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Martin Campbell-Kelly

Author of Computer: A History of the Information Machine

7+ Works 469 Members 9 Reviews

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Martin Campbell-Kelly is professor of computer science at the University of Warwick in England.

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Well written and organized covering the development of the software industry in a logical process - especially if you are already familiar with the underlying hardware from the 50's thru the early 90's. The books largest flaw is how it totally ignores Microsoft's marketing practices to control the PC hardware manufacturers. MS used DOS as a lever to dictate software bundling on new machines. On server software, MS used bundling with low prices to beat down the competition on products like Office.
In fairness the book stops in the early 90's and thus does not consider the impact of the Internet even though the publication date is 2003.
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DoesNotCompute | 3 other reviews | May 5, 2018 |
The history of computers as driven by business and information processing needs. Many great examples of how computers changed things like airline reservations, inventory control, check clearing, etc. The description of nineteenth century check clearing was fascinating. Published in 1996, the WWW is mentioned, but not browsers. The Internet's utility was debated since it wasn't clear then there would ever be a useful way to find anything. Much of the book is really a history of IBM, since IBM dominated computing services for decades.… (more)
 
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encephalical | 4 other reviews | Nov 12, 2017 |
Didn't read much of this , all stuff you've hear before
 
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Baku-X | 4 other reviews | Jan 10, 2017 |
This is an excellent book on the history of the software industry, of value now even though it only just covers up to the opening years of the 21st Century. For anyone whose perspective on software has been through the eye of a consumer, or the production of software in a research context, it is likely to be an eye-opener. Campell-Kelly's work really brings to life the dominance of the commercial market for accountancy systems, inventory control and the like in the history of software revenue and development. He tracks the shift from a diverse world of standalone applications to the increased dominance of integrated software systems, and the extent to which those systems affected how businesses worked. He doesn't ignore the growth of the personal computer market, but sets it in the wider context which it deserves.

This is well-researched, with notes for each chapter which provide evidence, further reading and links to alternative views. Highly recommended.
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kevinashley | 3 other reviews | Jul 11, 2016 |

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