Saturday, April 19, 2008

Turing's Cathedral

Apr 2008


(69 min)

George Dyson presents:
New Light on the Dawn of Digital Computing, 1945-1958

The digital universe consists of two kinds of bits: differences in space and differences in time. Digital computers translate between these two forms of information--structure and sequence--according to definite rules. Sixty-three years ago, at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, NJ, John von Neumann and a small group of nonconformists launched a project to do this at electronic speed. The resulting architecture and coding has descended directly to almost all computers now in use.

Von Neumann succeeded in jump-starting the computer revolution by bringing engineers into the den of the mathematicians, rather than by bringing mathematicians into a den of engineers. The stored-program computer, as conceived by Alan Turing and delivered by John von Neumann, broke the distinction between numbers that *mean* things and numbers that *do* things. Our universe would never be the same.

With a mere 5 kilobytes of random access memory, von Neumann and colleagues tackled previously intractable problems ranging from thermonuclear explosions, stellar evolution, and long-range weather forecasting to cellular automata, genetic coding, and the origins of life. Programs were small enough to be completely debugged, but hardware could not be counted on to perform consistently from one kilocycle to the next. This situation is now reversed.

Friday, April 18, 2008

Authors@Google: Jeffrey D. Sachs

Apr 2008


(1 hr 12 min)

Economist Jeffrey D. Sachs discusses his book, "Common Wealth: Economics for a Crowded Planet."

For more information http://www.sachs.earth.columbia.edu

Authors@Google: International Rescue Committee

Mar 2008


(55 min)

Monday, April 14, 2008

The Kings: From Babylon To Baghdad (History Channel)


(1 hr 30 min)

In the documentary:

The region now known as Iraq has always been, in many ways, world history's ground zero. From this rich territory sprang the earliest cities and empires, earliest armies, and earliest tyrants. It tells the story of Iraq through the history of its rulers, from Sargon the Great to Saddam Hussein.