harnessing the capabilities created by Moore's Law — clouds, devices, and wireless networks.
I consider it must reading for anyone interested in technology, in what it has done for us, what it's doing to us, and how we need to work with it to save the planet.
Also, it's just $2.99. Free if you get it through Kindle Unlimited, Amazon's $10/month lending library.
Cheap as chips.
Previous versions were offered as The Blankenhorn Effect in 2002, as Moore's Law: Better and Better, Faster and Faster in 2010, and as Technology's Big Bang: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow with Moore's Law, in 2019.
Try OCI now and let me know if you still think ORCL is a faux cloud company. Not right to judge a company without trying its latest offerings.
Try OCI now and let me know if you still think ORCL is a faux cloud company. Not right to judge a company without trying its latest offerings.
The market has spoken on Oracle’s policies regarding open source and the cloud. Microsoft surrendered to these forces and is worth 10 times more. Oracle retains a proprietary attitude, and so long as it does it will be hampered in the market.
The market has spoken on Oracle’s policies regarding open source and the cloud. Microsoft surrendered to these forces and is worth 10 times more. Oracle retains a proprietary attitude, and so long as it does it will be hampered in the market.
Nice post
Nice post