[SIGCIS-Members] New Book on Software History

Armando Fox fox at berkeley.edu
Mon Oct 4 12:20:04 PDT 2021


congrats, i've already downloaded and looking forward! looks very thorough!

Sent from my iPhone; forgive my terseness

> On Oct 4, 2021, at 12:12, Subramanian, Ramesh Prof. <Ramesh.Subramanian at quinnipiac.edu> wrote:
> 
> 
> Congrats, Kim! Looks Like a very useful book! I'll be sure to check it out for one of my graduate electives!
> 
> -Ramesh
> 
> 
> 
> “The greatest shortcoming of the human race is our inability to understand the exponential function.”- Prof. Albert Allen Bartlett
> 
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
> ​Ramesh Subramanian, Ph.D.
> ​Gabriel Ferrucci Professor of Information Systems
> ​Quinnipiac University
> ​Hamden, CT 06511, USA
> ​Email: ramesh.subramanian at qu.edu
> ​Web: https://www.qu.edu/faculty-and-staff/ramesh-subramanian
> ​&
> ​Fellow, Information Society Project, Yale Law School
> ​New Haven, CT 06511, USA
> Email: ramesh.subramanian at yale.edu
> Web: https://www.law.yale.edu/ramesh-subramanian
> 
> Recent book: Mobile Technology and Social Transformations, Routledge, UK (2021)
> 
> From: Members <members-bounces at lists.sigcis.org> on behalf of Tracy, Kim <tracy at rose-hulman.edu>
> Sent: Monday, October 4, 2021 2:06 PM
> To: members at sigcis.org <members at sigcis.org>
> Subject: [SIGCIS-Members] New Book on Software History
>  
> CAUTION: This email originated from outside of the organization. Do not follow guidance, click links, or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe.
> 
> SIGCIS,
>  
> I’m pleased announce my book on software history has been published with ACM Books.  It is titled Software: A Technical History and is a textbook for students of computing to understand the history of software.  If you have access to the ACM Digital Library (DL), then you likely already have free access to it: https://dl.acm.org/doi/book/10.1145/3477339.  It is also available via Amazon and Barnes and Noble.   It’s only $34.95 as a paperback, but I’m hoping most students studying computing will have free access through their institution’s ACM DL subscription. 
>  
> I wrote the book because I started teaching the history of computation as a special topics course and it became clear to me that much of the most important part, software, was barely covered in most texts from a technical point of view.  I began developing my own materials and it became clear that not only was this material not covered in most curricula, it was becoming increasingly important as students build on layers of pre-existing software without much understanding of how it was built or its design assumptions.   Students studying computer security are faced with these layers of pre-existing software that are often put to unpredicted uses which exposes new vulnerabilities.  An intent is that students will be able to better reason about software as a technology and better predict where it is going, why it succeeds, and why it fails.    I include as many exercises as I could so that students can explore interesting corners of software history that I couldn’t cover in the book.
>  
> I’d appreciate any feedback on it, and, of course, any Amazon or Barnes and Noble reviews you’d be willing to write. 
>  
> SIGCIS has helped provide a lot of interesting examples over the years, some of which you may recognize as exercises. . . .
>  
> Thanks,
> --Kim
>  
>  
> Kim W. Tracy
> Visiting Asst. Professor of Computer Science and Software Engineering
> (pronouns: he, him)
> ROSE-HULMAN INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
> 5500 Wabash Avenue  |  Terre Haute,  IN  47803-3999
> Room: Moench D216   | tracy at rose-hulman.edu
> Phone:  812.877.8343  |  Fax:  812.872.6060
> www.rose-hulman.edu
>  
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