Claude Shannon And His Impact On The World Of Communication Technology
    Claude Shannon
    was born in 1916 in the state of Michigan, and is often referred to as the
    father of information theory. In his younger years, he enjoyed building
    model planes and even crafted a remote control boat and a telegraph system. This
    interest in technology and how things worked would later blossom into a
    world-changing career. He admired Thomas Edison as a child, and when he was of
    college age, he attended the
    University of
        Michigan. Here, he studied the work of a man by the name of George Boole. In
    1936, Shannon graduated with not one, but two bachelor's degrees. The first
    degree he received was in mathematics, and the second was for electrical
    engineering. Upon graduation, he went on to receive his master's at MIT with a
    focus on developing and working with analyzers and an analog computer. His
    thesis written in 1937 has been considered one of the most
    
        important
     master's theses of the modern century.
    
    Claude Shannon worked in many different sectors after his college career,
    including a position as a research fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study in
    Princeton, New Jersey. He also had a few opportunities to speak with Albert
    Einstein during this important time in his life. He is best remembered for his
    time spent and work performed as a Bell Labs scientist, where he
    contributed a great deal of his time and effort.
    
        Communication theory
     was Shannon's main field of interest, and he developed
    a theory on its mathematical aspects, which was later published as a
    two-part article in the Bell System Technical Journal. His work explained
    about how information is transmitted between the sender and receiver, and how it
    is applied through the use of various formulas and mathematics. A culmination of
    his work has now become the basis and is credited for the beginning of the
    
        digital
        revolution
     including the Internet. He may not have known that many
    scientists and engineers gave him the credit for this title, but his long
    history of developing and studying theories has been passed along throughout the
    technology community as being the backbone of the
    
        digital age
    .
    
    Many of today's greatest 
        data
        recovery
     engineers look at Shannon as a role model.
    
        Data
        recovery services
     have been started in the
    
        Los
        Angeles data recovery
     industry offering
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    and 
        hard
        drive recovery
     service. Shannon won
    
        several awards
     for his various works, including the Nobel Prize in 1939. He
    also won the Kyoto Prize, and was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of
    Fame in 2004, although he passed away in 2001. Claude Shannon made many
    significant and
    
        instrumental developments
     in the world of technology, and also enjoyed
    inventing things
    on the side as well. For example, he invented a robot that could solve the
    Rubik's Cube, a flame throwing trumpet, and several other items that he created
    to cater to his personal hobbies. But perhaps the most important accomplishments
    of his life were his applications of Boolean theory to communications and
    digital applications. These theories implied that electrical switches could
    perform logical actions, which in turn would become the basic principle of all
    computers.
    
        Digital circuit
     design first began
    under Shannon's watch, so it is no wonder that he is now credited for making
    one of the most
    
        important contributions
     to society of our lifetime.