Left Brains for the Right Stuff
Computers, Space, and History
What made the Space Race possible? What made it necessary? How close a race was it? And what did it achieve? The answers are connected in surprising ways. Left Brains for the Right Stuff briefly summarizes the history of three technologies-rockets, navigation, and computers-and recounts how they were woven into the rise and rivalry of superpowers in the twentieth century. President John F. Kennedy inherited a small Space Race and transformed it into a Moon Race by creating the Apollo program (... achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon ...). To make it an offer the Soviet Union couldn't refuse, he added, We…
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Produktdetails
- ISBN: 978-0-9964345-3-9
- EAN: 9780996434539
- Produktnummer: 19164431
- Verlag: SDP Publishing
- Sprache: Englisch
- Erscheinungsjahr: 2015
- Seitenangabe: 474 S.
- Masse: H22.9 cm x B15.2 cm x D2.5 cm 681 g
- Abbildungen: Paperback
- Gewicht: 681
Über den Autor
As the Space Race began, Hugh Blair-Smith joined the engineering staff of MIT's Instrumentation Laboratory, founded by Charles Stark Doc Draper to develop self-contained inertial navigation for missiles, aircraft, and spacecraft. That timing gave him a ground-floor spot with Apollo's Primary Guidance, Navigation, and Control system, where he became the software specialist on the Apollo Guidance Computer design team, and the computer hardware specialist on the AGC programming team. Halfway through a 22-year career at MIT, he refocused on fault tolerance logic for the Space Shuttle's onboard computer system. Direct contact with astronauts included Buzz Aldrin (studying rendezvous science at MIT), Dave Scott (among the first to fully embrace the AGC way of flying), and Bob Crippen (a team member on the Shuttle work). Leaving MIT at the end of 1981, he specialized in user-interface and system-performance software, and after retiring to Cape Cod in 2005, worked with NASA on reliability software for an instrument in the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, thereby placing thousands of his own ones and zeros in orbit around the Moon. Hugh and his wife Vicki, married since 1968, have two grown children, who are successful professionals. There are also two teenaged grandchildren and approximately twenty-five granddogs. When he's not sailing or preparing a paper to give at the next Digital Avionics Systems Conference, he enjoys teaching boating skills, reading (mostly history and other non-fiction), avoiding watching television, taking medium walks and thinking long thoughts, and puzzling out the meaning in a busy life.
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