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Computing Tomorrow

Computing Tomorrow

Computing Tomorrow

Future Research Directions in Computer Science
Ian Wand, University of York
Robin Milner, University of Cambridge
March 2009
Paperback
9780521103091

    First published in 1996, this collection of essays by distinguished computer scientists celebrates the achievements of research and speculates about the unsolved problems in computer science that require future investigation. Since the subject stretches from technology in the field, through engineering design to foundations in mathematics, there is a wide variety of concerns and approaches among the authors. The book's purpose is to show that long-term research in computer science is crucial and that it must not be driven solely by commercial considerations. The authors do not shirk the difficult aspects of their topics, but try to expose them in the simplest terms possible without diluting them, in order that the reader can understand the issues involved. Thus the book also represents a broad overview of much of the state of knowledge and future expectations of computer science, illustrating that it is much more than a technology and it is a fully fledged and growing intellectual discipline with its own engineering principles and its own scientific concepts and models. It will be stimulating reading because it represents the views of prominent authorities who have had a significant impact on the direction of innovation, research and development in computer science.

    • Stimulating and readable essays by world class computer scientists
    • Gives overview of main achievements and directions in computer science
    • Covers the full breadth of computer science
    • Contributors have international reputation; one cited by Bill Gates in the NY Times as one of the ten most influential figures of the post war period

    Reviews & endorsements

    Review of the hardback: 'Computing Tomorrow lifts you out of the usual lemming hype about computers to the central research issues … these 16 essays by leading British academics range from the overacting human issues, down to the fascinating mathematical problems.' New Scientist

    See more reviews

    Product details

    March 2009
    Paperback
    9780521103091
    384 pages
    229 × 152 × 22 mm
    0.56kg
    23 b/w illus. 3 tables
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Preface
    • Contributors
    • 1. The complexity of algorithms M. D. Atkinson
    • 2. Building novel software: the researcher and the marketplace P. J. Brown
    • 3. Prospects for artificial intelligence Alan Bundy
    • 4. Structured parallel programming: theory meets practice John Darlington, Yi-ke Guo and Hing Wing To
    • 5. Computer science and mathematics J. H. Davenport
    • 6. Paradigm merger in natural language processing Gerald Gazdar
    • 7. Large databases and knowledge reuse P. M. D. Gray
    • 8. The global-yet-personal information system J. R. Gurd and C. B. Jones
    • 9. Algebra and models C. A. R. Hoare
    • 10. Real-time computing Mathai Joseph
    • 11. Evaluation of software dependability Bev Littlewood
    • 12. Engineering safety-critical systems John A. McDermid
    • 13. Semantic ideas in computing Robin Milner
    • 14. Computers and communications R. M. Needham
    • 15. Interactive computing in tomorrow's computer science William Newman
    • 16. On the importance of being the right size Simon Peyton Jones
    • References
    • Index.
      Contributors
    • M. D. Atkinson, P. J. Brown, Alan Bundy, John Darlington, Yi-ke Guo, Hing Wing To, J. H. Davenport, Gerald Gazdar, P. M. D. Gray, J. R. Gurd, C. B. Jones, C. A. R. Hoare, Mathai Joseph, Bev Littlewood, John A. McDermid, Robin Milner, R. M. Needham, William Newman, Simon Peyton Jones