Roberto Rigolin F Lopes

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He would preside over a custom-made brain the size of a room. He’d counsel presidents. He’d direct the nation’s scientists through World War II with the same brusqueness with which he once imagined unemploying two-thirds of the surveying profession. Collier’s magazine would call him “the man who may win or lose the war”; Time, “the general of physics.”
A Mind at Play: How Claude Shannon Invented the Information Age
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