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         Shannon Claude:     more books (61)
  1. Mathematical Theory of Communication 1st Edition by Claude E. Shannon and Warren Weaver, 1949
  2. A symbolic analysis of relay and switching circuits by Claude Elwood Shannon, 1952
  3. Ein / Aus by Claude E. Shannon, 2000
  4. Claude Elwood Shannon: Miscellaneous writings by Claude Elwood Shannon, 1993
  5. S-Box: Cryptography, Symmetric-Key Algorithm, Block Cipher, Ciphertext, Claude Shannon, Confusion and Diffusion, Bit, Twofish, Key, Bruce Schneier, International Data Encryption Algorithm
  6. CLAUDE E. SHANNON by CLAUDE E. SHANNON, 1993
  7. Claude E. Shannon - Collected Papers by CLAUDE E. SHANNON, 1993
  8. The Mathmatical Theory of Communication by Claude E./ Weaver, Warren Shannon, 1964
  9. Programming a computer for playing chess by Claude Elwood Shannon, 1949
  10. Communication in the presence of noise by Claude E Shannon, 1949
  11. The Mathematical Theory of Communication by Claude, Warren Weaver Shannon, 1959
  12. Automata studies (Annals of mathematical studies;no.34) by Claude Elwood Shannon, 1956
  13. Miscellaneous writings by Claude Elwood Shannon, 1994
  14. Introduction to Simulation Using Siman by Robert E. Shannon, Randall P. Sadowski, C. Dennis Pegden Claude Dennis Pegden, 1995

61. Histoire De L'Informatique : Liens : Résumé Des Liens Présentés Ailleurs Dan
Translate this page claude shannon Article shannon,claude Elwood. claude shannon, Fatherof Information Theory, Dies at 84 Article shannon,claude Elwood.
http://www.histoire-informatique.org/liens/resumeliens.html
Résumé des liens présentés ailleurs dans le site

62. AT&T ACES PKI Center
Return to Customer Support Center. claude shannon. claude Elwood shannon,an mathematician born in Gaylord, Michigan (US) in 1916, is
http://www.aces.att.com/glossary/claude_shannon.htm

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algorithm authentication authorization ... Return to Customer Support Center Claude Shannon Claude Elwood Shannon, an mathematician born in Gaylord, Michigan (U.S.) in 1916, is credited with two important contributions to information technology: the application of Boolean theory to electronic switching, thus laying the groundwork for the digital computer, and developing the new field called information theory . It is difficult to overstate the impact which Claude Shannon has had on the 20th century and the way we live and work in it, yet he remains practically unknown to the general public. Shannon spent the bulk of his career, a span of over 30 years from 1941 to 1972, at Bell Labs where he worked as a mathematician dedicated to research. While a graduate student at MIT in the late 1930s, Shannon worked for Vannevar Bush who was at that time building a mechanical computer, the Differential Analyser. Shannon had the insight to apply the two-valued Boolean logic to electrical circuits (which could be in either of two states - on or off). This syncretism of two hitherto distinct fields earned Shannon his MS in 1937 and his doctorate in 1940. Not content with laying the logical foundations of both the modern telephone switch and the digital computer, Shannon went on to invent the discipline of information theory and revolutionize the field of communications. He developed the concept of entropy in communication systems, the idea that information is based on uncertainty. This concept says that the more uncertainty in a communication channel, the more information that can be transmitted and vice versa. Shannon used mathematics to define the capacity of any communications channel and optimize the signal-to-noise ratio. He envisioned the possibility of error-free communications for telecommunications, the Internet, and satellite systems.

63. Claude Shannon Bios

http://www.utexas.edu/coc/journalism/SOURCE/j363/shannon.html
Class Bios of Claude Shannon
Bio 1... by Julie Chen:
Introduction Humble beginnings Education Theoretical contributions
Information source Transmitter Signal + Received signal Receiver Destination (message sent) (message received) Furthermore, Shannon developed an explanatory concept of balancing entropy and redundancy to achieve efficiency in the communication process. This would be the other half of his climactic achievements. The concept of entropy, as noise in a channel, and its effect on communications aided the understanding of and the progress towards improving information transmission. Basically, the increase in noise causes a greater need for redundancy, which reduces the relative entropy of the message. However, redundancy in turn reduces the amount of information that can be transmitted in a given time. The idea, then, is to somehow balance the two antagonizing elements to achieve utmost efficiency from the total system. Here is my non-scientific analogy: Compare the communication system mentioned above to the classroom setting, perhaps J363 at the University. The more conversational dialogue (

64. FUSION Anomaly. Claude Shannon
Telex External Link Internal Link Inventory Cache. claude shannon ThisnOde last updated December 1st, 2001 and is permanently morphing
http://fusionanomaly.net/claudeshannon.html
Telex External Link Internal Link Inventory Cache
Claude Shannon
This nOde last updated December 1st, and is permanently morphing...

(9 Ik (Wind) / Mak - 12.19.

Claude Shannon, a lone-wolf genius, is still known to his neighbors in Cambridge, Massachusetts, for his skill at riding a motorcycle. In 1937, as a twenty-one-year-old graduate student, he showed that Boole 's logical algebra was the perfect tool for analyzing the complex networks of switching circuits used in telephone systems and, later, in computers. During the war and afterward, Shannon established the mathematical foundation of information theory. Together with cybernetics, this collection of theorems about information and communication created a new way to understand people and machinesand established information as a cosmic fundamental, along with energy and matter.
immediate
impact. Vacuum tube circuits simply could not calculate the complex codes needed to approach the Shannon limit. Not until early 1970's, with the advent of high speed integrated circuits did engineers begin to fully exploit information theory. Today Shannon's insights have shaped virtually all systems that store, process or transmit information in digital form. Obviously this information applies to the above applications but science and computer technology is returning to the much older concept of connectionism. "Does not the fiction of an isolated object imply a kind of absurdity , since this object borrows its physical properties from the relations which it maintains with all others and owes each of its determinations, and consequently its very existence, to the place which it occupies in the universe as a whole".

65. As Others See Us
Devlin's Angle. March 2001. claude shannon. Mathematician claude shannon died onSaturday February 22, aged 84, after a long struggle with Alzheimer's disease.
http://www.maa.org/devlin/devlin_3_01.html
Devlin's Angle
March 2001
Claude Shannon
Mathematician Claude Shannon died on Saturday February 22, aged 84, after a long struggle with Alzheimer's disease. But his intellectual legacy will live on as long as people communicate using phone and fax, log on to the Internet, or simply talk about "information" as a commodity that can be measured in "bits" and shipped from place to place. The approach to information and communication Shannon laid out in his groundbreaking paper "A Mathematical Theory of Communication," published in the Bell System Technical Journal in 1948, and republished virtually unchanged in the pamphlet The Mathematical Theory of Communication he wrote with Warren Weaver the following year (published by the University of Illinois Press) remain current to this day. (Note how the "a" of his paper became "the" in the Shannon-Weaver version.) Shannon was born in Michigan in 1916. After obtaining degrees in both mathematics and engineering at the University of Michigan, he went to MIT to pursue graduate studies in mathematics. There he came into contact with some of the men who were laying much of the groundwork for the information revolution that would take off after the Second World War, notably the mathematician Norbert Wiener (who later coined the term cybernetics for some of the work in information theory that he, Shannon, and others did at MIT and elsewhere) and Vannevar Bush, the dean of engineering at MIT (whose conceptual "Memex" machine foretold the modern World Wide Web and whose subsequent achievements included the establishment of the National Science Foundation).

66. Biographical Profile: Claude Shannon
claude shannon US scientist claude Elwood shannon was author of The MathematicalTheory of Communication (PDF), a seminal work in information theory once
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Claude Shannon
US scientist Claude Elwood Shannon was author of The Mathematical Theory of Communication PDF ), a seminal work in information theory once described as "the magna carta of the information age". life Born in 1916, Shannon was a distant relation of Thomas Edison and shared that inventor's passion for tinkering but not, apparently, his mania for self-promotion. He grew up in Gaylord, Michigan, almost as a parody of the fin de siecle boy scientist: building model planes, a radio-controlled boat and telegraph system, earning pocket money from a paper route and delivering telegrams. Shannon graduated from the University of Michigan in 1936 with a Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering and Bachelor of Science in Mathematics. He moved to MIT the same year, as research assistant in the Department of Electrical Engineering.

67. Theory Of Data Compression
I. Introduction and Background. claude E. shannon. ($13 paper version); CEshannon, NJ Sloane, and AD Wyner, claude Elwood shannon Collected Papers.
http://www.data-compression.com/theory.html

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Diamond Rio 500 Portable MP3 Player Memory Upgrade: $1.23 per issue: Ebay Auction: $1.83 per issue: Theory of Data Compression Contents
  • Introduction and Background Source Modeling Entropy Rate of a Source Shannon Lossless Source Coding Theorem ... References
  • I. Introduction and Background Claude E. Shannon In his 1948 paper, `` A Mathematical Theory of Communication ,'' Claude E. Shannon formulated the theory of data compression. Shannon established that there is a fundamental limit to lossless data compression. This limit, called the entropy rate , is denoted by H . The exact value of H depends on the information source - more specifically, the statistical nature of the source. It is possible to compress the source, in a lossless manner, with compression rate close to H . It is mathematically impossible to do better than H Shannon also developed the theory of lossy data compression. This is better known as rate-distortion theory . In lossy data compression, the decompressed data does not have to be exactly the same as the original data. Instead, some amount of

    68. ECHO Science & Technology Memory Bank
    exploring collecting history online, Science Technology, memory bank claude shannon,
    http://echo.gmu.edu/shannon/
    Tor Aulin, Claude Shannon, and Torleiv Maseng
    (photograph courtesy of Torleiv Maseng)
    Add your recollections of Claude Shannon, or how his theories influenced your work, to our online memorial

    Read all contributions to our memorial

    Featured Site:
    Brandeis University's Arthur Lewbel, an economist and founder of the M.I.T Juggling Club, remembers Claude Shannon's humor, innovative mathematics, and amazing juggling machines. The site includes video of these machines as well as Shannon himself juggling.
    Go to the site

    Best of the Web
    On Claude Shannon:

    The Significance of Shannon's Work

    Shannon Day at Bell Labs, 1998
    Shannon Theory: Present and Future Lucent's History of Shannon and Information Theory Biographies of Shannon: N.J.A. Sloane and A.D. Wyner Digital Century The University of Pittsburgh The University of Texas ... Charles A. Gimon

    69. Michigan Engineering - Claude Shannon Statue
    CoE Home / Alumni / Events / Recent Events / claude shannon StatueEECS Unveils Statue of claude shannon. click thumbnail images
    http://www.engin.umich.edu/alumni/events/recentevents/shannon.html
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    Michigan Engineering Alumni Weekend 2002 Student/Alumni Networking Dinner Student/Alumni Networking Dinner Part 2 Forum on the Future I : "Trading Agents" ... Engineering Tailgate Claude Shannon Statue Emeritus Weekend 2002 Photo Album Block M Dedication Nobel Prize-Winner Herbert Kroemer Visit to Deliver the 2002 Goff Smith Lecture back to Events ... Recent Events Claude Shannon Statue
    EECS Unveils Statue of Claude Shannon
    [ click thumbnail images below to view a larger image ] Alumni, faculty, staff, students and friends gathered at noon, November 9, for the unveiling of a statue that honors the memory of UM alumnus Claude Shannon (BSE '36, BSE EM '36) a noted pioneer and innovator of the digital age. The statue stands at the west entrance of the EECS building. Shannon's mathematical theory, represented by the equation C = w log [(P + N)/N], inspired revolutionary advances that have immeasurably influenced digital communications and, consequently, all of today's world. (For more information about Shannon's work, see the articles about him in the Michigan Engineer, Spring/Summer 1999, and The University Record, Feb. 1, 1999.) Celebratory cake with Shannon's renowned mathematical equation.

    70. Michigan Engineering - Claude Shannon Statue
    CoE Home / Alumni / Events / Recent Events / Recent Events / claudeshannon Statue EECS Unveils Statue of claude shannon. click
    http://www.engin.umich.edu/alumni/events/recentevents/recentevents/shannon.html
    COE HOME COLLEGE PROFILE ADMISSIONS STUDENTS ... ALUMNI
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    Michigan Engineering Alumni Weekend 2002 Student/Alumni Networking Dinner Student/Alumni Networking Dinner Part 2 Forum on the Future I : "Trading Agents" ... Recent Events Claude Shannon Statue
    EECS Unveils Statue of Claude Shannon
    [ click thumbnail images below to view a larger image ] Alumni, faculty, staff, students and friends gathered at noon, November 9, for the unveiling of a statue that honors the memory of UM alumnus Claude Shannon (BSE '36, BSE EM '36) a noted pioneer and innovator of the digital age. The statue stands at the west entrance of the EECS building. Shannon's mathematical theory, represented by the equation C = w log [(P + N)/N], inspired revolutionary advances that have immeasurably influenced digital communications and, consequently, all of today's world. (For more information about Shannon's work, see the articles about him in the Michigan Engineer, Spring/Summer 1999, and The University Record, Feb. 1, 1999.) Celebratory cake with Shannon's renowned mathematical equation. Dr. Robert Lucky, vice president, Applied Research, Telcordia Technologies, spoke about the impact of Shannon - the man and the mathematician.

    71. Claude Elwood Shannon: Collected Papers
    Contents Preface; Introduction; Biography of claude Elwood shannon; claude shannonInterview by Anthony Liversidge; Bibliography of claude Elwood shannon
    http://shop.ieee.org/store/product.asp?prodno=PC3319

    72. Biological Information Theory And Chowder Society Tribute To Claude E. Shannon
    Remembering claude shannon a project at the George Mason University memoryproject. claude shannon Obituary claude shannon (19162001).
    http://www.lecb.ncifcrf.gov/~toms/shannontribute.html
    Claude Elwood Shannon
    April 30, 1916 - February 24, 2001
    Claude Elwood Shannon was born in Petoskey, Michigan, on April 30, 1916. He graduated with a B.S. in mathematics and electrical engineering from the University of Michigan in 1936. Shannon earned both a master's degree and a doctorate in 1940 as a student of Vannevar Bush at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. At that time Vannevar Bush was vice president of M.I.T. and dean of the engineering school, and actively conducting research on his invention the differential analyzer, the first reliable analog computer that solved differential equations. Shannon's electrical engineering master's thesis "A Symbolic Analysis of Relay and Switching Circuits" has been described as one of the most important master's theses ever written. In it Shannon applied George Boole's binary (true-false) logic algebra found in Russell and Whitehead's Principia Mathematica to the problem of electronic (on-off) switching circuits. At the time, Boolean arithmetic was little known or used outside the field of mathematical logic. Because of Shannon's work, Boolean arithmetic is the basis for the design and operation of every computer in the world. For his Ph.D. dissertation in mathematics, Shannon applied mathematics to genetics. This work was influenced by Norbert Wiener, one of his coworkers with Vannevar Bush at MIT. Wiener studied how the nervous system and machines perform the functions of communication and control, and as acknowledged by Shannon, Wiener made some early contributions to the field of information theory.

    73. WileyEurope :: Claude E. Shannon: Collected Papers
    claude Elwood shannon Collected Papers This collection contains all of claude Elwoodshannon’s published works, as well as many that have never before been
    http://www.wileyeurope.com/cda/product/0,,0780304349,00.html
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    74. All Too Flat : Geeky : Scientists
    Name claude shannon (19162001) Writes Left Dominant Cortex Left UniversityMIT Key Contributions shannon is known as the father of information theory.
    http://www.alltooflat.com/geeky/scientists/?idx=10

    75. Technology Review Claude Shannon Reluctant Father Of The
    claude shannon Reluctant Father of the Digital Age A juggling unicyclist transformed information from a vague idea into a precise concept that underlies the
    http://www.techreview.com/articles/waldrop0701.asp
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    Claude Shannon: Reluctant Father of the Digital Age
    By M. Mitchell Waldrop
    July/August 2001
    Pick up a favorite CD. Now drop it on the floor. Smear it with your fingerprints. Then slide it into the slot on the player—and listen as the music comes out just as crystal clear as the day you first opened the plastic case. Before moving on with the rest of your day, give a moment of thought to the man whose revolutionary ideas made this miracle possible: Claude Elwood Shannon. Shannon, who died in February after a long illness, was one of the greatest of the giants who created the information age. John von Neumann, Alan Turing and many other visionaries gave us computers that could process information. But it was Claude Shannon who gave us the modern concept of information—an intellectual leap that earns him a place on whatever high-tech equivalent of Mount Rushmore is one day established. The entire science of information theory grew out of one electrifying paper that Shannon published in 1948, when he was a 32-year-old researcher at Bell Laboratories. Shannon showed how the once-vague notion of information could be defined and quantified with absolute precision. He demonstrated the essential unity of all information media, pointing out that text, telephone signals, radio waves, pictures, film and every other mode of communication could be encoded in the universal language of binary digits, or bits—a term that his article was the first to use in print. Shannon laid forth the idea that once information became digital, it could be transmitted without error. This was a breathtaking conceptual leap that led directly to such familiar and robust objects as CDs. Shannon had written "a blueprint for the digital age," says MIT information theorist Robert Gallager, who is still awed by the 1948 paper.

    76. I, Cringely | The Pulpit
    Cringely claude shannon died last week at a nursing home in Massachusetts.At communication. I knew claude shannon, not well, but I knew him. We
    http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/pulpit20010301.html
    MARCH 1, 2001 Claude Who?
    The Passing of Another Computing Pioneer Reminds Us of How Much We Have Already Forgotten
    By Robert X. Cringely

    Claude Shannon died last week at a nursing home in Massachusetts. At 84, his mind once so great was clouded by Alzheimer's Disease, so in a sense I suppose it was only Shannon's body that died, but that, too, is a passage. For those who don't know about Shannon, he was the father of information theory, which in its simplest form means he made possible the leap from telephones and telegraphs to computers. In 1938, when he was a graduate student at MIT, Shannon came up with the idea of messages having information value, and that value could be encoded in a binary signal and sent down the wire. This was for his master's thesis. Where Morse encoded the alphabet and Bell replicated at a distance electrical wave forms, Shannon proposed taking just the raw information that could represent sound or video or the Declaration of Independence as either a text document or a historic artifact. His was a giant advancement in communication.
    I knew Claude Shannon, not well, but I knew him. We met a few times because I have made a point of trying to meet my heroes whenever possible. Our only substantive conversation that I can recall was about juggling, a hobby he did well and I can't do at all. But if Shannon wanted to talk about juggling, heck, we'd talk about juggling. (It's no accident that many computer folk like juggling. It's in their genes.)

    77. Claude Shannon - Computer Science Theory
    Go Back Time Line claude Elwood shannon. April Biography. A Midwesterner,claude shannon was born in Gaylord, Michigan in 1916. From
    http://www.thocp.net/biographies/shannon_claude.htm

    Claude Elwood Shannon
    April 30, 1916 Gaylord, Michigan USA
    24 Feb 2001, Medford, Massachusetts, USA
    claude shannon principal papers A Mathematical Theory of Communication hardware software keyords
    see also
    Related Subjects
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    Achievement He published A Mathematical Theory of Communication in in the Bell System Technical Journal (1948). His work founded the subject of information theory and he proposed a linear schematic model of a communications system. He gave a method of analysing a sequence of error terms in a signal to find their inherent variety, matching them to the designed variety of the control system. In 1952 he devised an experiment illustrating the capabilities of telephone relays. Biography A Midwesterner, Claude Shannon was born in Gaylord, Michigan in 1916. From an early age, he showed an affinity for both engineering and mathematics, and graduated from Michigan University with degrees in both disciplines. For his advanced degrees, he chose to attend the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
    There he wrote a thesis on the use of Boole's algebra to analyse and optimise relay switching circuits. He joined Bell Telephones in 1941 as a research mathematician and remained there until 1972.

    78. Mikro.lounge #18: Claude Shannon - Der Erfinder Des Bit
    am claude Elwood shannon (geb. 1916
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    Claude Shannon - der Erfinder des Bit

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    GAESTE SOUNDS http://www.txt.de/b_books TEXTE Panel E1: Shannons Toys I und Panel E2: Shannon's Toys II Sie sind der von Heiko Idensen herausgegebenen CD-ROM zum gleichnamigen Tagungsband entnommen und werden hier mit freundlicher Genehmigung der Autoren und von Heiko nachgedruckt. Weitere Informationen unter

    79. Claude Shannon Information
    EE 550 Coding Theory and Applications Fall 2000 Information aboutclaude shannon Websites with Information about claude shannon
    http://www.essrl.wustl.edu/~jao/ee550/shannonurls.html
    EE 550 Coding Theory and Applications Fall 2000 Information about Claude Shannon Websites with Information about Claude Shannon This file is created and maintained by Joseph A. O'Sullivan. Respond to him via jao@essrl

    80. PHONE-SOFT INTERNET DIRECTORY INTERNATIONAL:SHANNON, CLAUDE
    claude shannon biography includes his education, inventions, awards and honors,and more. Pioneers claude shannon - provides biographical information.
    http://www.phs2.net/cwi/L3/o7367i.htm
    TOP-LINK UP-LINK ADD URL SEARCH ... E-MAIL SHANNON, CLAUDE Copy any DVD on your CD-R Burner - Wow - Click Here Now!
  • Bibliography of Claude Elwood Shannon - list contains every published or unpublished document by Shannon.
  • Claude Shannon - biography includes his education, inventions, awards and honors, and more.
  • Claude Shannon: Collected Papers - the collected works of information theorist Claude Shannon.
  • Claude Shannon: Reluctant Father of the Digital Age - profile from MIT's Technology Review of the juggling unicyclist who transformed information from a vague idea into a precise concept that underlies the digital revolution.
  • Heroes of Cyberspace: Claude Shannon - paper which shows how Shannon's work contributed to the Internet.
  • Jones Digital Century Encyclopedia: Claude Shannon - offers biographical information and related links.
  • MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive: Claude Elwood Shannon - includes a short bio, references, and links.
  • Pioneers: Claude Shannon - provides biographical information.
  • Shannon Day @ Bell Labs - to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Shannon's 1948 paper ``A Mathematical Theory of Communication,'' the Mathematical Sciences Center of Bell Laboratories Lucent Technologies held a one day symposium.
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