The last lecture course that Nobel Prize winner Richard P. Feynman gave to students at Caltech from 1983 to 1986 was not on physics but on computer science. The first edition of the Feynman Lectures on Computation, published in 1996, provided an overview of standard and not-so-standard topics in computer science given in Feynman’s inimitable style. Although now over 20 years old, most of the ...
Feynman Lectures on Computation | Anniversary Edition | Tony Hey | Tay
Page — (1/324) Favorite Feynman lectures on computation by Feynman, Richard P. (Richard Phillips), 1918-1988 Publication date 1999 Topics
The last lecture course that Nobel Prize winner Richard P. Feynman gaveto students at Caltech from 1983 to 1986 was not on physics but on computerscience. The first edition of the Feynman Lectures on Computation, publishedin 1996, provided an overview of...
Feynman Lectures on Computation The last lecture course that Nobel Prize winner Richard P. Feynman gave to students at Caltech from 1983 to 1986 was not on physics but on computer science. The first edition of the Feynman Lectures on Computation, published in 1996, provided an overview of standard and not-so-standard topics in computer science given in Feynman’s inimitable style. Although ...
The last lecture course that Nobel Prize winner Richard P. Feynman gaveto students at Caltech from 1983 to 1986 was not on physics but on computerscience. The first edition of the Feynman Lectures on Computation, publishedin 1996, provided an overview of standard and not-so-standard topics incomputer science given in Feynman’s inimitable style. Although nowover 20 years old, most of the ...
The lectures that year were given by Feynman and Hopfield with guest lectures from experts such as Marvin Minsky, John Cocke and Charles Bennett. In the spring of 1983, through his connection with MIT and his son Carl, Feynman worked as a consultant for Danny Hillis at Thinking Machines, an ambitious, new parallel computer company.