Volume 21,
Number 1,
1999
Columns
Volume 21,
Number 2,
April-June 1999
- Jarle Brosveet:
IBM salesman meets Norwegian tax collector: computer entrepreneurs in the making.
5-13
- Magnus Johansson:
Big Blue gets beaten: the technological and political controversy of the first large Swedish computerization project in a rhetoric of technology perspective.
14-30
- Per Vingaard Klüver:
From research institute to computer company: Regnecentralen 1946-1964.
31-43
- Marja Vehviläinen:
Gender and computing in retrospect: the case of Finland.
44-51
- Per-Arne Persson:
Transformation of the analog: the case of the Saab BT 33 artillery fire control simulator and the introduction of the digital computer as control technology.
52-64
- Friedrich W. Kistermann:
When could anyone have seen Leibniz's stepped wheel?
68-72
- Dag Spicer:
The Computer Museum History Center.
74-77
Volume 21,
Number 3,
July-September 1999
- Sergei P. Prokhorov:
Computers in Russia: science, education, and industry.
4-15
- Stanislav V. Klimenko:
Computer science in Russia: a personal view.
16-30
- Laimutis Telksnys, Antanas Zilinskas:
Computers in Lithuania.
31-37
- Jozef Dujnic, Norbert Fristacky, Ludovít Molnár, Ivan Plander, Branislav Rovan:
On the history of computer science, computer engineering, and computer technology development in Slovakia.
38-48
- Zsuzsa Szentgyörgyi:
A short history of computing in Hungary.
49-57
- G. K. Stolyarov:
Computers in Belarus: chronology of the main events.
61-70
- Keith Smilie:
David Ewing Duncan, Calendar: Humanity's Epic Struggle to Determine a True and Accurate Year [Book Review].
75
- Jon Guice:
James A. Anderson and Edward Rosenfeld, Eds., Talking Nets: An Oral History of Neural Networks [Book Review].
75
- Aristotle Tympas:
Paul Levinson, The Soft Edge: A Natural History and Future of the Information Revolution [Book Review].
76
- Thomas J. Misa:
Susanne K. Schmidt and Raymund Werle, Coordinating Technology: Studies in the International Standardization of Telecommunications [Book Review].
76-77
- A. Cutler:
J.C. Herz (edited by Michael Pietsch), Joystick Nation: How Video Games Ate Our Quarters, Stole Our Hearts, and Rewired Our Minds [Book Review].
77-78
Volume 21,
Number 4,
October-December 1999
- William Aspray:
Command and control, documentation, and library science: the origins of information science at the University of Pittsburgh.
4-20
- George H. Buck, Stephen M. Hunka:
W. Stanley Jevons, Allan Marquand, and the origins of digital computing.
21-27
- Giuseppe De Marco, Giovanni Mainetto, Serena Pisani, Pasquale Savino:
The early computers of Italy.
28-36
- Saul I. Gass:
Project Mercury's man-in-space real-time computer system: "you have a go, at least seven orbits".
37-48
- James R. Harris:
The earliest solid-state digital computers.
49-54
- Louis C. Brown:
Flyable TRADIC: the first airborne transistorized digital computer.
55-61
- Friedrich W. Kistermann:
Leo Wenzel Pollak (1888-1964): Czechoslovakian pioneer in scientific data processing.
62-68
- Mary Croarken:
Case 5, 656: L.J. Comrie and the origins of the scientific computing service ltd.
70-71
- Glenn E. Meyers, J. A. N. Lee:
IBM field engineering experiences: a personal memoir.
72-76
- Ross Bassett:
Frederick Seitz and Norman G. Einspruch, Electconic Genie: The Tangled History of Silicon [Book Review].
81-82
- Thomas M. Smith:
Thomas P. Hughes, Rescuing Prometheus [Book Review].
82
- J. A. N. Lee:
Jeffrey Young, Forbes' Greatest Technology Stories [Book Review].
82-83
- Martin Campbell-Kelly, Peggy Aldrich Kidwell:
Michael E. Hobart and Zachary S. Schiffman, Information Ages: Literacy, Numeracy, and the Computer Revolution [Book Review].
83-84
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