Studying computing's past to make sense of present. Special Interest Group Cmptrs, Info & Society in @sochisttech. Retweets not endorsements! Info: @liz_petrick
Please join me in welcoming 3 new members to the SIGCIS Conference Organizing Committee! Katya Babintseva (@BabintsevaK), Gili Vidan, and Colette Perold (@coletteperold). Thank you for helping keep SIGCIS going strong!
Happy Pride everyone from the Computer History Museum! Today we celebrate 2012 CHM Fellow Sophie Wilson, co-inventor of the BBC Micro and the ARM microprocessor architecture. @Computerhistory@SocHistTech@IEEESpectrum@SIGCIS@HRC@Arm
A reminder that proposals for #sigcis2023, Online Edition 2.0, are due June 1st. The virtual conference will be held September 21-23, 2023.
https://t.co/AzwIuFvWst
2023 Mahoney Prize for best article in the history of computing is now accepting nominations! Nominations are due by April 30th. More info on the website.
https://t.co/38kB9g1yuk
SIGCIS 2023 Call for Papers. We will be having an online conference this year, Sept 21-23. Proposals due June 1. Spread the word!
https://t.co/AzwIuFvWst
PONG is 50! From its origins in a smoke-filled Silicon Valley bar to neurons in a Petri dish, PONG is here to stay. Read my blog: https://t.co/OJTX30MuGQ @ComputerHistory@SIGCIS@vcfederation
Legendary computer architect Fred Brooks passed away today. Brooks led the team creating the timeless IBM System/360 mainframe architecture as well as development of OS/360. Hear Brooks @ComputerHistory https://t.co/vaGBBgNWZY @SIGCIS@IEEESpectrum@TheOfficialACM@ibm@unc
Also pleased to announce Theodora Vardouli and David Theodore's article, “Walking Instead of Working: Space Allocation, Automatic Architecture, and the Abstraction of Hospital Labor,” as winner of the 2022 Mahoney Prize.
https://t.co/gBLTVxkW7F
Happy to announce Jacob Gaboury's Image Objects: An Archaeology of Computer Graphics as the winner of the 2022 Computer History Museum book prize!
https://t.co/w1Rv4hKQrj
Next up will be sessions on: "Legal and Political Constructions of Computing," "Minds and Machines," and "Out of Sight / Out of Mind: The Limits of Historical Representation." #sigcis2022
Collective histories to make sense of technologies under construction. How we use history to understand technology as it's unfolding and being hidden from us. The role of speculation as technology is evolving/changing, as a form of knowledge-making.