default search action
IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, Volume 34
Volume 34, Number 1, January 2012
- Lars Hiede:
From the Editor's Desk. 2-3 - Tom Van Vleck:
Electronic Mail and Text Messaging in CTSS, 1965-1973. 4-6 - David C. Brock, David A. Laws:
The Early History of Microcircuitry: An Overview. 7-19 - David A. Laws, Michael Riordan:
Making Micrologic: The Development of the Planar IC at Fairchild Semiconductor, 1957-1963. 20-36 - Charles Phipps:
The Early History of ICs at Texas Instruments: A Personal View. 37-47 - Hyungsub Choi, Takushi Otani:
Failure to Launch: Tarui Yasuo, the Quadrupole Transistor, and the Meanings of the IC in Postwar Japan. 48-59 - Richard Ahrons:
Industrial Research in Microcircuitry at RCA: The Early Years, 1953-1963. 60-73 - Edgar A. Sack, David A. Laws:
Westinghouse: Microcircuit Pioneer from Molecular Electronics to ICs. 74-82 - Chigusa Kita:
Events and Sightings. 88-91 - Ramesh Subramanian:
Murray Turoff: Father of Computer Conferencing. 92-98 - Andrew Meade McGee:
Stating the Field: Institutions and Outcomes in Computer History. 104-103
Volume 34, Number 2, 2012
- Ian Martin:
Too Far Ahead of Its Time: Barclays, Burroughs, and Real-Time Banking. 5-19 - Bernardo Batiz-Lazo, Thomas Haigh:
Engineering Change: The Appropriation of Computer Technology at Grupo ICA in Mexico (1965-1971). 20-33 - James W. Cortada:
Information Technologies in the German Democratic Republic (GDR), 1949-1989. 34-48 - Silvio Hénin, Massimo Temporelli:
An Original Italian Dial Adder Rediscovered. 49-59 - Denis Roegel:
The LOCOMAT Project: Recomputing Mathematical and Astronomical Tables. 74-79
Volume 34, Number 3, July - September 2012
- Lars Heide:
From the Editor's Desk. 2-3 - Edward Hunt:
US Government Computer Penetration Programs and the Implications for Cyberwar. 4-21 - Juan Alvarez, Claudio Gutierrez:
History of Computing in Chile, 1961-1982: Early Years, Consolidation, and Expansion. 22-33 - Dragan R. Milivojevic, Marijana Pavlov, Vladimir Despotovic, Visa Tasic:
Half a Century of Computing in the Serbian Copper Mining and Metallurgy Industry. 34-43 - Brian J. Shelburne:
The ENIAC's 1949 Determination of π. 44-54 - Dejan Ristanovic, Jelica Protic:
Once Upon a Pocket: Programmable Calculators from the Late 1970s and Early 1980s and the Social Networks Around Them. 55-66 - Sean Lawson, Jon Agar:
Reviews [reviews of "gameplay mode: war, simulation and technoculture" (crogan, p.; 2011) and "how societies embrace information technology: lessons for management and the rest of us"; (cortada, j.; 2009). 67-69 - Akihiko Yamada, Dag Spicer:
Events and Sightings. 70-73 - Keith W. Smillie:
An Early Statistical Calculation. 74-76 - Andrew L. Russell:
Standards, Networks, and Critique. 80
Volume 34, Number 4, October - December 2012
- Lars Heide:
From the Editor's Desk. 2-3 - Anthony P. Pennino, Francesca Musiani:
Reviews [review of "Prometheus (motion picture", Scott, R., Director; 2012) and "The Networked France, Vol. 1: The Meeting of Telecommunications and Computing" (Schafer, V.; 2012)]. 4-6 - Burton Grad:
Relational Database Management Systems: The Formative Years [Guest editor's introduction]. 7-8 - David Alan Grier:
The Relational Database and the Concept of the Information System. 9-17 - Martin Campbell-Kelly:
The RDBMS Industry: A Northern California Perspective. 18-29 - Hugh Darwen:
The Relational Model: Beginning of an Era. 30-37 - Bradford W. Wade, Donald D. Chamberlin:
IBM Relational Database Systems: The Early Years. 38-48 - Bradford W. Wade:
Compiling SQL into System/370 Machine Language. 49-50 - Robert Preger:
The Oracle Story, Part 1: 1977-1986. 51-57 - Lawrence A. Rowe:
History of the Ingres Corporation. 58-70 - Michael N. Geselowitz:
Stockholm, Sweden. 71 - David C. Walden:
Peter J. Denning. 72-77 - Donald D. Chamberlin:
Early History of SQL. 78-82 - Chigusa Kita:
Events and Sightings [Obituary of Lawrence A. Welke]. 83-85 - Burton Grad, Luanne (James) Johnson:
Collecting the History of the Software Industry. 88
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.