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Ron White (1) (1944–)

Author of How Computers Work

For other authors named Ron White, see the disambiguation page.

8 Works 867 Members 8 Reviews

About the Author

Ron White is a senior editor at PC Computing, where he writes the How It Works features and the Freeloader column. Founder of one of the earliest PC user groups, he has been writing about computers for 20 years. The second edition of How Computers Work won an award for best non-fiction computer show more book from the Computer Press Association. show less

Works by Ron White

How Computers Work (1992) 746 copies, 8 reviews
MP3 Underground (2000) 12 copies
Inuti datorn (1996) 1 copy
Les Logiciels micro (1993) 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
White, Ronald Clark
Birthdate
1944-11-04
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

5 reviews
How Computers Work is a compendium of all things related to computers and their peripherals. This places it into a very wide subject matter. It doesn’t cover everything that possesses a computer chip, but it does talk about things like Video Game Systems. It focuses more on how the component works rather than the history, but there are occasions where the history is all the component has. For example, the book might talk about ancient connection ports like the RS-232 port or pretty much show more anything before the USB port. The book discusses the underlying physics behind the computer components. In that vein, it talks about how magnetic fields are used, what electromagnetism is, how they produce semiconductors and so much more.

This book is ridiculously thorough; it even has descriptions of UPC and QR Codes and how the computer ‘reads’ them. The book combines descriptive imagery and text to great effect. It is difficult to summarize, so I will just say that if your Desktop, Laptop, or Smartphone has it, this book discusses it.

If you were curious about the history of Operating Systems, Computer Parts, the Internet, and other major components of computers then this book is a good place to start.
show less
A good guide for the novice. But technology books suffer from short shelf lives. This one is no exception. A 1993 computer is practically an antique in that ephemeral world.

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Associated Authors

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Statistics

Works
8
Members
867
Popularity
#29,520
Rating
3.8
Reviews
8
ISBNs
88
Languages
7

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