The Technical and Social History of Software Engineering
“Capers Jones has accumulated the most comprehensive data on every aspect of software engineering, and has performed the most scientific analysis on this data. Now, Capers performs yet another invaluable service to our industry, by documenting, for the first time, its long and fascinating history. C...
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Zusammenfassung: | “Capers Jones has accumulated the
most comprehensive data on every aspect of software engineering,
and has performed the most scientific analysis on this data. Now,
Capers performs yet another invaluable service to our industry, by
documenting, for the first time, its long and fascinating history.
Capers’ new book is a must-read for every software
engineering student and information technology
professional.”— From the Foreword by Tony Salvaggio,
CEO and president, Computer Aid, Inc.Software engineering is one of the
world’s most exciting and important fields. Now, pioneering
practitioner Capers Jones has written the definitive history of
this world-changing industry. Drawing on several decades as a
leading researcher and innovator, he illuminates the field’s
broad sweep of progress and its many eras of invention. He assesses
the immense impact of software engineering on society, and previews
its even more remarkable future. Decade by decade, Jones examines
trends, companies, winners, losers, new technologies,
productivity/quality issues, methods, tools, languages, risks, and
more. He reviews key inventions, estimates industry growth, and
addresses “mysteries” such as why programming languages
gain and lose popularity. Inspired by Paul Starr’s Pulitzer
Prize–winning The Social Transformation of American
Medicine, Jones’ new book is a tour de force—and
compelling reading for everyone who wants to understand how
software became what it is today.COVERAGE INCLUDES• The human need to compute: from
ancient times to the modern era• Foundations of computing: Alan
Turing, Konrad Zuse, and World War II• Big business, big defense, big
systems: IBM, mainframes, and COBOL• A concise history of minicomputers
and microcomputers: the birth of Apple and Microsoft• The PC era: DOS, Windows, and the
rise of commercial software• Innovations in writing and managing
code: structured development, objects, agile, and more• The birth and explosion of the
Internet and the World Wide Web• The growing challenges of legacy
system maintenance and support• Emerging innovations, from wearables
to intelligent agents to quantum computing• Cybercrime, cyberwarfare, and
large-scale software failure |
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