IEEE Annals of the History of Computing

Title Publication Date Language Citations
Gender and computing in retrospect: the case of Finland1999/01/0110
The beginnings of the Manchester computer phenomenon: people and influences1993/01/0110
The first business computer: a case study in user-driven innovation2000/01/0110
Commercial applications of the digital computer in American corporations, 1945-19951996/01/0110
How to make Zuse's Z3 a universal computer1998/01/019
The adding machine fraternity at St. Louis: creating a center of invention, 1880-19202000/01/018
Computer science in Russia: a personal view1999/01/018
From vacuum tubes to very large scale integration: a personal memoir1998/01/018
SEAC and the start of image processing at the National Bureau of Standards1998/01/018
Charles Babbage's Analytical Engine, 18381998/01/018
Ada Byron, Lady Lovelace, an analyst and metaphysician1996/01/018
Early experiences with the Arpanet and Internet in the United Kingdom1999/01/018
On the History of the Minimum Spanning Tree Problem1985/01/017
The rise and fall of the General Electric Corporation computer department1995/01/017
History in the computing curriculum1999/01/017
Before the ENIAC [weapons firing table calculations]1997/01/017
The social limits of speed: development and use of supercomputers1994/01/017
Gertrude Blanch of the Mathematical Tables Project1997/10/017
Fostering a capacity for compromise: business, government, and the stages of innovation in American computing1996/01/017
Where are we going, Phil Morse? Changing agendas and the rhetoric of obviousness in the transformation of computing at MIT, 1939-19571996/01/017
U.S. technological enthusiasm and British technological skepticism in the age of the analog brain1996/01/017
The Math Tables Project of the work projects administration: the reluctant start of the computing era1998/01/016
Inventing systems engineering [LEO]2000/01/016
A history of data-flow languages1994/01/016
UTEC and Ferut: the University of Toronto's computation centre1994/01/016
Development of the IBM 1500 computer-assisted instructional system1995/01/016
The origins, uses, and fate of the EDVAC1993/01/016
General Electric enters the computer business-revisited1995/01/016
Origins of software bundling2002/01/016
Konrad Zuse's Plankalkül: the first high-level, "non von Neumann" programming language1997/01/016