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This category contains articles about "how-to" books, instruction manuals, and guides to other practical topics. See Category:Self-help books for books on popular psychology and self-improvement. Contents
She used flashcards to communicate messages before she could talk, including expressing her age at 11 months old, had mastered the alphabet by the age of two, and played chess by the age of three. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] She used a homemade abacus to learn mathematics, and was simultaneously taught ethics and compassion for people from different backgrounds.
Math Blaster! is a 1983 educational video game, and the first entry in the "Math Blaster" series within the Blaster Learning System created by Davidson & Associates.The game was developed by former educator Jan Davidson. [2]
IBM Press is IBM's official retail book publisher for professionals and academia. [1] A collaboration between IBM and Pearson Education, [2] books are distributed in print and on Safari Books Online. [3] Published topics range from general information technology to IBM products.
Earliest picture book specifically for children. [9] [10] A Token for Children. Being An Exact Account of the Conversion, Holy and Exemplary Lives, and Joyful Deaths of several Young Children: James Janeway: 1672: One of the first books specifically written for children which shaped much eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century writing for ...
The book was a popular and comprehensive guide to programming the original IBM PC platform (covering BIOS and MS-DOS system calls in great detail). The first (1985) edition was nicknamed "the pink shirt book", after the pink shirt that Norton wore for the cover photo, and Norton's crossed-arm pose on that cover is a U.S. registered trademark.
Bibliography on the Use of IBM Machines in Science, Statistics, and Education. IBM. Compiled at the Watson Scientific Computing Laboratory (there is also a 1956 edition) Carter, Ciel (1974). Guide to Reference Sources in the Computer Sciences. Macmillan Information. Charles Babbage Institute (2003). "CBI Software History Bibliography" (PDF)
IBM's original OS/360 sort/merge program, 360S-SM-023, program name IERRCO00 (alias SORT), supported only IBM's first-generation direct-access storage devices (DASD) [d] and tapes (2400). Support for second-generation disk drives was provided by IBM program products such as 5734-SM1 and the later 5740-SM1 ( DFSORT , alias ICEMAN, also SORT).