Studies and representations of computing -- historical, social, curatorial -- have moved increasingly in recent years to consider information technology in the context of its use, and of its users' understandings, expectations and interactions with the world around them. Under current consideration are such questions as the following:
- How did early computer users interact with their hardware, and how can we account for the apparent shift in conceptual focus from hardware to software?
- Can we (and should we) clearly distinguish an idea of "the computer" from other information-processing machines which may share its locations and much of its history?
- How have computers historically been represented to "non-expert" audiences (with or without the intention of generating new "experts") -- and how should the history of the computer be represented to "non-experts" today?
- Given that the established historiography of computing focuses largely on the US, and almost wholly on the developed West and Japan, how should we begin to address cultures of computer use elsewhere in the world?
Organised as a collaboration between the Centre for the History of Science, Technology and Medicine, University of Manchester, and the Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester, this two-day meeting aims to address these and other questions by bringing together invited speakers and commentators across a broad range of seniority and research interests, with backgrounds in academic history, the social sciences, museums and libraries.
For further information, including venue and registration details, please see the conference webpage at <http://www.ls.manchester.ac.uk/chstm/events/conferences/computers/>, or write directly to the organiser: james.sumner (at) manchester.ac.uk.
PROVISIONAL PROGRAMME
[Please note that the content of this programme may change owing to circumstances beyond our control. Further, we expect some additional information to become available in the run-up to the meeting.]
Day One: Saturday 22 July
Centre for the History of Science, Technology and Medicine (CHSTM)
University of Manchester
09.30-10.30 Registration and coffee
10.30-10.45 Welcome
10.45-12.30 Session 1
Tom Haigh
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Blue collars, white shirts: the conflicted identity of 1950s punched card men
Marie Hicks
Duke University
Categorizing machine operators in the mechanized office, 1950-1965
Charles Care
University of Warwick
Can we have a modelling machine? The choice between digital and analog computers in British aeronautical research
Mark Walker
Open University
(Statement of research aims; 10-minute presentation) The history and development of the programmable logic controller
12.30-13.30 Lunch
13.30-15.00 Session 2
Tom Lean
University of Manchester
ZX81 at 25: the Big Blue of little black boxes
James Sumner
University of Manchester
"It's happening now": computer literacy in Britain from 1981
Frank Veraart
Technische Universiteit Eindhoven
Broadcasting software, co-producing a microcomputer Esperanto: Basicode
15.00-15.30 Coffee
15.30-17.00 Session 3
Nathan Ensmenger
University of Pennsylvania
"What's so hard about software?" Computers and organizational transformation, 1952-1968
Martin Campbell-Kelly
University of Warwick
Daniel D Garcia-Swartz
LECG
Economic perspectives on the computer time sharing industry, 1965-1985
Followed by general discussion
17.00 Drinks reception
Day Two: Sunday 23 July
Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester
10.15-11.00 Session 4: Museums, Libraries and Archives
Three short presentations on established activities and current initiatives aiming to broaden and promote the understanding of computing. Followed by general discussion.
Jenny Wetton
Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester
Katrina Dean
British Library
James Sumner
UK National Archive for the History of Computing
11.00-11.15 Break
11.15-12.30 Session 5
Yuwei Lin
University of Manchester
The genealogy of FLOSS (paper to be precirculated and discussed in absentia; commentator tba)
Ian Martin
Open University
Sense in working overtime: long hours in the construction of identity and career progression of IT specialists
Bill Aspray
Indiana University
History of the Indian software and services industry
12.30-13.30 Break for lunch
Meeting then divides into two groups, for activities to be taken in either order:
13.30 / 14.15 Demonstration of the Manchester Baby rebuild by volunteers from the Computer Conservation Society
13.30 / 14.15 Visit to the Museum's Collections Centre, including handling session
15.00 Close
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