>>11954632>Now the work has been bundled into a distinct field because it's sufficiently different than all threeExcept it hasn’t? If you look at the authors and engineers working on computers, they’re still a mix of mathematicians, physicists, and EE’s. You also have CE and CS working on these problems, but they’re not the only ones by a mile.
Either way, the point was that you, as an individual, don’t have the power to claim the work of people before you as your own or prestige because you share a field with them.
>inb4 CS reeeee The seminal papers on asynchronous computation and reliability among processors and networks came from CS departments. Whether you like them or hate them, modern processor technology is owed to EE on the side of electronics and to CS on the side of design and problem solving. We would be nowhere without processor scheduling algorithms.