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IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, Volume 17
Volume 17, Number 1, Spring 1995
- Thomas M. Stout, Theodore J. Williams:

Pioneering work in the field of computer process control. 6-18 - George H. Buck, Steve Hunka:

Development of the IBM 1500 computer-assisted instructional system. 19-31 - John A. N. Lee, Golde Holtzman:

50 Years after breaking the codes: interviews with two of the Bletchley Park scientists. 32-43 - John McPherson:

New ways of multiplying. 44-46 - James C. Worthy:

Control Data Corporation: the Norris era. 47-53
Volume 17, Number 2, Summer 1995
- Dirk de Wit:

Caught between historical experience and high hopes: automation at the Dutch Postal Cheque and Clearing Service, 1950-1965. 9-21 - Jan van den Ende:

Computers and industrial organization: early sources of 'just in time' production in the Dutch steel industry. 22-32 - Friedrich W. Kistermann:

The way to the first automatic sequence-controlled calculator: the 1935 DEHOMAG D 11 tabulator. 33-49 - Judy E. O'Neill:

'Prestige luster' and 'snow-balling effects': IBM's development of computer time-sharing. 50-54
Volume 17, Number 3, Fall 1995
- James E. Tomayko:

Anecdotes. 77 - Werner Buchholz:

Comments, Queries, and Debate. 6 - Donald MacKenzie:

The automation of proof: a historical and sociological exploration. 7-29 - Duncan Copeland, Richard O. Mason, James L. McKenney:

Sabre: the development of information-based competence and execution of information-based competition. 30-57 - Shane M. Greenstein:

Lock-in and the costs of switching mainframe computer vendors in the US federal government in the 1970s. 58-66 - Harry Polachek:

History of the journal Mathematical Tables and other Aids to Computation, 1959-1965. 67-74 - Earl E. Swartzlander Jr.:

Calculators. 75-77
Volume 17, Number 3, Fall / Fall 1995
- Eric A. Weiss:

Biographies. 79 - Peggy Kidwell:

Reviews. 82 - Peggy Kidwell:

Landmarks in Digital Computing: A Smithsonian Pictorial History [Reviews]. 82 - Peggy Kidwell:

From Memex to Hypertext: Vannevar Bush and the Mind's Machie [Reviews]. 82 - Peggy Kidwell:

"First Ribnitz Colloquium on the History of Informatics" [Reviews]. 85 - Peggy Kidwell:

Insanely Great, The Life and Times of Macintosh, the Computer that Changed Everything [Reviews]. 85 - Peggy Kidwell:

The Turn of the Tide: Computerization in Dutch Society 1900-1965 [Reviews]. 87 - Peggy Kidwell:

Sparks of Genius: Portraits of Electrical Engineering Excellence [Reviews]. 87
Volume 17, Number 4, Winter 1995
- J. A. N. Lee:

About this issue. 3 - Earl E. Swartzlander Jr.:

Calculators. 4 - Robert W. Seidel:

Charles Babbage Institute Director's Column. 5 - Helen M. Wood:

Computer Society Celebrates 50 Years. 6 - J. A. N. Lee:

On "Babbage and Kings" and "How sausage was made": and now for the rest of the story. 7-23 - J. A. N. Lee:

The rise and fall of the General Electric Corporation computer department. 24-45 - H. R. Oldfield:

General Electric enters the computer business-revisited. 46-55 - John F. Couleur:

The core of the Black Canyon Computer Corporation. 56-60 - James L. McKenney:

Developing a common machine language for banking: the ABA technical subcommittee story. 61-75 - Judy E. O'Neill:

The role of ARPA in the development of the ARPANET, 1961-1972. 76-81 - Peggy Kidwell:

Reviews. 82

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