[SIGCIS-Members] Tom Haigh to speak at CHM!

Dag Spicer dspicer at computerhistory.org
Fri Nov 11 10:40:57 PST 2016


Hello everyone!

The Computer History Museum is delighted to welcome Professor Thomas Haigh to the museum next week for a special lecture based on the amazing book “ENIAC in Action.”

Here is the official lecture announcement:

"Rethinking the Myths of Innovation with ENIAC in Action”

Books and shows about the history of information technology have usually focused on great inventors and technical breakthroughs, from Charles Babbage and Alan Turing to Steve Jobs and the World Wide Web. Work by non-geniuses, particularly operations work, has been written out of the popular history of innovation, but without it no computer would be useful. Information historian Thomas Haigh is writing it back in.

This talk will focus on ENIAC, the first general purpose electronic computer, based on research for his book ENIAC in Action: Making and Remaking the Modern Computer, recently published by MIT Press. Haigh’s book explains that the six women now celebrated as the “first computer programmers” were actually hired as computer operators and worked hands-on with the machine around the clock. Other women, who actually built ENIAC, have been forgotten entirely, as have the contributions of other people working on vital aspects of the project, from procuring the right kind of wire to saving ENIAC from flood water. Haigh’s concluding comments relate this historical material to the human labor and physical infrastructure today vanishing from public view into the “cloud.”

Join us as Thomas Haigh discusses his new book and the men and, in particular, women involved in the creation of design of the ENIAC.

We are very pleased that Books, Inc. will be selling copies of ENIAC in Action before and after the program.

There is no charge for the lecture and we especially encourage all SIGCIS members who can to attend.  It would be great to see you there and connect!

All the best,

Dag
--
Dag Spicer
Senior Curator
Computer History Museum
Editorial Board, IEEE Annals of the History of Computing
1401 North Shoreline Boulevard
Mountain View, CA 94043-1311

Tel: +1 650 810 1035
Fax: +1 650 810 1055



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