![]() ![]() Bern Dibner's Heralds of Science also cited that and Napier's Rabdologiae. Harrison Horblit's One Hundred Books Famous in Science and Printing and the Mind of Man cited only the seventeenth century invention of logarithms by John Napier relative to the history of computing. There are 1411 annotated entries.įew of the bibliographies of scientific and technological classics consulted by twentieth-century science collectors included any representation of computing. ![]() The material it describes ranges chronologically from 1613 to about 1970. This book, published in an edition of 500 copies, describes a library of technical reports, books, pamphlets, ephemera, letters, typescripts, manuscripts, prints, photographs, blueprints, and medals on the history of computing, networking, and related aspects of telecommunications. ![]()
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