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By jcortada , 7 April 2014

Happy 50th Birthday S/360!

system360I consider this set of 150 products announced on April 7, 1964, to be the most important introduced by an American company in the 20th century. And I am not alone in that view.  How we used computers around the world was shaped directly by these machines and software, including your cell phone.

By aweissberger , 10 March 2014

The New Digital Age: Authors Eric Schmidt and Jared Cohen in Conversation with Facebook’s Sheryl Sandberg at CHM

Introduction:

On March 3, 2014, Eric Schmidt and Jared Cohen (co-authors of The New Digital Age) engaged in a stimulating conversation with Facebook's COO Sheryl Sandberg.  The event took place at the Computer History Museum (CHM) as part of the museum's Revolutionary series (see description below).  This very interesting and wide ranging discussion, was mostly related to the promise and perils of the digital revolution, especially the Internet as it impacts the developing world. 

By fwithington , 24 February 2014

A Billion Programmers

When I first wrote programs in 1953, there was no software and few programmers. I entered programs in the computer’s binary language (octal notation) directly into the machine’s registers. And the machine was all mine: there was no operating system to allocate its resources among multiple programs or operate the input-output devices.

By jcortada , 21 January 2014

Why Care Who Invented the First Computer?

During January some of you might have noticed a running dialogue among historians and other interested parties about who invented the “first” computer. There was no agreement reached on the correct answer to that question. Discussions about “firsts” pop up about every five years, almost like short-lived brush fires on the side of the road as historians travel on to do their serious work. Over the past forty years I have seen articles and books, even one lawsuit on patents, over the question of “firsts.”

By stein , 10 January 2014

Old Software and Games....They're Alive!

internet-archive-gamesEver get the urge to mess with Visicalc or WordStar again? Play the original Donkey Kong or Adventure on your computer? Now you can!

By aweissberger , 25 December 2013

Computer Pioneer Alan Turing Pardoned by UK for "crime" he didn't commit

The United Kingdom has finally pardoned Alan Turing for a gay sex conviction which tarnished the brilliant career of the code breaker credited with helping win the war against Nazi Germany and laying the foundation for the computer age.

By aweissberger , 15 December 2013

Testimonials to Doug Englebart: Dec 9, 2013 @CHM

Computer visionary Doug Englebart was posthumously honored on December 9th at the Computer History Museum (CHM) in Mt View, CA.  The date of this event was significant, because December 9 was the 45th Anniversary of the “Mother of All Demos.^”  Doug's wife, daughter, and several people that worked with Doug or knew of his work made brief speeches to honor him.

By aolley , 6 December 2013

History of IT at the History of Science Society 2013 Boston

The History of Science Society held its annual meeting two weeks ago (November 21st to November 24th) in Boston MA. The meeting celebrated among other things the centenary of the journal Isis, the organ around which the society was eventually formed. The meeting covered a broad range of topics in the history of science from all historical periods ancient to recent.

By stein , 11 November 2013

The Story of LEO

LEO, more formally known as Lyons Electronic Office, was the world's first business computer, having been developed by the British company J. Lyons & Co. Ltd. between 1947-1954. John Simmons was very much the genius behind this adventure into business process re-engineering. His papers are archived at the Modern Record Centre at Warwick University in Coventry, England. Many of these contain valuable information about the ideas behind the LEO development.

By aweissberger , 9 November 2013

Highlights of Intel's Justin Rattner at CHM: Oct 8, 2013

The event was in the form of an interview/conversation led by CHM CEO/moderator John Hollar.  Mr. Rattner spent a lot of time discussing his early life at Hollywood High School and how he got involved in electronics and as a EE student at Cornell University.  It was less about Intel's early history.  However, here are a few quick takes on Intel from Mr. Rattner:

By stein , 7 October 2013

Honoring Computer Pioneer Tommy Flowers and Colossus

tommy flowersIn November 1943, an electrical engineer working in the telecommunications department of Britain's General Post Office named Tommy Flowers designed and built the world’s first programmable computer. Named "Colossus," the thermionic tube-based programmable computer successfully broke the supposedly unbreakable Lorenz cipher used by Hitler and the German High Command during the Second World War.

By aweissberger , 5 October 2013

Summary, photos & videos of Oct 1st IEEE Panel: Intel's Transition to Success!

This was a hugely succcessful panel session on Intel's transitions, twists and turns into the world's most successful semiconductor company of all time.  Many attendees complemented our 2 panelists and myself for a great learning experience and intellectually stimulating session.  The great stories told by Ted and Dave is what tech history should be all about, IMHO!
 
It was certainly a team effort, as evidenced by our planning session last week, Gwen Caldwell's superb job of making the r
By aweissberger , 28 August 2013

Oct 1, 2013 IEEE CNSV meeting: Intel's Transition to Success: From Memory to the Microprocessor

Panelists:  Ted Hoff, Intel (1968-1983)
                  Dave House, Honeywell (Intel customer) and Intel (1974-1996)
 
Moderator:  Alan J Weissberger, IEEE ComSoc
 
Abstract:
 
By aweissberger , 10 August 2013

Conversation with Inventor Ted Hoff @ Flash Memory Summit-Aug 15th in Santa Clara, CA

A free session at the Flash Memory Summit- Aug 12-15, 2013 at Santa Clara Convention Center:  
Fireside Chat with Ted Hoff:  organized by IEEE COMSOC content manager Alan J Weissberger,  the session will be on Thursday from 9:50am to 10:50am.      Ted Hoff is co-inventor of the microprocessor and an early semiconductor memory design and applications engineer.
By aolley , 8 August 2013

iCHSTM 2013

Almost two weeks ago I was at the 24th International Congress for the History of Science, Technology and Medicine (iCHSTM) in Manchester, England. At more than 1700 registered participants it may have been the largest gathering devoted to the history of science, technolgoy and medicine ever.

SSEM Manchester museum close up

By aweissberger , 14 January 2013

CEO John Hollar's CHM Progress Report at Jan 7, 2013 IEEE Life Member Meeting

John Hollar, Computer History Museum (CHM) President and CEO, delivered a progress report on CHM activities at the January 7th IEEE Life Member meeting in Mt View, CA.  The CHM has become the leading institution that's archived computer artifacts, but is now recognized as a thought leader on the impact of computing on our society.

Four CHM areas were cited by John as being particularly successful:

By aweissberger , 22 June 2013

CHM Chairman Len Shustek- Tues June 25 @Oshman JCC in PaloAlto: The Amplifier for Our Brains- Who Invented the Computer?

Abstract

By aweissberger , 26 May 2013

Bob Metcalfe's Closing Keynote at Ethernet Innovation Summit - May 23, 2013, CHM in Mt View, CA

Bob Metcalfe's key points on the Ethernet Innovation Summit are summarized in this article:

http://community.comsoc.org/blogs/alanweissberger/bob-metcalfes-closing-keynote-ethernet-innovation-summit-may-23-2013-chm-mt-vi

40 years of Ethernet history discussed during day one; day two featured "movers & shakers" talking about current and future market trends and technologies.
....................................................
Metcalfe's closing keynote talk along with the Q & A session can be viewed at:

By stein , 23 May 2013

Going Once, Going Twice...A Working Apple 1

Apple_I-300Have you been longing for a working Apple 1 computer? Or maybe a reproduction of a Pascaline?

By aweissberger , 11 May 2013

Inventor Ted Hoff's Keynote @ World IP Day- April 26, 2013 in San Jose, CA

Introduction

The World IP Day program was to promote and celebrate the many benefits of intellectual property in San Jose and the SF Bay Area. San Jose and Silicon Valley lead the nation in patent generation and the city co-hosted this West Coast event to celebrate the contributions of innovators and creators worldwide.

By Nathan Zeldes , 9 April 2013

A Wonderful Adventure in Exhibition Space

Somehow my career has repeatedly led me into doing unexpected and wonderful things.

One such piece of serendipity has been the role I landed at the Jerusalem Science Museum as the curator of an exhibition in honor of Alan Turing. This project took a year and half, and gave me the occasion to work with some amazing people at the museum, interact with many more from around the world, and learn so much about that tragic genius, Alan Turing, of which I wrote here before.

By Nathan Zeldes , 8 April 2013

Alan Turing’s Earthshaking Philosophical Insight

Being the curator of the Alan Turing Year exhibition at the Jerusalem Science Museum, I was invited to sit on a panel dedicated to Turing’s legacy at the ICON Science Fiction, Imagination and The Future festival in Tel Aviv. My talk there was well received, and touches on some interesting truths, so I decided to share its content here. I hope you enjoy it as much as I have!

By aweissberger , 13 March 2013

CHM lecture: IBM Fellow Grady Booch on Computing: The Human Experience

Introduction:

In this informative March 11, 2013 lecture at the Computer History Museum (CHM), Grady Booch asked and tried to answer this question:  "What does it take to make "sentient" devices (that can feel, sense,  think and reason) out of silicon and software?"

By stein , 6 February 2013

The Day IBM Let Married Women Work

It's hard to imagine not being able to work at IBM if you're a woman who happens to be married, but  Gizmodo has published a memo from January 10, 1951  that discusses a "temporary modification" of IBM's personnel policy—yes, it finally allowed female employees to continue working once they were married. It says: 

Effective immediately and until further notice:

By aweissberger , 18 February 2013

Using Dense Social Networks to Progress a Brilliant Career in Computer Science!

Introduction

The February 10, 2013 Stony Brook (SBU) Northern CA Alumni Association meeting featured a very informative and enlightening talk by Ike Nassi, PhD (1974 Computer Science) about what he learned at SBU, the friends he made there, and use of his social network to further his career.

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