Silicon
A**C
The content is a 10, the book arrived water damaged, and definitely used.
The content is a 10, the book arrived water damaged, and definitely used. Still, I read it, enjoyed it and live on to see an other day, Too bad though, I treat all my books as friends, this one is a gargoyle. You may do better with an other supplier.
S**R
Beautiful Life and Story, brought tears many times... WOW.
An amazing read. I First began programming and assembling computers with a Sinclair ZX81 kit in 1981. At the time, I did not know the man behind the Z80 microprocessor I soldered onto the board, but now I do! I also had a lifelong interest in airplanes, and I even designed my own airfoil and cut all the ribs out of balsa... It was amazing all the parallels. That was the personal stuff... You might be surprised by how connected he was to so many things--even the development of the touch-screen.Even more amazing was to learn about the life of an engineer and inventor who changed the world, definitely someone "in the arena" in the computer revolution. An insider's history of the invention of the microprocessor. He went through so much, and endured so much, worked so hard--A true hero in my eyes. This book will live in your heart. I could not put the book down. I could totally relate to his struggles--which matched my own in the areas of consciousness and brain science. For 30 years now I have tried to get people to listen and understand about the paradoxes of symbolic information and the brain, and I even left graduate school at a prestigious university because I thought that they were wrong—like everyone, I even tried another grad school… So Federico’s struggles with people who said his ideas “couldn’t work” brought tears! But even though I left graduate school to write my own book, I never stopped. I did research on my own, wrote papers and traveled, and I just completed a second book—which I could not put all the diagrams I wanted into it, sorry Federico!!! If you read the book you will understand! Lol! I don’t have a lot of resources and sometimes not enough to eat… because I will never give up. I worked hard and continuously, but when I contacted people, even though they understood some things like the importance of meaning, they didn’t seem to understand the deeper issues. I even chatted with Nobel-prizewinners like Francis Crick back in the day. But he didn't see what Federico clearly sees! This man is a genius. I think he and I would get along well. I can tell him things about my own discoveries and my papers which he would definitely resonate with. I first started with human language ability and usage back in the day --just as he emphasizes. I try to be "in the arena, but even at the consciousness conventions at Tucson, there were so many voices people would only listen to parts… My longtime friend Jordan Peterson still uses my example of building literary meaning from my first book in his lectures and videos. Mr. Faggin has his finger on the pulse of the world. I cant help the tears thinking that he is growing older as all of us will, we need more people like him on this Earth.I say all this to you in my review because this is the type of mind you will be reading about—someone who even when he had all the money he needed, STILL worked HARD for all of humanity with the gifts he has been given, STILL has the deep creative ability and curiosity so fundamental to the advancement of the modern world. If you want to delve into a mind of our times, see into the well of innovation and the struggle of a great soul, you owe it to yourself to read this book!, I dream that one day he could teach me how to appreciate fine Italian wine… Maybe I already do. Maybe I already do. In the symbolic form of this timeless book.
3**1
Fascinating for Zilog Z80 enthusiasts
Faggin founded the Zilog company and invented fundamental tech while driving the development and production of the most successful 8-bit microprocessors of the 1970s, still made and in use today.The middle part and techie appendix of Federico Faggin’s new book Silicon is a fascinating read for Z80 fans.For those who don’t know, he and Masatoshi Shima were the chip engineers who founded Zilog and created the Z80 - they also actually implemented the 4004, 8008 and 8080 while working at Intel, then got written out of history (only briefly) by Intel suits who had no idea how to make a CPU or build anything but RAM but were incensed when Faggin left after years struggling against their reluctance to make chips that Intel thought would compete with their intended customers, the big (and doomed) mainframe corporations.The name Zilog is a pun on Intel, with the Z (akin to Omega) standing for the end (of the alphabet) and iLog referring to Integrated Logic.It’s not specifically a book for engineers or programmers, though. The first part is conventional biography of an Italian born to educated parents during the Nazi war. The last is a non-rigorous personal endorsement of Ada Lovelace’s declaration that computers cannot originate anything, which I find hard to argue with - though imaginatively denying it is, as I write, very lucrative.The techie part about chip development is the substance of this insightful book by a very bright man of international stature.I can’t wait for Shima to write his side.
S**E
Mind over Matter
Very pleasant biography by the european CPU pioneer. Gives a good impression on how much dedication it took to work on the 4004 and later design the legendary Z80 which surpassed Intel for a few years.If you liked Federico's book you might also enjoy:"Konrad Zuse - The Computer - My Life" (1993) who was a German developer of one of the very first computers before and during WW2 and "Hans Camenzind - Much Ado About Almost Nothing" (2007) by the Swiss inventor of the 555 timer.If you want to try using a Z80 there are many open source projects and motherboard options. One easy start is with a Z80-MBC2. You can get an inexpensive Z80-MBC2 as a PCB on ebay, then order all required components and solder them yourself or get a populated one. The official project page of the Z80-MBC2 can be found on hackaday io.
S**O
Stile fluido e semplice. Un must per gli appassionati di elettronica e sulle nuove frontiere dell'AI
Ho preferito la versione inglese a quella italiana non solo per assoporare il libro nella lingua originale ma perchè la versione inglese contiene alcune integrazioni negli ultimi capitoli. Stile semplice e appassionante che trasmette l'intensità con la quale Federico Faggin ha vissuto non una ma ben quattro vite diverse. Da ex nerd dell'elettronica mi è piaciuta molto la parte in cui Faggin racconta lo sviluppo dei circuiti integrati e del primo microprocessore, anche se ai non addetti ai lavori questa parte potrebbe risultare un po' pesante.
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