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IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, Volume 18
Volume 18, Number 1, Spring 1996
- Michael R. Williams:

New EIC. 3 - Michael R. Williams:

About this Issue. 4 - Dilys Winegrad:

Celebrating The Birth Of Modern Computing: The Fiftieth Anniversary of a Discovery At The Moore School of Engineering of the University of Pennsylvania. 5-9 - Herman H. Goldstine, Adele Goldstine:

The Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer (ENIAC). 10-16 - Mitchell Marcus, Atsushi Akera:

Exploring the Architecture of an Early Machine: The Historical Relevance of the ENIAC Machine Architecture. 17-24 - Peter Eckstein:

J. Presper Eckert. 25-44 - John Costello:

As the Twig is Bent: The Early Life of John Mauchly. 45-50 - David Alan Grier:

The ENIAC, the Verb "to program" and the Emergence of Digital Computers. 51-55
- Geoffrey C. Bowker:

Happenings. 56-66 - Eric A. Weiss:

Biographies. 67-79 - Peggy Aldrich Kidwell:

Reviews. 79-80
Volume 18, Number 2, Summer 1996
- Eric A. Weiss:

Konrad Zuse (Obituary). 3-5 - Robert W. Seidel:

Guest Editor's Introduction. 6 - Emerson W. Pugh, William Aspray:

Creating the Computer Industry. 7-17 - James W. Cortada:

Commercial Applications of the Digital Computer in American Corporations, 1945-1995. 18-29 - Steven W. Usselman:

Fostering a Capacity for Compromise: Business, Government, and the Stages of Innovation in American Computing. 30-39 - Arthur L. Norberg:

Changing Computing: The Computing Community and DARPA. 40-53 - John A. N. Lee:

"Those Who Forget the Lessons of History Are Doomed To Repeat It" 1. With apologies to George Santayana. or, Why I Study the History of Computing. 54-62
- Walter M. Carlson:

Anecdotes. 63-66 - Eric A. Weiss:

Biographies. 67-76 - Peggy Aldrich Kidwell:

Reviews. 77-78 - Geoffrey C. Bowker:

Happenings. 79-80
Volume 18, Number 3, Fall 1996
- Betty Campbell:

About This Issue. 3 - Betty Alexandra Toole:

Ada Byron, Lady Lovelace, An Analyst and Metaphysician. 4-12 - W. Barkley Fritz:

The Women of ENIAC. 13-28 - Denise W. Gürer:

Women's Contributions to Early Computing at the National Bureau of Standards. 29-35 - Amita Goyal:

Women in Computing: Historical Roles, the Perpetual Glass Ceiling, and Current Opportunities. 36-42 - Thelma Estrin:

Women's Studies and Computer Science: Their Intersection. 43-46 - Alison E. Adam:

Constructions of Gender in the History of Artificial Intelligence. 47-53 - Anita Borg:

First Hopper Celebration an Unqualified Success. 54-55
- Brian Randell, Rudolph E. Hirsch:

Anecdotes. 56-59 - Eric A. Weiss:

Biographies. 60-69 - Earl E. Swartzlander Jr.:

Calculators. 70-71 - Werner Buchholz:

Comments, Queries, and Debate. 72-73 - Geoffrey C. Bowker:

Happenings. 74-76 - Peggy Aldrich Kidwell:

Reviews. 77-79
Volume 18, Number 4, Winter 1996
- James M. Nyce:

Guest Editor's Introduction. 3-4 - Mark D. Bowles:

U.S. Technological Enthusiasm and British Technological Skepticism in the Age of the Analog Brain. 5-15 - Per A. Holst:

Svein Rosseland and the Oslo Analyzer. 16-26 - Magnus Johansson:

Early Analog Computers in Sweden-With Examples From Chalmers University of Technology and the Swedish Aerospace Industry. 27-33 - Larry Owens:

Where Are We Going, Phil Morse? Changing Agendas and the Rhetoric of Obviousness in the Transformation of Computing at MIT, 1939-1957. 34-41 - Aristotle Tympas:

From Digital to Analog and Back: The Ideology of Intelligent Machines in the History of the Electrical Analyzer, 1870s-1960s. 42-48 - Susann Puchta:

On the Role of Mathematics and Mathematical Knowledge in the Invention of Vannevar Bush's Early Analog Computers. 49-59
- James E. Tomayko:

Anecdotes. 60 - Eric A. Weiss:

Biographies. 61 - Earl E. Swartzlander Jr.:

Calculators. 62-64 - Werner Buchholz:

Comments, Queries, and Debate. 65-66 - Geoffrey C. Bowker:

Happenings. 67-68 - Peggy Aldrich Kidwell:

Reviews. 69-75

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