How Computers Work, 9th Edition, Multi-Touch Version
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- $14.99
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
How Computers Work Multi-Touch Version is an iPad-only edition of the best-selling print book, How Computers Work, which has dazzled readers for years with its incisive look at the inner-workings of computers, printers, monitors, cell phones, networking, operating systems and more. The Multi-Touch version includes many new and exciting features that take the one-of-a-kind How Computers Work experience to the next level. Here's a look at just a few of the new features you'll find in the Multi-Touch version:
The Touch Experience—How Computers Work has always been a beautiful book to look at, with loads of informative content to absorb, but the ability to drag, pinch, and tap your way through its wealth of content is an entirely new experience that enhances every facet of how it teaches you about the computing world.
Interactive Elements—We have added direct interactivity to more than a dozen of the topics covered in this book. Send a power surge into a surge protector to see how it protects your pricey electronics. Drag data into a processor to see how it divides up a work load and computes an answer. You'll even control the flow of light through an LCD monitor as you learn how it generates an image!
Animations, 3D Models, and Video—See first-hand how morphing software morphs a photo or how video compression and resolution change the quality of a digital video. Learn how a 3D model goes from wireframe to textured object and then manipulate that object yourself. Have you ever wondered just how a transistor physically controls the flow of electrons to turn itself on and off? You'll see it in action here!
Customer Reviews
Content needs to be updated
Was very interested in an interactive book to teach my child the fundamentals of computers in an age which all he knows how to use is a touch screen.
Got a sample copy and was very impressed by the interactive features. However, for a book just recently published for iBooks - the content is dated and images/videos seem repurposed or ported from an older medium (some images are even pixilated on the latest retina displays).
One section talks about "tablet" pc's as if the technology is vapor ware and uses old tablet metaphors and concepts such as pen input or hand writing recognition as a demonstration of the technology. This in itself is reason enough to believe the publishers did not give much thought in having the content relevant and just wanted to transition dated content over to the new format. With that in mind, a few may find he interactive features interesting.