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IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, Volume 39
Volume 39, Number 1, 2017
- Nathan L. Ensmenger:
From the Editor's Desk. 4-5 - Bradley Fidler:
Eternal October and the End of Cyberspace. 6-7 - Andrew Russell:
Reviews. 8 - B. Jack Copeland, Andre A. Haeff, Peter Gough, Cameron Wright:
Screen History: The Haeff Memory and Graphics Tube. 9-28 - R. Arvid Nelsen:
Race and Computing: The Problem of Sources, the Potential of Prosopography, and the Lesson of Ebony Magazine. 29-51 - Zbigniew Stachniak:
MCM on Personal Software. 52-64 - Herbert E. Bruderer:
Early History of Computing in Switzerland: Discovery of Rare Devices, Unknown Documents, and Scarcely Known Facts. 65-72
Volume 39, Number 2, 2017
- Nathan L. Ensmenger:
From the Editor's Desk. 4-5 - Mitali Thakor:
How to Look: Apprehension, Forensic Craft, and the Classification of Child Exploitation Images. 6-8 - Gerardo Con Diaz:
Reviews. 9-11 - Alexander Mirowski:
At the Electronic Crossroads Once Again: The Myth of the Modern Computer Utility in the United States. 13-29 - Jordi Fornes, Nestor Herran, Luis Duque:
Computing for Democracy: The Asociación de Técnicos de Informática and the Professionalization of Computing in Spain. 30-48 - William F. Vogel:
"The Spitting Image of a Woman Programmer": Changing Portrayals of Women in the American Computing Industry, 1958-1985. 49-64 - Stephen M. Davies:
The Experimental Computer Programme: The First Computing Initiative for the National Health Service in England. 65-79 - Paul R. McJones:
In Search of the Original Fortran Compiler. 81-88 - Dag Spicer:
CHM Happenings. 89-90 - Irina Nikivincze:
Dana Ulery: Pioneer of Statistical Computing and Architect of Large, Complex Systems. 91-95
Volume 39, Number 3, 2017
- Nathan L. Ensmenger:
From the Editor's Desk. 4-5 - Kevin Baker:
Simulation and "Seduction" at the Policy Interface. 6-7 - James W. Cortada:
IBM Branch Offices: What They Were, How They Worked, 1920s-1980s. 9-23 - Nicholas Lewis:
Purchasing Power: Rivalry, Dissent, and Computing Strategy in Supercomputer Selection at Los Alamos. 25-40 - Ralf Kneuper:
Sixty Years of Software Development Life Cycle Models. 41-54 - Denis Roegel:
Carries Stripped to the Bone: Episodes in the History of Coaxial Modular Digital Counters. 55-64 - David C. Walden, Hiromichi Hashizume:
Desktop Publishing Pioneer Meeting at Computer History Museum. 65-67 - Salem Elzway, Kera Jones Allen:
Book Reviews. 69-71
Volume 39, Number 4, October - December 2017
- Nathan L. Ensmenger:
From the Editor's Desk. 3-4 - Bjorn Westergard:
Do Computers Follow Rules Once Followed by Workers? 5-8 - Janet Abbate, Elinor Carmi:
Reviews. 9-11 - Corinna Schlombs:
The "IBM Family": American Welfare Capitalism, Labor, and Gender in Postwar Germany. 12-26 - Elizabeth R. Petrick:
Imagining the Personal Computer: Conceptualizations of the Homebrew Computer Club 1975-1977. 27-39 - Alexandre Hocquet, Frédéric Wieber:
"Only the Initiates Will Have the Secrets Revealed": Computational Chemists and the Openness of Scientific Software. 40-58 - Timo Leimbach:
Path Creation in the Software Industry - The Case of Software AG. 59-80 - Irina Nikivincze:
Anne-Louise Guichard Radimsky: An Educator and a Champion for Diversity in Computing. 81-84 - Paul R. McJones:
The LISP 2 Project. 85-92 - David C. Walden, Dag Spicer:
Events and Sightings. 93-96
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