Большая библиография 50 Years of Army Computing: From eniac to msrc


Computers in Russia, the U.S. View, Part 1 (by Weiss E. A.); Part 2 (by Ware W. H., Holland W. B.) // AHC, Vol. 22, № 1, January-March 2000. P. 92-96



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Computers in Russia, the U.S. View, Part 1 (by Weiss E. A.); Part 2 (by Ware W. H., Holland W. B.) // AHC, Vol. 22, № 1, January-March 2000. P. 92-96.


Computing Before Computers, ed. by William Aspray. Ames: Iowa State University Press, 1990. 266 p.

Computing in Russia. The History of Computer Devices and Information Technology revealed. G. Trogemann, A. Y. Nitussov, W. Ernst (Eds.). Wiesbaden: VIEWEG, 2001. 350 p.

Первый развернутый очерк развития российской вычислительной техники, опубликованный на Западе. Около 50 статей и заметок.



Conant L. L. The Number Concept. Its origin and development. N.-Y.  L.: Macmillan and Co, 1896. 218 p.

Coombs A. W. M. The Making of Colossus // AHC, Vol. 5, № 3, July-September 1983. P. 253-259.

Copeland B. J. Colossus and the Dawning of the Computer Age / Action This Day, R. Erskine and M. Smith, eds. N.-Y.: Bantam Book, 2001. P. 342-369.

Copeland B. J. Unfair to Aiken // AHC, Vol. 26, № 4, October-December 2004. P. 35-37.

Copeland B. J. Colossus: Its Origins and Originators // AHC, Vol. 26, № 4, October-December 2004. P. 38-45.

Copeland B. J. The Essential Turing: Seminal Writings in Computing, Logic, Philosophy, Artificial Intellegence, And Artificial Life; Plus The Secrets Of Enigma. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004. 613 p.

Copeland J., Proudfoot D. On Alan Turings Anticipation of Connectionism // Synthese, vol. 108, № 3, March 1996. P. 361-377.

Copeland J., Proudfoot D. Alan Turings Forgotten Ideas in Computer Science // Scientific American, vol. 280, № 4, 1999. P. 98-103.

Neural networks and hypercomputation are hot ideas for transcending the limits of traditional algorithmic computing. What few realize, however, is that both concepts were anticipated in detail decades ago by Alan Turing, the British genius better remembered for laying the groundwork for artificial intelligence.



Copeland J., Proudfoot D. What Turing Did after He Invented the Universal Turing Machine // Journal of Logic Language and Information, vol. 9, № 4, 2000. P. 491-510.

Cortada J. W. An Annotated Bibliography on the History of Data Processing. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1983. 215 p.

Cortada J. W. Historical Dictionary of Data Processing. Biographies. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1987. 334 p., apps.

Cortada J. W. Historical Dictionary of Data Processing: Organizations. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1987. 320 p., apps.

Cortada J. W. Historical Dictionary of Data Processing: Technology. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1987. 428 p., apps.

Cortada J. W. A Bibliographic Guide to the History of Computing, Computers, and the Information Processing Industry. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1990. 656 p.

Cortada J. W. Archives of Data-Processing History. A Guide to Major U.S. Collections. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1990. 195 p.

Cortada, J. W. The Computer in the United States: From Laboratory to Market, 1930 to 1960. Armonk, N.-Y.: M. E. Sharp, 1993. 183 p.

Cortada J. W. Second Bibliographic Guide to the History of Computing, Computers, and the Information Processing Industry. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1996. 432 p.

Cortada J. W. Commercial Applications of the Digital Computer in American Corporations, 1945-1995 // AHC, Vol. 18, № 2, Summer 1996. P. 18-29.

Cortada J. W. Economic Preconditions That Made Possible Application of Commercial Computing in the United States // AHC, Vol. 19, № 3, July-September 1997. P. 27-40.

Cortada J. W. Before the Computer: IBM, NCR, Burroughs, and Remington Rand and the Industry They Created, 1865-1956. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2000. 376 p.

Cortada J. W. The Digital Hand: How Computers Changed the Work of American Manufacturing, Transportation, and Retail Industries. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003. 544 p.

Text combines detailed analysis with narrative history to provide a broad overview of computing's role in sixteen industries, accounting for nearly half of the U.S. economy. Provides a survey of how computers transformed the American economy. DLC: Automation - Economic aspects - United States.



Product Description. This book describes how computers were used in 16 American industries over the past half century to determine what were the critical uses, how technologies came into these industries, and how they were changed by it. This book asserts that computing profoundly changed the nature of work in these industries, creating the bedrock of the Information Age.

Costello J. As the Twig is Bent: The Early Life of John Mauchly // AHC, Vol. 18, № 1, Spring 1996. P. 45-50.

Cotter, Charles H. Edmund Gunter (1581-1626) // Journal of Navigation, vol. 34, № 3, 1981. P. 363-367.

Cowlishaw M. The Early History of REXX // AHC, Vol. 16, № 4, Winter 1994. P. 15-24.

Craik, Alex D. D. The logarithmic tables of Edward Sang and his daughters // Historia Mathematica, vol. 30, February 2003. P. 47-84.

Edward Sang (1805–1890), aided only by his daughters Flora and Jane, compiled vast logarithmic and other mathematical tables. These exceed in accuracy and extent the tables of the French Bureau du Cadastre, produced by Gaspard de Prony and a multitude of assistants during 1794–1801. Like Prony's, only a small part of Sang's tables was published: his 7-place logarithmic tables of 1871. The contents and fate of Sang's manuscript volumes, the abortive attempts to publish them, and some of Sang's methods are described. A brief biography of Sang outlines his many other contributions to science and technology in both Scotland and Turkey. Remarkably, the tables were mostly compiled in his spare time.



Cragon, Harvey G. From Fish to Colossus: How the German Lorenz Cipher was Broken at Bletchley Park. Cragon Books, 2003. 158 p.

Croarken M. Early Scientific Computing in Britain. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1990. 176 p.

Croarken M. The Emergence of Computing Science Research and Teaching at Cambridge, 1936-l949 // AHC, Vol. 14, № 4, October-December 1992. P. 10-15.

Croarken M. The Beginnings of the Manchester Computer Phenomenon: People and Influences // AHC, Vol. 15, № 3, July-September 1993. P. 9-16.

Croarken M. Case 5656: L. J. Comrie and the origins of the Scientific Computing Service // AHC, Vol. 21, № 4, October-December 1999. P. 70-71.

Croarken M. L. J. Comrie: A Forgotten Figure in the History of Numerical Computing // Mathematics Today, Vol. 36, № 4, August, 2000. P. 114-118.

An excellent summary of Comrie’s life and work.



Croarken M. Computing in Britain During World War II / IEE History of Technology Summer Meeting 6th July 2002, London, 2002.

Croarken M. Tabulating the Heavens: Computing the Nautical Almanac in 18th-Century England // AHC, 2003, № 3. P. 48-61.

Croarken M. Mary Edwards: Computing for a Living in 18th-Century England // AHC, 2003, № 4. P. 9-15.

Croarken M., Campbell-Kelly M. Beautiful Numbers: The Rise and Decline of the British Association Mathematical Tables Committee, 1871-1965 // AHC, Vol. 22, № 4, October-December 2000. P. 44-61.

Crosby K. HPs Early Computers (interview with Bernard M. Oliver) // The Analytical Engine, Vol. 2, № 3, May 1995. P. 5-14.

Crowe G. D., Goodman S. E. S. A. Lebedev and the birth of Soviet computing // AHC, vol. 16, № 1, Spring 1994. P. 4-24.

Crowther-Heyck, Hunter. Herbert A. Simon: The Bounds of Reason in Modern America. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2005. 420 p.

Анализ трудов нобелевского лауреата Герберта Саймона, одного из отцов искусственного интеллекта.

Curtiss J. H. The National Applied Mathematics Laboratories of the National Bureau of Standards // AHC, Vol. 11, № 2, Summer 1989. P. 69-98.

DaCosta R. The History of Ada // Defense Science and Electronics. March 1984. P. **-**.

Dahl A. The Last of the First // Datamation, June 1978. P. 145-149.

Описание последней машины UNIVAC II.



Darby, Edwin. It all adds up: The Growth of Victor Comptometer Corporation. Chicago, IL: Victor Comptometer Corporation, 1968. 243 p.

Interesting company history looking at the Victor Adding Machine Company, and the Comptometer Corporation which merged in 1961. One of their innovations was the first handwritten message to and from outer space via the Telstar communications satellite on October 18, 1962.



Darwin C. G. Douglas Rayner Hartree 1897-1958 // Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society, vol. 4, 1958. P. 103-116.

Davies, Donald. Early Computer Development at NPL // Resurrection: The Bulletin of the Computer Conservation Society, № 8, Winter 1993. P. 8-16.

Davies, Donald. The Bombe – a Remarkable Logic Machine // Cryptologia, vol. 23, № 2, April 1999. P. 108-138.

Davies, Donald. Effectiveness of the Diagonal Board // Cryptologia, vol. 23, № 3, July 1999. P. 229-239.

Davies D. W. Charles Wheatstones Cryptograph and Pletts Cipher Machine // Cryptologia, vol. 9, № 2, April 1985. P. 155-161.

Davies D. W. The Lorenz Cipher Machine SZ42 / Selections from Cryptologia: history, people, and technology. Deavours Cipher A., ed. Norwood, MA: Artech House, Inc, 1998. P. 517-540.

Davis M. The Universal Computer: The Road from Leibniz to Turing. Norton, 2000. 256 p.

Deavours C. A. How the British Broke Enigma // Cryptologia, vol. IV, № 3, July 1980. P. 129-132.

Deavours C. A. The Autoscritcher // Cryptologia, vol. XIX, № 2, April 1995. P. 137-148.

Deavours C. A., Kruh L. Machine Cryptography and Modern Cryptanalysis. Norwood, MA: Artech House, 1985. 276 p.

Deavours C., Kruh L. The Turing Bombe: Was it Enough? / Selections from Cryptologia: history, people, and technology. Deavours Cipher A., ed. Norwood, MA: Artech House, Inc, 1998. P. 403-422.

Deavours C. A., Reeds J. The Enigma // Cryptologia, vol. I, № 4, Oct. 1977. P. 381-391.

DeBrosse J., Burke C. The Secret in Building 26: The Untold Story of Americas Ultra War Against the U-boat Enigma Codes. Random House, 2004. 304 p.



Delire, Jean-Michel. Lexpression des grands nombres dans lArenaire dArchimede // Memoires et Publications de la Societe des Sciences, des Arts et des Lettres du Hainaut, vol. 96, 1992. P. 1-18.

Denning P. J. Origin of Virtual Machines and Other Virtualities // AHC, Vol. 23, № 3, July-September 2001. P. 73.

De Marco G., Mainetto G., Pisani S., Savino P. The Early Computers of Italy // AHC, Vol. 21, № 4, October-December 1999. P. 28-36.

Detlefsen, Max. Polnische Rechenmaschinenerfinder des 19. Jahrhunderts // Wissenschaft und Fortschritt, 26 (1976). P. 86-90.

Статья о работах А. Штерна, Х. З. Слонимского и А. И. Штаффеля – трех изобретателей механических счетных машин польского происхождения, работавших в XIX в.



De Villiers, Melius. The numeral-words, their origin, meaning, history and lesson. London: Witherby, 1923. 124 p.

Contents: The Numeral-Words in English & In Kindred Languages; The Persistence of Form of Numeral-Words; Gesture-Language: & the Relation in General of Hands & Fingers to Numeral-Words; The Art of Reckoning Amongst Savages; Origin & Meaning of the Aryan Numeral-Words; Representation of Numeral-Words by Means of Figures; Use & Advantage of Numeral-Words & Figures; Derivation of Other Words from the Numeral Words; conclusion. An extremely rare book on the true history of numerology which will be a welcome addition to anyone interested In the subject.



Di L. On the Transmission of the Hand-Operated Drum Calculator in China in the 19th Century // Proceedings of the Cultural History of Mathematics, vol. 6. Inner Mongolia Press, 1996. P. 26-27.

Di L., Shangshu B., Williams M. R. Chinese Calculators Made During the Kangxi Reign in the Quing Dynasty // AHC, vol. 14, № 4, October-December 1992. P. 63-67.

Dickson L. E. History of the Theory of Numbers. Vol. 1: Divisibility and Primality. N.-Y.: Chelsea Publishing Company, 1952. 486 p.

The first volume of Dickson's History covers the related topics of divisibility and primality. This long book is sort of the equivalent of an extremely long review paper, with innumerable references. It is the only work of its kind on Theory of Numbers. Written in the early 1920s, it is still the only place where one can find information on who did what in various topics of number theory, and many of those topics are still fertile ground for further research. So if one wants to do research on any topic in theory of numbers, or on related aspects of algebra, topology, Ramsey Theory, theory of graphs, etc. one must have Dickson's book handy.



Dorfman R. The Discovery of Linear Programming // AHC, Vol. 6, № 3, July-September 1984. P. 283-295.

Dorsch H. The Development of the First Electronic Analog Computer by Helmut Hoelzer in 1941 // Proceedings of the Cultural History of Mathematics, vol. 6. Inner Mongolia Press, 1996. P. 49-54.

Douglas, Sandy. Some Memories of EDSAC I: 1950-1952 // AHC, Vol. 1, № 2, October 1979. P. 98-99, 208.

Doyle R. The US Navys First Online Crypto System // AHC, Vol. 23, № 1, January-March 2001. P. 17-21.

Drake S. Galileo and the First Mechanical Computing Device // Scientific American, vol. 234, № 4. April 1976. P. 104-113.


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