
David Tarnoff, “Computer Organization and Design Fundamentals”
tarnoff | 2007 | ISBN: 1411636902 | 434 pages | File type: PDF | 16,5 mb
Computer
Organization and Design Fundamentals takes the reader from the basic
design principles of the modern digital computer to a top-level
examination of its architecture. This book can serve either as a
textbook to an introductory course on computer hardware or as the basic
text for the aspiring geek who wants to learn about digital design. The
material is presented in four parts. The first part describes how
computers represent and manipulate numbers. The second part presents the
tools used at all levels of binary design. The third part introduces
the reader to computer system theory with topics such as memory, caches,
hard drives, pipelining, and interrupts. The last part applies these
theories through an introduction to the Intel 80×86 architecture and
assembly language. The material is presented using practical terms and
examples with an aim toward providing anyone who works with computer
systems the ability to use them more effectively through a better
understanding of their design.
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