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IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, Volume 32
Volume 32, Number 1, February 2010
- Jeffrey R. Yost:
From the Editor's Desk. 2-3 - Frederick P. Brooks Jr.:
Stretch-ing Is Great Exercise— It Gets You in Shape to Win. 4-9 - Janet Abbate:
Privatizing the Internet: Competing Visions and Chaotic Events, 1987–1995. 10-22 - Martyn Clark:
State Support for the Expansion of UK University Computing in the 1950s. 23-33 - Silvio Hénin:
Two Early Italian Key-Driven Calculators. 34-43 - Arthe Van Laer:
Developing an EC Computer Policy, 1965–1974. 16-17 - David A. Laws:
A Company of Legend: The Legacy of Fairchild Semiconductor. 60-74 - Stanley Mazor:
Intel's 8086. 75-79 - Chigusa Kita:
Events and Sightings. 80-81 - Pierre-E. Mounier-Kuhn:
Jean Carteron. 82-89 - Honghong Tinn:
Cold War Politics: Taiwanese Computing in the 1950s and 1960s. 92-95
Volume 32, Number 2, April-June 2010
- Jeffrey R. Yost:
From the Editor's Desk. 2-3 - Gerard Alberts:
Appropriating America: Americanization in the History of European Computing. 4-7 - Thomas Haigh
:
Computing the American Way: Contextualizing the Early US Computer Industry. 8-20 - Helena Durnova:
Sovietization of Czechoslovakian Computing: The Rise and Fall of the SAPO Project. 21-31 - Simon Donig:
Appropriating American Technology in the 1960s: Cold War Politics and the GDR Computer Industry. 32-45 - Ksenia Tatarchenko:
Cold War Origins of the International Federation for Information Processing. 46-57 - David Nofre
:
Unraveling Algol: US, Europe, and the Creation of a Programming Language. 58-68 - Michael N. Geselowitz
:
Israel. 69 - Reviews. 70-71
- Armand Van Dormael:
Heinrich Welker. 72-79 - Anecdotes. 80-83
- Chigusa Kita:
Events and Sightings. 84-86 - Christopher McDonald:
Technology in the Political Landscape. 87-88
Volume 32, Number 3, July-September 2010
- Jeffrey R. Yost:
From the Editor's Desk. 2-3 - Hans-Rüdiger Wiehle:
External Characteristics of Computer Operations: Toward Large Conversational Time-Sharing Systems. 4-19 - Eike Jessen, Dieter Michel, Hans-Jürgen Siegert, Heinz Voigt:
The AEG-Telefunken TR 440 Computer: Company and Large-Scale Computer Strategy. 20-29 - Eike Jessen, Dieter Michel, Heinz Voigt:
Structure, Technology, and Development of the AEG-Telefunken TR 440 Computer. 30-39 - Hans-Jürgen Siegert:
The German TR 440 Computer: Software and Its Development. 40-73 - Warren Toomey:
First Edition Unix: Its Creation and Restoration. 74-82 - Elizabeth J. Feinler:
The Network Information Center and its Archives. 83-89 - Chigusa Kita:
Events and Sightings. 90-93 - Jonathan Aylen
:
Promoting the Prosaic: The Case for Process-Control Computers. 94-96
Volume 32, Number 4, October - December 2010
- Jeffrey R. Yost:
From the Editor's Desk. 2-4 - Marie Hicks:
Only the Clothes Changed: Women Operators in British Computing and Advertising, 1950-1970. 5-17 - David Alan Grier:
The Inconsistent Youth of Charles Babbage. 18-31 - Christopher McDonald:
From Art Form to Engineering Discipline? A History of US Military Software Development Standards, 1974-1998. 32-47 - Zbigniew Stachniak:
The MIL MF7114 Microprocessor. 48-59 - Daniel Ortiz Arroyo
, Francisco Rodríguez-Henríquez, Carlos Artemio Coello Coello
:
The Turing-850 Project: Developing a Personal Computer in the Early 1980s in Mexico. 60-71 - Thomas Haigh:
John R. Rice: Mathematical Software Pioneer. 72-81 - Randy H. Katz:
RAID: A Personal Recollection of How Storage Became a System. 82-87 - Michael N. Geselowitz
:
Long Island, New York. 88-89 - Chigusa Kita:
Events and Sightings. 90-93 - D. Yarnell:
A Question of Scale: Networks, Systems, and Practice. 94-96

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