Deconstructing the Computer Deconstructing the Computer

Deconstructing the Computer

Report of a Symposium

    • $22.900
    • $22.900

Descripción editorial

Starting in the mid 1990s, the United States economy experienced an unprecedented upsurge in economic productivity. Rapid technological change in communications, computing, and information management continue to promise further gains in productivity, a phenomenon often referred to as the New Economy. To better understand this phenomenon, the National Academies Board on Science, Technology, and Economic Policy (STEP) has convened a series of workshops and commissioned papers on Measuring and Sustaining the New Economy.

This major workshop, entitled Deconstructing the Computer, brought together leading industrialists and academic researchers to explore the contribution of the different components of computers to improved price-performance and quality of information systems. The objective was to help understand the sources of the remarkable growth of American productivity in the 1990s, the relative contributions of computers and their underlying components, and the evolution and future contributions of the technologies supporting this positive economic performance.

GÉNERO
Negocios y finanzas personales
PUBLICADO
2005
28 de septiembre
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
182
Páginas
EDITORIAL
National Academies Press
VENDEDOR
National Academy of Sciences
TAMAÑO
1.5
MB
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