Communications of the ACM,
Vol. 55 No. 5, Pages 33-34
10.1145/2160718.2160728
Reflections on the changing face of the history of computing.
The full text of this article is premium content
1 Comments
CACM Administrator
The following letter was published in the Letters to the Editor in the July 2012 CACM (http://cacm.acm.org/magazines/2012/7/151227).
--CACM Administrator
David Anderson's Historical Reflections column "The Future of the Past" (May 2012) made a persuasive case for preserving computer hardware and software artifacts. I would add that computer science has not preserved its paper well, either; for example, when The American Federation of Information Processing Societies, the parent of both ACM and IEEE, folded in 1990, its records, periodicals collection, and books went to the dump, as did the records of the Microelectronics and Computer Technology Corporation, or MCC, a major consortium for which I worked in the 1980s. I welcome efforts such as those led by Bruce Damer, whose Digibarn Museum (http://www.digibarn.com/) houses paper materials, as well as working versions of vintage PC hardware and GUI software.
Computer science can do even more to preserve its legacy, encouraging and assisting ethnographers to look into technology development and use. Otherwise, future historians, as well as computer professionals, will be left to infer or guess how preserved artifacts were designed, used, and ultimately abandoned, much as we speculate today about the use of unearthed artifacts of ancient civilizations.
Jonathan Grudin
Redmond, WA
Displaying 1 comment
Log in to Read the Full Article
Purchase the Article
Log in
Create a Web Account
If you are an ACM member, Communications subscriber, Digital Library subscriber, or use your institution's subscription, please set up a web account to access premium content and site
features. If you are a SIG member or member of the general public, you may set up a web account to comment on free articles and sign up for email alerts.
CACM Administrator
The following letter was published in the Letters to the Editor in the July 2012 CACM (http://cacm.acm.org/magazines/2012/7/151227).
--CACM Administrator
David Anderson's Historical Reflections column "The Future of the Past" (May 2012) made a persuasive case for preserving computer hardware and software artifacts. I would add that computer science has not preserved its paper well, either; for example, when The American Federation of Information Processing Societies, the parent of both ACM and IEEE, folded in 1990, its records, periodicals collection, and books went to the dump, as did the records of the Microelectronics and Computer Technology Corporation, or MCC, a major consortium for which I worked in the 1980s. I welcome efforts such as those led by Bruce Damer, whose Digibarn Museum (http://www.digibarn.com/) houses paper materials, as well as working versions of vintage PC hardware and GUI software.
Computer science can do even more to preserve its legacy, encouraging and assisting ethnographers to look into technology development and use. Otherwise, future historians, as well as computer professionals, will be left to infer or guess how preserved artifacts were designed, used, and ultimately abandoned, much as we speculate today about the use of unearthed artifacts of ancient civilizations.
Jonathan Grudin
Redmond, WA