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November 2011
- 12 participants
- 13 discussions
Dear SIGCIS members,
I hope this end of year message finds you all well and in a relaxed holiday
mood. SIGCIS has had another good year, reaching new heights on every
measurable aspect of our activities. The number of members reached a new
high (over 250), the number and quality of contributions to the email list
was greater than ever before, we raised more money at our annual lunch with
our book auctions and small than ever before ($1,486) and gave out more
travel grants (www.sigcis.org/travelaward) to participants than ever before
($2,400). Our second annual workshop received more submissions than the
first, and more people attended. The Mahoney Fund (www.sigcis.org/mahoney)
holds its highest balance to date (over $8,000) after its best year of
donations so far (at least $2,850). So does our operating account (around
$3,500).
For the most part, then, it was a year of consolidation and incremental
growth. If something can be done annually for several years then it becomes
a tradition, and perhaps the most crucial stumbling block is doing something
twice. SIGCIS made the second Computer History Museum award
(http://www.sigcis.org/chmprize) to Atsushi Akera for his book Computing a
Natural World. The second SIGCIS Workshop,
http://www.sigcis.org/workshop10, was a great success. See the full report
at http://www.sigcis.org/node/13. We are already planning for next year's.
SHOT's 2011 meeting is collocated with the IEEE Annals of the History of
Computing editorial board meeting, as well as with several scholarly
societies, and so we anticipate a particularly good turnout among the
field's best known scholars.
Despite our focus on institutional sustainability the SIGCIS team did launch
several new projects. These fit with our philosophy of looking for simple,
easy and low cost ways to strengthen the international scholarly community
in history of computing. This year's breakout hit was the syllabus
repository (http://www.sigcis.org/syllabi) It now holds around forty
syllabi showcasing a broad range of approaches to teaching in the area.
(Here's a new year resolution: if you have a new syllabus and are willing to
share it please send a copy now to secretary(a)sigcis.org) Our team of
international vice presidents added new resource guides for the history of
computing in Britain (http://www.sigcis.org/britain) and Japan
(http://www.sigcis.org/japan) We also added a new edition of Anne
Fitzpatrick's Pioneers of Soviet Computing to the Member Contributions area
(http://www.sigcis.org/contributions) Next year we will be looking for new
ways to strengthen this part of the website.
Another new initiative is currently unfolding. Behind the scenes we updated
the site this year to use a current release of Drupal, fixing some glitches
that had accumulated over the years. Our platform includes blogging and
comment capabilities, and we have been experimenting with the best way to
use it. Chris McDonald of Princeton and Marie Hicks of Duke have recently
joined the SIGCIS executive committee (http://www.sigcis.org/node/6) and
have taken special responsibility for this. Dag Spicer will also be blogging
to keep us up to date with events at the Computer History Museum. You can
see the latest from them at http://www.sigcis.org/blog. All SIGCIS members
can login to post comments. If you would like your own blog on the site them
please contact us. In the future we will be experimenting with ways to use
blogs, wikis, and the email list together - for example by asking a question
by email and then having answers accumulate on a blog page.
Another good new year resolution: check your entry in our member directory
at http://www.sigcis.org/members and make any updates needed by logging in
at http://www.sigcis.org/user.
Thanks to all of you who have contributed to SIGCIS over the past year,
whether as email posters, organizers, donors, syllabus providers, bidders in
the book auction, workshop attendees, or readers of our website and
messages. If you have ideas on how to make 2011 another record breaking year
for the SIG, or would like to get involved as a volunteer, then please get
in touch.
Happy holidays,
Tom Haigh, SIGCIS chair
www.tomandmaria.com/tom
3
2
Hello SIGCIS members,
This year SHOT meets jointly with the History of Science Society and the Society for Social Studies of Science. That makes the 3 combined programs a daunting read – 4S alone has more than 1,000 participants. 4S got going with a plenary Wednesday night, and SHOT starts on Thursday evening.
The first section below just lists the “official” SIGCIS events. This year we have two SIGCIS organized panels in the main conference, the SIG lunch on Friday, and a full day SIGCIS workshop with two plenary and four regular sessions on Sunday with a dinner afterwards.
That’s followed by a much longer listing of events of interest to SIGCIS members in all three conferences. I’ve tried (although I will inevitably have missed some) to include all IT-related SHOT and HSS sessions. For 4S the primary focus is not history and the conference is enormous, meaning there are too many interesting panels on things like women and IT to include all those with no historical angle. However I tried to include a somewhat random selection of relevant non-historical panels there with an IT focus to give an idea of what’s going on there.
Hope to see many of you there over the next couple of days. For those of you who can’t make it, I hope the material below whets your appetite for the exciting and diverse range of work going on within our community.
Tom
SIGCIS Sponsored Events:
Friday, 4 November 12:30 PM – 2:00 PM
SHOT: SIG on Computers, Information, and Society lunch - Erie
Friday 2:00-3:30
SHOT 22. Geographies of Computing: Straddling the Divide Between the Global and the
Local - Salon A
Sponsored by the SIG on Computers, Information, and Society
Organizers: Gerard Alberts and David Nofre (both University of Amsterdam)
Chair & Commentator: Eden Medina (Indiana University)
· Gerard Alberts (University of Amsterdam), David Nofre (University of Amsterdam), Mark Priestley
· (University College London): From Local Practice to Common Knowledge: New Perspectives on the Emergence of Programming Languages, 1955-60
· Janet Toland (Victoria University of Wellington): Not All Links Are Equal: ICT Networks in New Zealand, 1985-2005
· Patryk Wasiak (Zentrum für Zeithistorische Forschung Potsdam): Hacking Across the Atlantic: HowYoung Hackers “Phreaked” Transatlantic Telephone Cables
Saturday, 8:30-10:00
SHOT 28. Coded Narratives: Memory, Practice and Community in the History of
Software - Salon F
Sponsored by the SIG on Computers, Information, and Society
Organizer: Thomas Haigh (University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee)
Chair: David Hemmendinger (Union College)
Commentator: Thomas Haigh (University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee)
· Irina Nikiforova (Georgia Institute of Technology) [Robinson Prize Candidate]: ACM and Turing Prize Scientists: Defining the Art and Science of Computing, 1947-2008
· Hansen Hsu (Cornell University) [Robinson Prize Candidate]: NeXT History and Cocoa Community Memory
· Joline Zepcevski (University of Minnesota) [Robinson Prize Candidate]: Complexity, Verification and the Rise of Object Oriented Programming
ALL DAY SUNDAY SIGCIS WORKSHOP:
CULTURES & COMMUNITIES IN THE HISTORY OF COMPUTING
Salon B (includes both plenaries)
Salon C
9:00-10:15
Opening Plenary:
* "Designing and Using Cyberinfrastructure: Challenges and Opportunities for History"
Keynote Address by <http://www.tc.umn.edu/%7Etmisa/> Thomas J. Misa, <http://www.cbi.umn.edu/> Charles Babbage Institute, University of Minnesota
10:15-10:45
Coffee Break and Presentation of the Computer History Museum Award
10:45-12:15
Dissertations in Progress: Questions of Identity and Embodiment in Computing Communities
Moderator: <http://www.iit.edu/csl/hum/faculty/hicks_marie.shtml> Marie Hicks, Illinois Institute of Technology
* " <http://www.sigcis.org/workshop11/ellcessor> Disability Online: Policies, Practices, and Representations of the Embodied Use of New Media," <http://lizellcessor.org/> Elizabeth Ellcessor, University of Wisconsin-Madison
* " <http://www.sigcis.org/workshop11/nikiforova> Careers and Achievements of the First Women Computer Scientists, 1960-1980," <http://www.prism.gatech.edu/%7Egtg939u/> Irina Nikiforova, Georgia Institute of Technology
* <http://www.sigcis.org/node/291> "Dispatches from the Underground: Gendered Labour and Communications Technology in the remaking of London, 1870-1916," Katie Hindmarch-Watson, Johns Hopkins University
(Short presentations of around 5 minutes each to introduce precirculated dissertation proposals, to be discussed by workshop participants)
Paper Panel 1: Creating Culture through Materials and Methods
Chair: <http://publichistorian.wordpress.com/> Suzanne Fischer, The Henry Ford
Commentator: Alex Bochannek, <http://www.computerhistory.org/> Computer History Museum
* " <http://www.sigcis.org/workshop11/kidwell> Preserving the Material Culture of Computing Communities," <http://americanhistory.si.edu/about/staff.cfm?key=12&staffkey=198> Peggy Kidwell, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution
* " <http://www.sigcis.org/workshop11/november> Macromodules, Miniaturization, and the CPU's Brief Removal from the Black Box," <http://www.cas.sc.edu/hist/faculty/novemberJ.html> Joseph November, University of South Carolina
* " <http://www.sigcis.org/workshop11/stachniak> Before the Web, there was the NABU Network," <http://www.cse.yorku.ca/%7Ezbigniew/> Zbigniew Stachniak, York University, Toronto
(Three 20-minute presentations followed by a 10-15 minute comment and general discussion)
12:15-2:15
Lunch break (See program booklet for options)
2:15-3:45
Works in Progress: Why does the Study of How Communities are Formed Matter to the History of Computing?
Moderator: <http://www.arussell.org/> Andrew Russell, Stevens Institute of Technology
* " <http://www.sigcis.org/workshop11/subramanian> Murray Turoff and the Birth of Computer Mediated Comunications," <http://www.quinnipiac.edu/x1601.xml?School=BU&Dept=CS&Person=23345> Ramesh Subramanian, Quinnipiac University
* " <http://www.sigcis.org/workshop11/toland_yoong> The Learning Region Restructured," <http://www.victoria.ac.nz/sim/staff/janet-toland.aspx> Janet Toland and <http://www.victoria.ac.nz/sim/staff/pak-yoong.aspx> Pak Yoong, Victoria University of Wellington
* " <http://www.sigcis.org/workshop11/mounier_kuhn> From Universal Project to Sunken Culture: Algol in France," <http://www.sigcis.org/?q=node/52> Pierre Mounier-Kuhn, CNRS & Université Paris-Sorbonne
(Short presentations of around 5 minutes each to introduce precirculated papers, to be discussed by workshop participants)
Paper Panel 2: Insider and Outsider Communities in the History of Computing
Chair: <http://sts.stanford.edu/slayton.html> Rebecca Slayton, Stanford University
Commentator: Kevin Walsh, UC San Diego
* " <http://www.sigcis.org/workshop11/mcgee> Big Red, White, and Blue: Communities of Policy and Computing in Mainframe-era Washington, DC," <http://www.virginia.edu/history/user/137> Andrew Meade McGee, University of Virgina
* " <http://www.sigcis.org/workshop11/collopy> Computing, Video, and Radical Software," <http://hss.sas.upenn.edu/people/pcollopy> Peter Sachs Collopy, University of Pennsylvania
* " <http://www.sigcis.org/workshop11/olley> Punched Card Table Libraries as a Communal Resource," <http://individual.utoronto.ca/fofound/ultima/whoSGD.html> Allan Olley, University of Toronto
(Three 20-minute presentations followed by a 10-15 minute comment and general discussion)
3:45-4:05
Afternoon Coffee Break
4:05-5:30
Closing Plenary: Cultures & Communities in the History of Computing
Moderator: <http://www.tc.umn.edu/%7Etmisa/> Tom Misa, <http://www.cbi.umn.edu/> Charles Babbage Institute
* Alex Bochannek, <http://www.computerhistory.org/> Computer History Museum
* <http://www.soic.indiana.edu/people/profiles/medina-eden.shtml> Eden Medina, Indiana University, Bloomington
* <http://www.ischool.utexas.edu/people/person_details.php?PersonID=174> Nathan Ensmenger, University of Texas at Austin
* <http://www.arussell.org/> Andrew Russell, Stevens Institute of Technology
* <http://www.cbi.umn.edu/about/yost.html> Jeff Yost, Charles Babbage Institute
(Short introductory statements from panelists of around 5 minutes each, to be followed by discussion between the panelists and audience of <http://www.sigcis.org/node/292> questions posed in advance by the panelists).
Meet @6:15pm
Walk from Marriott lobby to Strada restaurant. See program booklet for details.
Other Relevant Items
Note that the three conferences are in different hotels. 4S is in the Crowne Plaza, SHOT’s at the Marriott and HSS is at the Renaissance (appropriately enough).
4S 011. Mediating War after 1945
Thursday 8:30 to 10:00 am
Crowne Plaza: Savoy
Chair: Paul N. Edwards, University of Michigan
Participants:
· InfoWar 2.0: Mobilizing Surveillance via Interactivity. Marc Andrejevich, University of Iowa
· Mediating the Enemy: Drone Networks as Technologies of Risk Management. Peter Asaro, New School University
· Infrared, Or, the Algorithmic Production of Visual Knowledge. Carolyn Lee Kane, Hunter College, CUNY
· Soviet Networks and the Collapse of the Cold War Digital Mindset. Benjamin Peters, University of Tulsa
Discussants:
Geoffrey Bowker, Santa Clara University
Paul N. Edwards, University of Michigan
4S 040. Internet: Use, Appropriation and Control
Thursday 10:30 to 12:00 pm
Crowne Plaza: Newman
Chair: Mikkel Flyverbom, Copenhagen Business School
Participants:
· Probing the Cloud: Rendering Publicly Visible Hidden Surveillance on the Internet Backbone. Andrew Clement, University of Toronto; Nancy Paterson, OCAD University; David J. Phillips,
· University of Toronto Refracting the Self: Proana, Visual Culture and the Internet.
· Stephanie Houston Grey, Louisiana State University From Online “Filter” to Web “Format”: Rethinking the Early Stabilization of the Blog. Ignacio Siles, Northwestern University
· Testing Web Browser Compliance: Rhetorics of Standardization and Expertise. Nathan R. Johnson, University of Wisconsin‐‐Madison
· Disclosure and Dialogue in the Internet Industry. Mikkel Flyverbom, Copenhagen Business School
4S 044. Skill, Labor and Identity in High‐Tech Occupations
Thursday 10:30 to 12:00 pm
Crowne Plaza: Boardroom
Chair: Mary Ebeling, Drexel University
Participants:
· Born to Research: Recent Reassertions of Biological Bases for Scientific Talent. Amy E. Slaton, Drexel University
· “Being Useful to Society”: Labor, Skills and Knowledge in Postindustrial Science. Mary Ebeling, Drexel University
· Gender and Skill at the Dawn of Digital Computing. Janet Abbate, Virginia Tech
· Gifted: Merit and Caste in the Making of Indian Technical Knowledge. Ajantha Subramanian, Duke University
· Virtual Citizenship in the Global Age. Aneesh Aneesh, University of Wisconsin ‐ Milwaukee
4S 061. ICTs, Economics and Market
Thursday 1:30 to 3:00 pm
Crowne Plaza: Allen
Chair: Isaac Quinn DuPont, University of Toronto
Participants:
· Our Knowledge Is Our Market: Commerciality and Materiality in Hackerspace and Hacklabs. Jeremy Hunsinger, Wilfrid Laurier University.
· The Role of Gap‐analysis in the Procurement of Packaged Software. Alexander P. Kinney, Pennsylvania State University; Nicholas J Rowland, Pennsylvania State University
· Media Publics: Modeling the Sociotechnical Network. Rachel O'Dwyer, Trinity College Dublin
· Source Control: Competing and Complimentary Histories. Isaac Quinn DuPont, University of Toronto
4S 078. Latin America in the Global Cyberspace
Thursday 3:30 to 5:00 pm
Crowne Plaza: Van Sweringen
Chair: Yuri V Takhteyev, University of Toronto
Participants:
· Future Tense: Information Work and Reform in Peru's “Innovation Classrooms." Anita Chan, University of Illinois
· Free Software in Brazil: Politics and Practice. Yuri V Takhteyev, University of Toronto
· The Charisma Machine: Discourses about OLPC from MIT to Paraguay. Morgan Ames, Stanford University
· Orkut and Narratives about Violence in Rio de Janeiro. Dilton, Santos Maynard, Uinversidade Federal de Sergipe
Friday: 8:30-10:00
SHOT 9. Superconductivity: From New Materials to New Devices - Salon A
Organizer: Ann Johnson (University of South Carolina)
Chair/Commentator: Trevor Pinch Cornell University
· David Brock (Chemical Heritage Foundation): The Superconducting Cryotron, Materiality, and
· Microcircuitry, 1954-64
· Cyrus Mody (Rice University): The Josephson Junction at IBM, 1968-83
· Ann Johnson (University of South Carolina): Superconductivity in the Field: Ford and the SQUID
HSS: Friday, 9:00-11:45
New Views of the Antikythera Mechanism:
A Geared Astronomical Computing
Machine from the Second Century BCE
Humphrey (3rd Floor)
Chair: James Voelkel, Othmer Library of Chemical History
1. Albert Rehm and the Antikythera Mechanism, Alexander Jones, New York University
2. Ancient Greek Luni-Solar Calendars, John D. Morgan, University of Delaware
3. A Clockwork Bronze: The Calendar and ‘Olympiad Dial’ on the Antikythera Mechanism, Paul A. Iversen, Case Western Reserve University
4. The Planetary Extension for the Antikythera Mechanism: Statistics, Analysis and Reconstruction, Niels Bos, Kapteyn Astronomical Institute
5. Greek or Babylonian Solar Theory on the Antikythera Mechanism? *James Evans, University of Puget Sound
4S 101. Using ICTs
Friday 8:30 to 10:00 am
Crowne Plaza: Hanna
Chair: Stephanie B Gokhman, University of Washington
Participants:
· Reliable Records and the Production of Scientific Credibility. Kathleen Fear, University of Michigan
· Cybernetics as Apparatus and Assemblage. Alasdair McMillan, York University
· Dimensions of Power: The Case within the Scientific Laboratory. Andrea Deyanira Beattie, Texas A&M International University; Marcus Ynalvez, Texas A&M International University
· Marking Territory: Exerting Control over the Shape of Scientific Knowledge in Wikipedia. Stephanie B Gokhman, University of Washington; Jonathan Morgan, University of Washington; Behzod Sirjani, University
4S 109. The Fiction in the Science: The Intersection of Fiction
and STS
Friday 8:30 to 10:00 am
Crowne Plaza: Boardroom
Chair: David L Ferro, Weber State Univerity
Participants:
· Around the Techno‐scientist's Campfire: Science Fiction and the Undergraduate Engineer. David L Ferro, Weber State Univerity
· Forensic Fictions: Science, Storytelling and Media Production. David Kirby, University of Manchester
· Sex and Nobility: Fictional Love, Imagined Technology, and the Real Engineer. Joseph Pitt, Virginia Tech
· Weird Tales to Weird Life: The Scientific Realization of Fictional Lifeforms. David Toomey, University of Massachusetts
· Design Fiction: From Props To Prototypes. Julian Bleecker, Near Future Laboratory
Discussant: Paul E. Ceruzzi, National Air & Space Museum
Friday 10:30-12:30
SHOT 13. Controlling Territories, Crossing Boundaries: Information and
Communication Technologies Between Authoritarianism and Democracy –
Salon E
Organizer: Léonard Laborie (CNRS)
Chair/Commentator: Pascal Griset (Paris-Sorbonne University)
· Paul Edwards (University of Michigan): Translating Science into Politics? Computer Models From Limits to Growth to Nuclear Winter
· Léonard Laborie (CNRS): “Users who Wanted to Matter: The French Association of Telecommunication Users and the Democratization of (the Telephone in) France, 1969-75”
· Simone Müller-Pohl (Freie Universitat): As Easy as Speech and as Free as Air: Henniker Heaton's Attempts at Democratizing Global Communication, 1883-1914
· Larissa Zakharova (EHESS): Communication Technologies Serving Authoritarianism? Mail, Telegraph and Telephone as Tools of Governing in the USSR (1922-64)
Friday, 4 November
12:30 PM – 2:00 PM
SHOT: SIG on Computers, Information, and Society lunch - Erie
Friday 2:00-3:30
SHOT 22. Geographies of Computing: Straddling the Divide Between the Global and the
Local - Salon A
Sponsored by the SIG on Computers, Information, and Society
Organizers: Gerard Alberts and David Nofre (both University of Amsterdam)
Chair & Commentator: Eden Medina (Indiana University)
· Gerard Alberts (University of Amsterdam), David Nofre (University of Amsterdam), Mark Priestley (University College London): >From Local Practice to Common Knowledge: New Perspectives on the Emergence of Programming Languages, 1955-60
· Janet Toland (Victoria University of Wellington): Not All Links Are Equal: ICT Networks in New Zealand, 1985-2005
· Patryk Wasiak (Zentrum für Zeithistorische Forschung Potsdam): Hacking Across the Atlantic: How Young Hackers “Phreaked” Transatlantic Telephone Cables
The Long 1960s: Between Science and Counterculture
HSS Friday, 1:30-3:30
Blossom (4th Floor)
Chair: Marilyn Gaull, Boston University
1. A Search for Perspective: Project OZMA and the Drake Equation, Sierra Smith, James
Madison University
2. Time, Physics, and Philosophy: The Discovery of CP Violation, Lisa Crystal, Harvard University
3. Popular Cybernetics and the Human Sciences in the Counterculture, Peter Sachs Collopy, University of Pennsylvania
4. The New Alchemy Institute: A Countercultural Alternative to Big Science, 1969-1980, Henry Trim, University of British Columbia
4S 143. The Dynamics and Consequences of ICTs
Friday 1:30 to 3:00 pm
Crowne Plaza: Hope
Chair: Carmen James Schifellite, Ryerson University
Participants:
· The Rationalities Behind the Adoption of Cyberinfrastructure as Organizational Practices, Technical Infrastructures and Social Norms. Kerk F Kee, Chapman University; Larry D. Browning, Univ of Texas, Austin
· Stabilizing Surveillance in Cloud Computing: Google's and Apple's OS's as Obligatory Passage Points. David J. Phillips, University of Toronto; Michael Murphy, U Toronto; Karen Pollock, U Toronto
· Globalization with a Social Conscience? The World Wide Web Foundation through the Lens of ICT4D. Michael Dick, University of Toronto
· Producing “Cocoa” Programmers at the “Big Nerd Ranch”. Hansen Hsu, Cornell University
· The Impact of the World Wide Web on Normal and Revolutionary Science. Carmen James Schifellite, Ryerson University
Saturday, 8:30-10:00
SHOT 28. Coded Narratives: Memory, Practice and Community in the History of
Software - Salon F
Sponsored by the SIG on Computers, Information, and Society
Organizer: Thomas Haigh (University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee)
Chair: David Hemmendinger (Union College)
Commentator: Thomas Haigh (University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee)
· Irina Nikiforova (Georgia Institute of Technology) [Robinson Prize Candidate]: ACM and Turing Prize Scientists: Defining the Art and Science of Computing, 1947-2008
· Hansen Hsu (Cornell University) [Robinson Prize Candidate]: NeXT History and Cocoa Community Memory
· Joline Zepcevski (University of Minnesota) [Robinson Prize Candidate]: Complexity,
· Verification and the Rise of Object Oriented Programming
Saturday 10:30-12:30
SHOT 37. The Tao of Innovation - Salon G
Chair & Commentator: David Hounshell (Carnegie Mellon University)
· Augustin Cerveaux (University of Strasbourg): The Shift to Titanium Pigments at Du Pont – a study of “materials ontology” (1927-36)
· Benjamin Gross (Princeton University): Computer Research and the Development of Flat-Panel Displays at RCA
· John Laudun (University of Louisiana at Lafayette) [Robinson Prize Candidate]: The Invention of a Traditional Amphibious Boat: A History of the Crawfish Boat
· Katherine Dykes (MIT): NASA and the MOD Wind Turbine Development Program: Important
· Contribution or Colossal Failure?
4S 183. The Physicality of the Virtual
Saturday 10:30 to 12:00 pm
Crowne Plaza: Hanna
Chair: Matt Burton, University of Michigan
Participants:
· "The Internet Is Here": The Virtuality of Online Communities in Physical Spaces. R. Stuart Geiger, UC‐Berkeley
· The Multiplexing of Multi‐space: Attention, Spatiality and Protest in Online Social Networks. Morgan Daniels, University of Michigan
· Crowd Theory From the Street to the Screen. Finn Brunton, University of Michigan
· Embodying the Free Encyclopedia: Wikipedia’s Materiality in Myth and Practice. Andrew Famiglietti, Georgia Institute of Technology
· Virtual Place Attachment and the Physical Place. Raz Schwartz, Bar Ilan University
Saturday, 12:30-2:00
SHOT: How to Give an Effective Academic Talk, Paul Edwards (University of Michigan) - Superior
HSS Saturday, 12:00-1:15
A conversation with Fred Kronz of theNational Science FoundationHumphrey (3rd Floor)
Come hear Dr. Kronz discuss in an informal setting the recent changes at the NSF, including the new data-management plans.
4S 194. STS Funding Opportunities at the National Science Foundation
Saturday 12:15 to 1:15 pm
Crowne Plaza: Owens
Chair: Kelly Moore, National Science Foundation
Saturday 2:00-3:30
SHOT 46. Expert Communities - Salon G
Chair & Commentator: Ron Kline (Cornell University)
· Erinn McComb (Mississippi State University): "It's Hip to Be Square": Individual Control, Masculinity, and Engineers within NASA, 1958-72
· Kevin Walsh (University of California San Diego) [Robinson Prize Candidate]: The Sons of Manhattan and the Winning of Supercomputer Access – The Tipping Point of National Security Decision Directive 189
· Søsser Brodersen, Ulrik Jørgensen, Andrés Valderrama (Technical University of Denmark): Environmental Engineering in Denmark
· Lars Heide (University of Pennsylvania and Copenhagen Business School): Association for Computing Machinery as an Institutional Intermediary Between the Innovators, Producers, and Users in Shaping Mainframe Computers
4S 221. Narratives of Place in Communities of Exposure and Disaster
Saturday 3:30 to 5:00 pm
Crowne Plaza: Dolder
Chair: Jody A Roberts, Chemical Heritage Foundation
Participants:
· Narratives of Toxics Mitigation at the IBM‐Endicott Site. Peter Little, Oregon State University Between Philly, Ambler and a Hard Place: Grids, Flows and Competing Place Narratives in Toxic Remediation. Raoul Lievanos, UC Davis; Jody A Roberts, Chemical Heritage Foundation
· Cornucopia, Dystopia, Home: Placing Environmental Justice in California’s San Joaquin Valley. Jonathan K London, UC Davis
· Not If, but When: Disaster Preparedness as Both Imagined and Situated Response. Natalie Danielle Baker, University of California, Irvine
· After the Storm: Rebuilding a Sustainable Community. Heather Marsh, University of Maryland
Saturday 9-Midnight
9-12 Midnight
Hospitality Suite, sponsored by the History and Sociology of Science Department, University of Pennsylvania, Salons F and G
SUNDAY:
ALL DAY SUNDAY SIGCIS WORKSHOP – SEE ABOVE!!
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Dear all,
Thanks for your responses regarding dinner on Sunday. We'll be taking
our sizable group over to La Strada restaurant, which has vegetarian,
vegan, and gluten free options in addition to the rest of the menu:
http://lastradacleveland.com/menu.html
Because this week is Cleveland Restaurant Week, there will also be a
prix fixe menu option for $30. And, as is customary for the SIGCIS,
those of us lucky enough to be employed full time will chip in a bit
to reduce the amount that the grad students have to pay for dinner--so
grad students, don't let cost deter you from coming along!
See you in Cleveland,
Marie
2011 SIGCIS workshop program chair
_______________
Marie Hicks, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of History of Technology
Lewis Department of the Humanities
Illinois Institute of Technology
Chicago, IL
mhicks1(a)iit.edu
www.mariehicks.net
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