Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 42. Chapters: Neil J. Gunther, Mark Skousen, Larry Sabato, Eugene C. Barker, N. Gregory Mankiw, Irving Adler, Henry Milner Rideout, William P. Foster, Sean M. Carroll, Jacob Eisenberg, Leon Litwack, Eugene Odum, Frederic Mishkin, Jay Pasachoff, Panos Prevedouros, Sue Eakin, James Loewen, Aswath Damodaran, William Doerner, James Q. Wilson, Carolyne M. Van Vliet, Joel Dean, Albert L. Lehninger, George B. Thomas, Jacob Abbot Cummings, Warren K. Lewis, Julia R. Burdge, Donald Voet, Abraham S. Luchins, Neil Campbell, Philip Wadler, John E. McMurry, Karl Eugen Guthe, Judith G. Voet, David Gries, Franklin Allen, Gunning S. Bedford, Robert T. Barton, Stewart Myers, Michael Spivak, John A. Garraty, Fred B. Schneider, Clarence Abiathar Waldo, Philip Joseph Furlong, Alexis Caswell, James Hartle, Timothy Luehrman, George Edgar Vincent, Rolla C. Carpenter, John Robert Taylor, Henry Sylvester Jacoby, Thurman C. Crook, Francis Sears, Alexander Smith, Tom Chiarella, Jane Reece, James E. Darnell, Harold Rugg, Frederic M. Wheelock, Jim Hefferon, John Oren Reed, James Munkres, Thomas William Edmondson, Richard Wolfson, Arthur Mattuck, Carolyn Graham, Stuart J. Murphy. Excerpt: Neil Gunther, (born 15 August 1950) is a computer information systems researcher best known internationally for developing the open-source performance modeling software Pretty Damn Quick and developing the Guerrilla approach to computer capacity planning and performance analysis. He has also been cited for his contributions to the theory of large transients in computer systems and packet networks, and his universal law of computational scalability. Gunther is a Senior Member of both the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), as well as a member of the American Mathematical Society (AMS), American Physical So...