How Computers Really Work
Description
But you won’t just read about these concepts, you’ll test your knowledge with exercises, and practice what you learn with 41 optional hands-on projects. Build digital circuits, craft a guessing game, convert decimal numbers to binary, examine virtual memory usage, run your own web server, and more.
Explore concepts like how to:
• Think like a software engineer as you use data to describe a real world concept
• Use Ohm’s and Kirchhoff’s laws to analyze an electrical circuit
• Think like a computer as you practice binary addition and execute a program in your mind, step-by-step
The book’s projects will have you translate your learning into action, as you:
• Learn how to use a multimeter to measure resistance, current, and voltage
• Build a half adder to see how logical operations in hardware can be combined to perform useful functions
• Write a program in assembly language, then examine the resulting machine code
• Learn to use a debugger, disassemble code, and hack a program to change its behavior without changing the source code
• Use a port scanner to see which internet ports your computer has open
• Run your own server and get a solid crash course on how the web works
And since a picture is worth a thousand bytes, chapters are filled with detailed diagrams and illustrations to help clarify technical complexities.
REQUIREMENTS: The projects require a variety of hardware—electronics projects need a breadboard, power supply, and various circuit components; software projects are performed on a Raspberry Pi. See Appendix B or this page for a complete list. Even if you skip the projects, the book’s major concepts are clearly presented in the main text.