Dilys Winegrad: Celebrating The Birth Of Modern Computing: The Fiftieth Anniversary of a Discovery At The Moore School of Engineering of the University of Pennsylvania.
5-9
James W. Cortada: Commercial Applications of the Digital Computer in American Corporations, 1945-1995.
18-29
Steven W. Usselman: Fostering a Capacity for Compromise: Business, Government, and the Stages of Innovation in American Computing.
30-39
Arthur L. Norberg: Changing Computing: The Computing Community and DARPA.
40-53
John A. N. Lee: "Those Who Forget the Lessons of History Are Doomed To Repeat It" 1. With apologies to George Santayana. or, Why I Study the History of Computing.
54-62
Mark D. Bowles: U.S. Technological Enthusiasm and British Technological Skepticism in the Age of the Analog Brain.
5-15
Per A. Holst: Svein Rosseland and the Oslo Analyzer.
16-26
Magnus Johansson: Early Analog Computers in Sweden-With Examples From Chalmers University of Technology and the Swedish Aerospace Industry.
27-33
Larry Owens: Where Are We Going, Phil Morse? Changing Agendas and the Rhetoric of Obviousness in the Transformation of Computing at MIT, 1939-1957.
34-41
Aristotle Tympas: From Digital to Analog and Back: The Ideology of Intelligent Machines in the History of the Electrical Analyzer, 1870s-1960s.
42-48
Susann Puchta: On the Role of Mathematics and Mathematical Knowledge in the Invention of Vannevar Bush's Early Analog Computers.
49-59