"The science of computing" - Information and Links:

The science of computing - Info and Reading Options

shaping a discipline

"The science of computing" was published by CRC Press in 2015 - flu, it has 280 pages and the language of the book is English.


“The science of computing” Metadata:

  • Title: The science of computing
  • Author:
  • Language: English
  • Number of Pages: 280
  • Publisher: CRC Press
  • Publish Date:
  • Publish Location: flu

“The science of computing” Subjects and Themes:

Edition Specifications:

  • Pagination: xii, 280 pages

Edition Identifiers:

AI-generated Review of “The science of computing”:


"The science of computing" Table Of Contents:

  • 1- Part 1. Introduction
  • 2- part 2. Computer scientists and mathematicians
  • 3- part 3. The fall and rise of engineering
  • 4- part 4. The science of computing
  • 5- part 5. Conclusions.

"The science of computing" Description:

The Open Library:

"Preface "That's not computer science," a professor told me when I abandoned the traditional computer science and software engineering study tracks to pursue computing topics that I thought to be more societally valuable. Very quickly I learned that the best way to respond to such remarks was a series of counter questions about what exactly is computer science and why. The difficulties that many brilliant people had responding those questions led me to suspect that there's something deeper about that topic, yet the more I read about it, the more confused I got. Over the years I've heard the same reason--"That's not computer science"--used to turn down tenure, to reject doctoral theses, and to decline funding. Eventually I became convinced that the nature of computing as a discipline is something worth studying and writing about. Fortunate enough, the word "no" does not belong to the vocabulary of professor Erkki Sutinen, who became my supervisor, academic mentor, colleague, and friend. Throughout my studies in his group I worked on a broad variety of applied computing topics, ranging from unconventional to eccentric, yet in the meanwhile Erkki encouraged me to continue to study computing's disciplinary identity, and I ended up writing, in a great rush, a thesis on the topic. When my curiosity took me from the University of Eastern Finland to Asia and then to Africa for the better half of a decade, I kept on writing small practice essays on computing's identity"--

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