For decades, two technological revolutions unfolded in parallel, seemingly worlds apart. In the hallowed halls of academia and top-secret labs, visionaries chased the audacious dream of artificial intelligence, a quest to create a machine that could think. Simultaneously, in garages and hobbyist clubs, a different kind of uprising was taking place: the personal computer revolution, a movement to snatch computing power from the elite and place it in the hands of everyone.
The Digital Mind is the definitive history of how these two stories-the top-down pursuit of a thinking machine and the bottom-up demand for personal empowerment-collided to shape our modern world. Journey back to the logical roots of computation with pioneers like Alan Turing and John von Neumann, witness the birth of AI at the Dartmouth Workshop, and feel the chilling winds of the "AI Winters" that nearly ended the dream. Alongside this, dive into the counter-culture spirit that fueled the first PC kits, the garage-based brilliance of Apple, and the corporate gambit of IBM that brought computers to the masses.
Author Luis Rubio masterfully reveals the central, untold story of convergence: how the PC revolution inadvertently built the global infrastructure, the software ecosystem, and the vast oceans of data that became the indispensable fuel for the deep learning explosion. This is more than a history of silicon and software; it's a gripping narrative of the human architects, corporate titans, and intellectual breakthroughs that created our digital present and are defining our intelligent future.