


default search action
IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, Volume 33
Volume 33, Number 1, January 2011
- Jeffrey R. Yost:

From the Editor's Desk. 2-3 - B. Jack Copeland:

The Manchester Computer: A Revised History Part 1: The Memory. 4-21 - B. Jack Copeland:

The Manchester Computer: A Revised History Part 2: The Baby Computer. 22-37 - John Laprise:

Kissinger's Computer: National Security Council Computerization, 1969-1972. 38-51 - Frank Veraart:

Losing Meanings: Computer Games in Dutch Domestic Use, 1975-2000. 52-65 - Alexander M. McKenzie:

INWG and the Conception of the Internet: An Eyewitness Account. 66-71 - Keith W. Smillie:

Donald McIntyre: Geologist, Historian, and Array Language Advocate, 1923-2009. 72-77 - Chigusa Kita:

Events and Sightings. 78-82 - R. Eardley-Pryor, Keith W. Smillie:

Reviews [review of "A Vast Machine: Computer Models, Climate Data, and the Politics of Global Warming" (Edwards, P.N.; 2010) and "The Last Good War" (Wonnacott, P.; 2007)]. 83-85 - David Alan Grier:

Programming and Planning. 86-88
Volume 33, Number 2, February 2011
- Jeffrey R. Yost:

From the Editor's Desk. 2-3 - William Aspray, Jeffrey R. Yost:

New Voices, New Topics. 4-8 - Joseph A. November

:
Early Biomedical Computing and the Roots of Evidence-Based Medicine. 9-23 - M. Mills:

Hearing Aids and the History of Electronics Miniaturization. 24-45 - C. Turdean:

Casinos and the Digitization of the Slot Machine, 1950-1989. 46-59 - P. Galloway:

Personal Computers, Microhistory, and Shared Authority: Documenting the Inventor-Early Adopter Dialectic. 60-74 - Honghong Tinn:

From DIY Computers to Illegal Copies: The Controversy over Tinkering with Microcomputers in Taiwan, 1980-1984. 75-88 - Gordon Bell, Daniel P. Siewiorek

:
The Book Computer Structures: Thoughts After 40 Years. 89-95 - Kristen J. Nyitray

:
William Alfred Higinbotham: Scientist, Activist, and Computer Game Pioneer. 96-101 - Michael N. Geselowitz

:
Greece [IEEE History Center]. 105 - Chigusa Kita:

Events and Sightings. 106-110 - G. Royer:

Familiar Concepts, Unfamiliar Territory. 112
Volume 33, Number 3, March 2011
- Jeffrey R. Yost:

From the Editor's Desk. 2-3 - Stephen J. Lukasik:

Why the Arpanet Was Built. 4-21 - Lars Heide:

Scale and Scope in American Key-Set Office Machine Dynamics, 1880s-1930s. 22-31 - Bernardo Batiz-Lazo

, Robert J. Reid:
The Development of Cash-Dispensing Technology in the UK. 32-45 - Jonathan G. Koomey, Stephen Berard, Marla Sanchez, Henry Wong:

Implications of Historical Trends in the Electrical Efficiency of Computing. 46-54 - Christian Sandström

:
Hasselblad and the Shift to Digital Imaging. 55-66 - Elizabeth J. Feinler:

Host Tables, Top-Level Domain Names, and the Origin of Dot Com. 74-79 - Chigusa Kita:

Events and Sightings. 82-85 - David Alan Grier:

Control in the History of Computing: Making an Ambiguous Concept Useful. 88-87
Volume 33, Number 4, 2011
- Jeffrey R. Yost:

From the Editor's Desk. 2-4 - Ronald Kline:

Cybernetics, Automata Studies, and the Dartmouth Conference on Artificial Intelligence. 5-16 - Philipp Aumann:

The Distinctiveness of a Unifying Science: Cybernetics' Way to West Germany. 17-27 - Yasushi Sato:

An Inconspicuous Giant: NTT's Role in the Development of Software Engineering in Japan. 28-37 - Alena Solcova, Michal Krízek:

Vladimír Vand (1911-1968): Pioneer of Computational Methods in Crystallography. 38-44 - Mikko Valorinta, Tomi Nokelainen:

Introduction and Early Use of Computers in the Finnish Retail Industry. 45-55 - Julian Feldman:

Computers and Thought - The Back Story. 56-61 - Michael N. Geselowitz

:
Vancouver. 68-69 - Thomas Haigh:

Charles W. Bachman: Database Software Pioneer. 70-80 - Chigusa Kita:

Events and Sightings. 84-85 - David Alan Grier:

From Computer Celebrities to Historical Biography. 88-87

manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.


Google
Google Scholar
Semantic Scholar
Internet Archive Scholar
CiteSeerX
ORCID














