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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: James W. CortadaPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc Imprint: Greenwood Press Edition: Annotated edition Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.20cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.378kg ISBN: 9780313259234ISBN 10: 0313259232 Pages: 195 Publication Date: 24 April 1990 Recommended Age: From 7 to 17 years Audience: College/higher education , General/trade , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviewsSome people call it information processing and some call it data processing (sort of like 'you say tomato, I say tomato'?). Whatever one's perspective, there is no disputing the fact that computers have revolutionized society. The collecting of this revolution's history is the subject of Archives of Data-Processing History: A Guide to Major U.S. Collections. Editied by James W. Cortada, the book provides overviews of major archival collections dealing with the history of computing. Twelve collections, including those of the University of Minnesota's Charles Babbage Institute, the Library of Congress, and the IBM Archives, are described in separate essays. (I wonder who is vying for the rights to document NREN's developing history?) Each essay gives basic information on the institution (hours, telephone numbers, etc.), surveys the collection's contents, and assesses its historical significance. -American Libraries The history of the computer, and of the industry it spawned, is the latest entrant into the field of historical studies. Each essay provides an overview of a major government, academic, or industrial archival collection dealing with the history of computing, the industry, and its leaders and is written by the archivist/historian who has worked with or is responsible for the collection. The archives give practical information on hours, organization, contacts, telephone numbers, survey of contents, and assessment of the historical significance of the collections and their institutions. Those interested in the history of technology, the business history of major institutions will want to consult it. -IEEE Spectrum An annotated bibliography of 4551 items related to the history of data processing that expands upon the author's earlier An Annotated Bibliography on the History of Data Processing (Greenwood, 1983). The volume is organized into approximately 100 subcategories within nine main chapters: Reference and Introductory Materials; Pre-History of Information Processing; Origins of Modern Computing; Between Two World Wars; Hardware, 1939-1960s; Hardware, 1960s-1980s; Programming Languages; Software and Applications; and Information Processing Industry. Each chapter has a brief introduction outlining important historical issues and includes comments on the literature. Ongoing publications are also identified for those wishing to track issues on a continuing basis. The volume concludes with author and subject indices. -Science, Technology and Society ?The history of the computer, and of the industry it spawned, is the latest entrant into the field of historical studies. Each essay provides an overview of a major government, academic, or industrial archival collection dealing with the history of computing, the industry, and its leaders and is written by the archivist/historian who has worked with or is responsible for the collection. The archives give practical information on hours, organization, contacts, telephone numbers, survey of contents, and assessment of the historical significance of the collections and their institutions. Those interested in the history of technology, the business history of major institutions will want to consult it.?-IEEE Spectrum ?An annotated bibliography of 4551 items related to the history of data processing that expands upon the author's earlier An Annotated Bibliography on the History of Data Processing (Greenwood, 1983). The volume is organized into approximately 100 subcategories within nine main chapters: Reference and Introductory Materials; Pre-History of Information Processing; Origins of Modern Computing; Between Two World Wars; Hardware, 1939-1960s; Hardware, 1960s-1980s; Programming Languages; Software and Applications; and Information Processing Industry. Each chapter has a brief introduction outlining important historical issues and includes comments on the literature. Ongoing publications are also identified for those wishing to track issues on a continuing basis. The volume concludes with author and subject indices.?-Science, Technology and Society ?Some people call it information processing and some call it data processing (sort of like 'you say tomato, I say tomato'?). Whatever one's perspective, there is no disputing the fact that computers have revolutionized society. The collecting of this revolution's history is the subject of Archives of Data-Processing History: A Guide to Major U.S. Collections. Editied by James W. Cortada, the book provides overviews of major archival collections dealing with the history of computing. Twelve collections, including those of the University of Minnesota's Charles Babbage Institute, the Library of Congress, and the IBM Archives, are described in separate essays. (I wonder who is vying for the rights to document NREN's developing history?) Each essay gives basic information on the institution (hours, telephone numbers, etc.), surveys the collection's contents, and assesses its historical significance.?-American Libraries ?Some people call it information processing and some call it data processing (sort of like 'you say tomato, I say tomato'?). Whatever one's perspective, there is no disputing the fact that computers have revolutionized society. The collecting of this revolution's history is the subject of Archives of Data-Processing History: A Guide to Major U.S. Collections. Editied by James W. Cortada, the book provides overviews of major archival collections dealing with the history of computing. Twelve collections, including those of the University of Minnesota's Charles Babbage Institute, the Library of Congress, and the IBM Archives, are described in separate essays. (I wonder who is vying for the rights to document NREN's developing history?) Each essay gives basic information on the institution (hours, telephone numbers, etc.), surveys the collection's contents, and assesses its historical significance.?-American Libraries Some people call it information processing and some call it data processing (sort of like 'you say tomato, I say tomato'?). Whatever one's perspective, there is no disputing the fact that computers have revolutionized society. The collecting of this revolution's history is the subject of Archives of Data-Processing History: A Guide to Major U.S. Collections. Editied by James W. Cortada, the book provides overviews of major archival collections dealing with the history of computing. Twelve collections, including those of the University of Minnesota's Charles Babbage Institute, the Library of Congress, and the IBM Archives, are described in separate essays. (I wonder who is vying for the rights to document NREN's developing history?) Each essay gives basic information on the institution (hours, telephone numbers, etc.), surveys the collection's contents, and assesses its historical significance. -American Libraries An annotated bibliography of 4551 items related to the history of data processing that expands upon the author's earlier An Annotated Bibliography on the History of Data Processing (Greenwood, 1983). The volume is organized into approximately 100 subcategories within nine main chapters: Reference and Introductory Materials; Pre-History of Information Processing; Origins of Modern Computing; Between Two World Wars; Hardware, 1939-1960s; Hardware, 1960s-1980s; Programming Languages; Software and Applications; and Information Processing Industry. Each chapter has a brief introduction outlining important historical issues and includes comments on the literature. Ongoing publications are also identified for those wishing to track issues on a continuing basis. The volume concludes with author and subject indices. -Science, Technology and Society The history of the computer, and of the industry it spawned, is the latest entrant into the field of historical studies. Each essay provides an overview of a major government, academic, or industrial archival collection dealing with the history of computing, the industry, and its leaders and is written by the archivist/historian who has worked with or is responsible for the collection. The archives give practical information on hours, organization, contacts, telephone numbers, survey of contents, and assessment of the historical significance of the collections and their institutions. Those interested in the history of technology, the business history of major institutions will want to consult it. -IEEE Spectrum ?The history of the computer, and of the industry it spawned, is the latest entrant into the field of historical studies. Each essay provides an overview of a major government, academic, or industrial archival collection dealing with the history of computing, the industry, and its leaders and is written by the archivist/historian who has worked with or is responsible for the collection. The archives give practical information on hours, organization, contacts, telephone numbers, survey of contents, and assessment of the historical significance of the collections and their institutions. Those interested in the history of technology, the business history of major institutions will want to consult it.?-IEEE Spectrum ?Some people call it information processing and some call it data processing (sort of like 'you say tomato, I say tomato'?). Whatever one's perspective, there is no disputing the fact that computers have revolutionized society. The collecting of this revolution's history is the subject of Archives of Data-Processing History: A Guide to Major U.S. Collections. Editied by James W. Cortada, the book provides overviews of major archival collections dealing with the history of computing. Twelve collections, including those of the University of Minnesota's Charles Babbage Institute, the Library of Congress, and the IBM Archives, are described in separate essays. (I wonder who is vying for the rights to document NREN's developing history?) Each essay gives basic information on the institution (hours, telephone numbers, etc.), surveys the collection's contents, and assesses its historical significance.?-American Libraries ?An annotated bibliography of 4551 items related to the history of data processing that expands upon the author's earlier An Annotated Bibliography on the History of Data Processing (Greenwood, 1983). The volume is organized into approximately 100 subcategories within nine main chapters: Reference and Introductory Materials; Pre-History of Information Processing; Origins of Modern Computing; Between Two World Wars; Hardware, 1939-1960s; Hardware, 1960s-1980s; Programming Languages; Software and Applications; and Information Processing Industry. Each chapter has a brief introduction outlining important historical issues and includes comments on the literature. Ongoing publications are also identified for those wishing to track issues on a continuing basis. The volume concludes with author and subject indices.?-Science, Technology and Society Author InformationJAMES W. CORTADA is a Marketing Branch Manager for IBM USA in Madison, Wisconsin. This book rounds out a broad project involving a bibliography entitled An Annotated Bibliography on the History of Data Processing (Greenwood Press, 1983), and a three-volume Historical Dictionary of Data Processing (Greenwood Press, 1987) designed as reference materials for the professional historian. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |