SIGCIS 2011 Meeting: Read Works in Progress Online Now!
Folks, I'm very pleased to be able to tell you that 5 out of the 6 works-in-progress papers for this year's SIGCIS workshop are now available online, linked from the online program. Please have a look at them before the conference and consider attending either the dissertations-in-progress session in the morning, or the works-in-progress session in the afternoon. The dissertation session, in particular, with works ranging over topics in disability studies, telegraph information infrastructure, and the history of gender and sexuality promises to engender a lively discussion, and the afternoon works-in-progress session, with papers looking at communities and networks in the development of computing will no doubt promote terrific discussion as well. The direct link for the papers is: http://mypages.iit.edu/~mhicks1/SIGCIS2011WIP/ I look forward to seeing many of you at SHOT in a few weeks. Best, Marie _______________ Marie Hicks, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of History of Technology Lewis Department of the Humanities Illinois Institute of Technology Chicago, IL mhicks1@iit.edu www.mariehicks.net
Just got word, unconfirmed, that John McCarthy passed away today. The news is appearing in several places on the Internet. Lots of passing and transitions this fall. Paul E. Ceruzzi Chair, Division of Space History National Air & Space Museum MRC 311; PO Box 37012 Washington, DC 20013-7012 202-633-2414 <http://www.nasm.si.edu/staffDetail.cfm?staffID=24>
I just read the New York Times piece on McCarthy, which strikes me as unfair to the point that I feel a need to share with our group. Though in my work I mostly deal with the international scientific persona of McCarthy, namely Algol and his Soviet connections, even the American part of the story, or to quote "the arc of modern computing" seems to be totally misrepresented as a teleological drive toward the California born pc. A larger question to ask: where is the place for a [good] computer history in public sphere? ksenia ________________________________ De : "Ceruzzi, Paul" <CeruzziP@si.edu> À : "members@sigcis.org" <members@sigcis.org> Envoyé le : Lundi 24 Octobre 2011 18h11 Objet : [SIGCIS-Members] John McCarthy Just got word, unconfirmed, that John McCarthy passed away today. The news is appearing in several places on the Internet. Lots of passing and transitions this fall. Paul E. Ceruzzi Chair, Division of Space History National Air & Space Museum MRC 311; PO Box 37012 Washington, DC 20013-7012 202-633-2414 <http://www.nasm.si.edu/staffDetail.cfm?staffID=24> _______________________________________________ This email is relayed from members@sigcis.org, the email discussion list of SHOT SIGCIS. The list archives are at http://sigcis.org/pipermail/members/ and you can change your subscription options at http://sigcis.org/mailman/listinfo/members
I believe the answer to your larger question lies in the Information School movement. That is where I am in the first year of my doctoral program (University of Washington), where I am focusing on the historical co-evolution of information science and information technology. There have been books, some of them quite good (yes, Paul, I mean yours), that have focused on the "what" of computing, but I have not seen much addressing the "why", more of Orlikowski's technology-in-action approach that considers the reflexive relationship between ourselves and our digital offspring. The rise of interactive computing - in which McCarthy played a crucial role - was more than just technology on the march. It represented movement toward a more intimate relationship, a conversation, between ourselves and the artifacts of information technology, a trend that remains a powerful moving force as we consider the hands-on interaction that has become ubiquitous. The Information School (iSchool) here at the UW is a multidisciplinary department that is well situated to encompass, preserve and discuss this history. The Computer Science and Engineering department (from which I earned my MS) is about the theoretical "what" and has little interest in computers themselves. While a history department might seem the proper place for a history, they lack domain knowledge for this specialized area, where the interaction of hardware and software is methodologically unsuited to a traditional curatorial treatment. Anthropology is a player, but again not well suited to studying "intelligences" other than human. The iSchool is a commons where these concepts come together - or at least that was the judgement of the admissions committee that accepted my application. :-) I was in the early stages of planning an interview of McCarthy about his work on timesharing. <sigh> I had been talking with Dennis Ritchie (through an intermediary) for over a year, hoping to find at least fragments of listings of his PDP-7 UNICS implementation, to guide a restoration/reconstruction effort on our PDP-7 here. <sigh^2> Too many passings of too many great minds.... - Ian ________________________________________ From: members-bounces@sigcis.org [members-bounces@sigcis.org] On Behalf Of Ksenia Tatarchenko [ktatarchenko@yahoo.fr] Sent: Wednesday, October 26, 2011 9:05 AM To: Ceruzzi, Paul; members@sigcis.org Subject: [SIGCIS-Members] Re : John McCarthy and the arch of modern computing I just read the New York Times piece on McCarthy, which strikes me as unfair to the point that I feel a need to share with our group. Though in my work I mostly deal with the international scientific persona of McCarthy, namely Algol and his Soviet connections, even the American part of the story, or to quote "the arc of modern computing" seems to be totally misrepresented as a teleological drive toward the California born pc. A larger question to ask: where is the place for a [good] computer history in public sphere? ksenia ________________________________ De : "Ceruzzi, Paul" <CeruzziP@si.edu> À : "members@sigcis.org" <members@sigcis.org> Envoyé le : Lundi 24 Octobre 2011 18h11 Objet : [SIGCIS-Members] John McCarthy Just got word, unconfirmed, that John McCarthy passed away today. The news is appearing in several places on the Internet. Lots of passing and transitions this fall. Paul E. Ceruzzi Chair, Division of Space History National Air & Space Museum MRC 311; PO Box 37012 Washington, DC 20013-7012 202-633-2414 <http://www.nasm.si.edu/staffDetail.cfm?staffID=24> _______________________________________________ This email is relayed from members@sigcis.org<mailto:members@sigcis.org>, the email discussion list of SHOT SIGCIS. The list archives are at http://sigcis.org/pipermail/members/ and you can change your subscription options at http://sigcis.org/mailman/listinfo/members
participants (4)
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Ceruzzi, Paul -
Ian King -
Ksenia Tatarchenko -
Marie Hicks