A New History of Modern Computing

  • May 18, 2022
  • 6:00 PM - 7:00 CST
  • Cuneo Hall Room 210 and online
  • Professor Ronald Greenberg, rig@cs.luc.edu
  • free
  • all
    Open to the public.
  • https://www.meetup.com/acm-chicago/events/285566610
  • Add to calendar
  • Details

    To register in-person, RSVP on this Meetup event page:

    https://www.meetup.com/acm-chicago/events/285566610/

    To register online, RSVP on this page:

    https://acm-org.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_1pv5KfIJQbiFk6WcCHbJ0A


    Live at Loyola University in Chicago and Simulcast on Zoom
    Loyola University and the Chicago Chapter of the ACM presents
    *Becoming Universal: A New History of Modern Computing*
    Book launch and signing event
    Signed copies of the book will be available for purchase with cash or credit card.

    Summary

    Over the past fifty years, the computer has been transformed from a hulking scientific supertool and data processing workhorse, remote from the experiences of ordinary people to a diverse family of devices that billions rely on to play games, shop, stream music and movies, communicate, and count their steps. In A New History of Modern Computing (MIT Press, 2021), co-authors Thomas Haigh and Paul Ceruzzi traced these changes to recount how these transformations and the community of users and producers remade the computer into something new.

    The book tells the history of electronic computing as a series of transitions, in which particular groups of users remake the computer to fit their needs whether as a scientific tool, a real-time control system, a communications medium, or a publishing platform.
    Our speaker, Thomas Haigh, will summarize some of the key features of the new book, looking both at the specific choices made in structuring the first new scholarly overview history of computing to appear in decades and at the general insights of the history of computing community that the authors were able to draw on in writing the book.

    Speaker
    Thomas Haigh is Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin¿Milwaukee, Comenius Visiting Professor at Siegen University, and the coauthor of ENIAC in Action: Making and Remaking the Modern Computer (MIT Press).
    Tom is the columnist for ¿Historical Reflections¿ in the ACM flagship journal, Communications of the ACM. His articles in CACM include ¿Becoming Universal¿ (2/2022), ¿Hey Google, What¿s a Moonshot¿, and ¿The Tears of Donald Knuth¿.
    Don't miss this LIVE presentation which tells the story of us, our career, and recreational pastime!

    Location
    Loyola University, Lake Shore Campus, is in the East Rogers Park area of Chicago. The talk is in Cuneo Hall, CH 210, which is few minutes east of the parking facility off of Sheridan Rd. On the campus map, building 21, is Cuneo Hall.
    Campus map
    Parking
    Loyola University asks for proof of vaccination. Masks are not required in the presentation space.
    Agenda:
    (Times are Central Standard Time)
    6:00pm - brief intros
    6:05pm - Talk by Thomas Haigh
    7:10 pm ¿ Q&A
    7:30 pm - end

    Registration for Zoom
    Note: You must register with Zoom for the remote broadcast, registering in Meetup does not give you access to the Zoom meeting.

    https://acm-org.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_1pv5KfIJQbiFk6WcCHbJ0A