While the release of the award-winning film "The Imitation Game" made Alan Turing a household name, stories of other WWII codebreakers lie buried in the histori... Read More »
Over a half century ago, IBM designer Eliot Noyes wrote that computers “should not be like a ranch house. They should be like a Mies house. They should have tha... Read More »
Anne-Louise Guichard Radimsky helped blazed a trail for women in tech when she left her native France just as its computer industry was crumbling in the 1960s. ... Read More »
The Homebrew Computer Club was a hobbyist group in the San Francisco Bay Area dedicated to helping people build their own home personal computers.
In her art... Read More »
For more than a century, IBM has been one of the leading names among computing giants, dominating the early global market with technical and service superiority... Read More »
Although much has been written on the history of calculating machines, very little attention has been paid to the evolution of mechanical counters and their com... Read More »
In the Mid-1960s, the Laboratory at Los Alamos, New Mexico, a center of scientific computing since the Manhattan Project, embarked on a search for a new superco... Read More »
Lori Cameron is Senior Writer for the IEEE Computer Society (CS) and currently writes regular features for Computer magazine, Computing Edge, 13 CS magazine websites, and a career blog. She serves as manager and writer for several CS social media outlets. In addition, she has been a visiting professor of writing and literature at DeVry University, Long Beach, and a technical writer for over 20 years. Lori received a master of arts in English from the California State Polytechnic University, and a bachelor of arts in writing from Indiana Wesleyan University.