The articles in IEEE Annals of the History of Computing are the result of hard work by many people. We deeply appreciate the efforts of everyone who reviewed th... Read More »
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 »
By Lori Cameron and Michael Martinez
Long before Apple, Google, Amazon and Microsoft, there was IBM and its international network of branch offices.
IBM’s... Read More »
By Lori Cameron and Michael Martinez
Tech wasn’t always a man’s world.
Go back to the 1980s, and you’ll find that the computer industry was increasingly t... Read More »