Hello everyone, I recently came across mention of an interesting project on the history of the Plato system. The historical importance of Plato is, I think, reasonably well understood among expert historians of computing as a crucial contribution to the development of large-scale timesharing, computer mediated communication, online communities, and educational computing. We're also aware of the direct line of influence on Lotus Notes from Plato. It does have a full chapter in Chris McDonald's 2011 Princeton Ph.D. Thesis, and pops up in work on the history of CDC and William Norris, but has not received a thorough history or been featured in many overview histories of computer technology. So I'm glad to learn that Brian Dear has taken up the challenge of preserving and disseminating information on Plato. His main site is http://platohistory.org/. There was a big event at the Computer History Museum back in 2010, http://platohistory.org/conference/50th-anniversary/ and videos of the panel sessions are available online if you scroll way down on his main page. So the project hadn't exactly been in stealth mode, but I thought that if I hadn't known about it then you might not either. Dear has apparently conducted lots of interviews and gathered masses of material for a book in progress, http://friendlyorangeglow.com/. I'm looking forward to the book, but also hope that he will be making sure that this material is properly archived so that future researchers will be able to tell their own stories about Plato. Tom
Hello, and thanks Tom! To add a bit to the PLATO discussion, this 2010 conference held at the University of Illinois is archived and includes Don Bitzer and others talking about PLATO: http://50years.lis.illinois.edu/ Sharon Sharon Irish Graduate School of Library and Information Science University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign 501 E. Daniel St. MC-493 Champaign, IL 61820 slirish@illinois.edu (mobile) 217.766-2411 www.sharonirish.org From: Thomas Haigh <thaigh@computer.org<mailto:thaigh@computer.org>> Reply-To: "thaigh@computer.org<mailto:thaigh@computer.org>" <thaigh@computer.org<mailto:thaigh@computer.org>> Date: Thursday, February 21, 2013 2:18 PM To: "members@sigcis.org<mailto:members@sigcis.org>" <members@sigcis.org<mailto:members@sigcis.org>> Subject: [SIGCIS-Members] PLATO History Hello everyone, I recently came across mention of an interesting project on the history of the Plato system. The historical importance of Plato is, I think, reasonably well understood among expert historians of computing as a crucial contribution to the development of large-scale timesharing, computer mediated communication, online communities, and educational computing. We're also aware of the direct line of influence on Lotus Notes from Plato. It does have a full chapter in Chris McDonald's 2011 Princeton Ph.D. Thesis, and pops up in work on the history of CDC and William Norris, but has not received a thorough history or been featured in many overview histories of computer technology. So I'm glad to learn that Brian Dear has taken up the challenge of preserving and disseminating information on Plato. His main site is http://platohistory.org/. There was a big event at the Computer History Museum back in 2010, http://platohistory.org/conference/50th-anniversary/ and videos of the panel sessions are available online if you scroll way down on his main page. So the project hadn’t exactly been in stealth mode, but I thought that if I hadn’t known about it then you might not either. Dear has apparently conducted lots of interviews and gathered masses of material for a book in progress, http://friendlyorangeglow.com/. I’m looking forward to the book, but also hope that he will be making sure that this material is properly archived so that future researchers will be able to tell their own stories about Plato. Tom
Tom, Have you heard news on specific publication plans? The book has been listed as upcoming since I first started researching PLATO in 2009. I hope it does see the light of day soon. Best, Chris McDonald ________________________________________ From: members-bounces@sigcis.org [members-bounces@sigcis.org] On Behalf Of Thomas Haigh [thaigh@computer.org] Sent: Thursday, February 21, 2013 3:18 PM To: members@sigcis.org Subject: [SIGCIS-Members] PLATO History Hello everyone, I recently came across mention of an interesting project on the history of the Plato system. The historical importance of Plato is, I think, reasonably well understood among expert historians of computing as a crucial contribution to the development of large-scale timesharing, computer mediated communication, online communities, and educational computing. We're also aware of the direct line of influence on Lotus Notes from Plato. It does have a full chapter in Chris McDonald's 2011 Princeton Ph.D. Thesis, and pops up in work on the history of CDC and William Norris, but has not received a thorough history or been featured in many overview histories of computer technology. So I'm glad to learn that Brian Dear has taken up the challenge of preserving and disseminating information on Plato. His main site is http://platohistory.org/. There was a big event at the Computer History Museum back in 2010, http://platohistory.org/conference/50th-anniversary/ and videos of the panel sessions are available online if you scroll way down on his main page. So the project hadn’t exactly been in stealth mode, but I thought that if I hadn’t known about it then you might not either. Dear has apparently conducted lots of interviews and gathered masses of material for a book in progress, http://friendlyorangeglow.com/. I’m looking forward to the book, but also hope that he will be making sure that this material is properly archived so that future researchers will be able to tell their own stories about Plato. Tom
participants (3)
-
Irish, Sharon Lee -
McDonald, Christopher -
Thomas Haigh