Gerard Alberts (1954) is an historian of digital cultures and historian of mathematical thought. He graduated in mathematics and took his Ph D cum laude in History. Gerard”s key contribution to the history of mathematical thinking is pinpointing the rise of mathematical modeling in the middle of the twentieth century. In history of computing his focus has been on the history of software, and history of hacker culture. Recent work has been on webarchaeology. He his member of the editorial board of Annals of the history of computing and of Internet histories.
Gerard Alberts served the research Eurocores project “Software for Europe” (2007-2011) as its project leader. He is retired associate professor history of digital cultures at University of Amsterdam.
Gerard Alberts is the editor of the Springer series History of Computing.
Jan Friso Groote (1965) is a full professor in Formal Methods at Eindhoven University of Technology. His interest is in efficiently proving the correctness of the software in computer controlled systems. This for instance led to the book, Modeling and Analysis of Communicating Systems, The MIT Press 2014. Before commencing in Eindhoven, in 1997, he studied Computer Science at Twente University and wrote a Ph D on process algebra at CWI, Amsterdam (1991), where he later became a leader of the research group SEN2.
2 Ebooks by Gerard Alberts
Gerard Alberts & Ruth Oldenziel: Hacking Europe
Hacking Europe traces the user practices of chopping games in Warsaw, hacking software in Athens, creating chaos in Hamburg, producing demos in Turku, and partying with computing in Zagreb and Amster …
PDF
English
€90.94
Gerard Alberts & Jan Friso Groote: Tales of Electrologica
Manufacturing computers in series was quite a feat in the 1950s. As mathematical as it gets, the machines discussed here were called X1 and X8. The industrial achievement combined with the background …
PDF
English
€37.44