From petpaju at utu.fi Mon Nov 3 03:18:53 2008 From: petpaju at utu.fi (Petri Paju) Date: Mon, 03 Nov 2008 10:18:53 +0200 Subject: [SIGCIS-Members] [Fwd: History of Robotics] Message-ID: <490EB3ED.6020608@utu.fi> -------- Original Message -------- Subject: History of Robotics Date: Sun, 02 Nov 2008 16:21:05 +0100 From: Zeiss R (TSS) To: EUROGRAD at NIC.SURFNET.NL German Society for the History of Technology (GTG) Annual Conference from May 22-24, 2009 at the Hochschule f?r Gestaltung Offenbach am Main If ?the atom? and then ?the gene? were considered by History of Science and Technology as symbols of the 20^th century, then ?the robot? ultimately joined their ranks at the beginning of the 21^st century. In science fiction, visions of the future were and are being constructed about the possible use of robots. These visions often show a rather ambivalent view of these machines. Even current robotics casts both positive and negative lights on them. Thus, developers and producers promise that in the future robots will contribute to the solution of such large and manifold problems of humanity as environmental catastrophes or caring for the elderly. A particularly controversy of the topic lies therein that robots appear not only to be surpassing humans in regards to particular activities, but also to be replacing them: with regard to heavy labor in industry, particular cultural skills such as arithmetic or music, or in social work, such as in the care of the handicapped, children or the sick. Therefore, a challenge is to research if these developments will change the self-conception of people in its relation to itself and to machines. To arrange this question historically and to answer it is the task of the History of Technology. The goal of the planned interdisciplinary conference is threefold. First, it should be discussed how the History of Technology can approach a (temporal-)historiography of robots and robotics, in which the presentation of robots in museums and exhibits would be analyzed. Second, the history of robotics and robots should be concretely discussed on the basis of various topics. Finally, it should be shown by the example of robotics that the History of Technology can deliver relevant contributions to answering modern questions. The History of Culture and Technology has studied robots for quite some time: it spans from cult use in antique temple automatons on through courtly culture of automatons in the early modern period up to the modern industrial use of robots. Thereby, also museums contribute to the research and presentation of the history of robots. Let the following topics and fields of interest be mentioned: - History of the vision of the future for robots - Interaction between science fiction and robotics - Historical change in the perception of the man-robot relationship - Robotics in international comparison - Application errors of robotics and its history (industry, medicine, military, service, toy industry?) - Historical decisions regarding the use of robots in particular sectors - The sociality of robots - The design of robots in the course of time: humanoid robots as a model? - Historically based technology assessment Abstracts for presentation suggestions (max. 350-400 words) should be sent along with a one-page curriculum vitae until January 6, 2009 to: Catarina Caetano da Rosa, caetano at histech.rwth-aachen.de . Contact: Catarina Caetano da Rosa RWTH Aachen Lehrstuhl f?r Geschichte der Technik 52056 Aachen -- Petri Paju, FT, tutkija, Turun yliopisto -- Ph.D. Researcher, Univ. of Turku http://users.utu.fi/petpaju/ From yostx003 at umn.edu Thu Nov 6 15:28:42 2008 From: yostx003 at umn.edu (Jeff Yost) Date: Thu, 06 Nov 2008 14:28:42 -0600 Subject: [SIGCIS-Members] Annals Update Message-ID: <4913537A.2020803@umn.edu> Annals Update It was a pleasure to see many of you at the SIGCIS lunch (and elsewhere at SHOT) in Lisbon and tell you briefly about upcoming content and initiatives with IEEE Annals of the History of Computing. Given that some SIGCIS members were not in Lisbon, I wanted to fill everyone in on developments at Annals. Our thematic issue on the international history of computing will be coming out later this month (volume 30:4) with excellent contributions from five talented historians?Jim Cortada, surveying the diffusion of computing worldwide; Eden Medina, on the history of IBM Chile; Corinna Schlombs, on European strategies and execution by IBM and Remington/Sperry Rand; Timo Leimbach on the history of German software giant SAP; and Petri Paju on the history of computing in Finland. We also have exciting special issues planned on the history of Asian language processing, the history of computer games, and the history of database management systems. Additionally, there are a number of great article and department contributions in the queue. If you are not a subscriber to IEEE Annals, please consider subscribing [just $38 annually for IEEE Computer Society members and $45 for nonmembers?go to http://www.computer.org/portal/site/annals/index.jsp and follow the links (Subscribe to Annals>Subscribe to Individual Publications?)] I also strongly encourage you to submit your scholarship to Annals. We welcome submissions of article manuscripts (for consideration) on all aspects of the history of computing, software and networking. We also welcome proposals for guest editing a special issue. If I can be of assistance with an article manuscript you are thinking about submitting, please let me know. Also, contact me if you have ideas for a special issue proposal. For submission instructions click on "Write for Annals" at http://www.computer.org/portal/site/annals/index.jsp Finally, I want to alert you to a new feature of the IEEE Annals-sponsored ?Computing Then? portion of the IEEE Computer Society?s ?Computing Now? portal. ?Computing Then? just added ?Annals Through the Years,? a continuing feature that will electronically publish free select content (articles and department pieces) from each of Annals? thirty year history?starting with Volume 1 (now available) and rolling out a new volume every several weeks. Brief introductions offer context on the content. See this at http://www2.computer.org/portal/web/computingthen Best, Jeff Jeffrey Yost Associate Director, Charles Babbage Institute Editor in Chief, IEEE Annals of the History of Computing yostx003 at umn.edu 612 624 5050 From yostx003 at umn.edu Thu Nov 6 16:46:45 2008 From: yostx003 at umn.edu (Jeff Yost) Date: Thu, 06 Nov 2008 15:46:45 -0600 Subject: [SIGCIS-Members] CBI Tomash Fellowship and Norberg Travel Fund Announcements Message-ID: <491365C5.7030404@umn.edu> Dear SIGCIS members, Please find below announcements for the Charles Babbage Institute's 2009-2010 Tomash Fellowship and the Arthur L. Norberg Travel Fund. The application deadline for both is January 15, 2009. Basic information on the Tomash Fellowship and the Norberg Travel Fund is below. Additional information, including eligibility and application procedures, can be found on the CBI website at the links/URLs following each announcement. If you have any questions about either, please contact me. Best, Jeff Jeffrey Yost Associate Director, Charles Babbage Institute Editor in Chief, IEEE Annals of the History of Computing yostx003 at umn.edu 612 624 5050 *2009-2010 CBI Tomash Fellowship Announcement* The Charles Babbage Institute is accepting applications for the 2009-2010 Adelle and Erwin Tomash Graduate Fellowship. The fellowship will be awarded to a graduate student for doctoral dissertation research on the history of computing. The fellowship may be held at the recipient's home academic institution, the Charles Babbage Institute, or any other location with appropriate research facilities. The stipend is $14,000. It is intended for students who have completed all requirements for the doctoral degree except the research and writing of the dissertation. Preference will be given to applicants indicating a need to use CBI materials, planning research in residence at CBI, and willing to make a brief presentation of their research findings to CBI staff. Questions pertaining to collection content and access can be directed to R. Arvid Nelsen, CBI Archivist, at nels0307 at umn.edu . Tomash Fellowship recipients must remain students in good standing throughout the term of their fellowship, but there is no restriction on holding other fellowships, scholarships, or awards concurrent to the Tomash Fellowship. For more information, including eligibility and application procedures-- see http://www.cbi.umn.edu/research/tfellowship.html *Arthur L. Norberg Travel Fund Announcement* The Arthur L. Norberg Travel Fund provides short-term grants-in-aid to help scholars with travel expenses to use archival collections at the Charles Babbage Institute. Each year we plan to award two $750 grants. For more information, including eligibility and application procedures-- see http://www.cbi.umn.edu/research/ntravelfund.html From thaigh at computer.org Thu Nov 6 18:32:52 2008 From: thaigh at computer.org (Thomas Haigh) Date: Thu, 6 Nov 2008 17:32:52 -0600 Subject: [SIGCIS-Members] ICOTECH Prize for historians of technology under 37 Message-ID: <013301c94067$fd9f3b50$f8ddb1f0$@org> See below. Sounds like a good opportunity, but note that it's only available to those under 37. I stripped out the attachment, but the details are also online here: http://hsozkult.geschichte.hu-berlin.de/chancen/id=3150&count=78&recno=20&ty pe=stipendien&sort=datum&order=down. Tom -----Original Message----- From: Timo Myllyntaus [mailto:timmyl at utu.fi] Sent: Friday, October 31, 2008 8:18 AM To: myllynta at helsinki.fi Subject: Prize for historians of technology Dear colleagues, In 2009 ICOHTEC will grant a prize of 3.000 Euros to the best original work in the history of technology. Eligible are monographs published in 2007 or 2008 as well as published and unpublished Ph.D. theses in English, French, German Russian or Spanish accepted during that two year period. The deadline for submissions is 31 December 2008. Please, find further information in the file attachment. With best wishes Timo Myllyntaus ICOHTEC Secretary General **************** Julkaisupalkinto teknologian historian tutkijoille Vuonna 2009 ICOHTEC jakaa 3.000 euron palkinnon parhaalle, vuosina 2007 tai 2008 ilmestyneelle teknologian historiaan liittyv?lle julkaisulle, joka voi olla monografia tai julkaistu tahi julkaisematon v?it?skirja. Julkaisun kieli tulee olla englanti, espanja, ranska, saksa tai ven?j?. Hakemukseen tulee liitt?? 4.500 sanan englanninkielinen tiivistelm? sek? ansio- ja mielell??n my?s julkaisuluettelo. Muita liitteit?, kuten suosituskirjeit? ja kirja-arvosteluja, hakijat voivat oheistaa harkintansa mukaan. Lis?tietoja oheisesta liitteest?. Englanninkieliset hakemukset tulee toimittaa kolmena kappaleena 31 joulukuuta 2008 menness? alla mainitulla osoitteella: Timo Myllyntaus Professori Suomen historia Historian laitos 20014 Turun yliopisto Puh. 02-333 5222 GSM 0400-798 409 Email: timmyl at utu.fi ----- Professor of Finnish History University of Turku, Finland Tel. +358-2-333 5222 PS. Sorry for cross posting From bbl4 at btinternet.com Tue Nov 11 03:41:21 2008 From: bbl4 at btinternet.com (Bernardo Batiz-Lazo) Date: Tue, 11 Nov 2008 08:41:21 +0000 (GMT) Subject: [SIGCIS-Members] Athens: Computers in banking workshop Message-ID: <500246.70931.qm@web86603.mail.ird.yahoo.com> Dear all, Alexandros-Andreas Kyrtsis from the University of Athens has organised a very interesting workshop, thanks to the support of the National Bank of Greece. Abstracts below. Saludos / best wishes, Bernardo _______________________________________ see History of ATM Homepage: http://atm.sigcis.org __________________? Contact details Dr Bernardo Batiz-Lazo Senior Lecturer in Business and Accounting History School of Management Ken Edwards Building University of Leicester Leicester LE1 7RH (England) Tel +44(0) 116 252 5647? ? Fax +44(0) 116 252 5515 Email: b.batiz-lazo [AT] leicester.ac.uk? Skype: bbatiz ********* If you want to keep updated with working papers follow this link: http://nep.repec.org * ********* Personal page http://www.le.ac.uk/ulmc/academics/bbatizlazo.html * ********* Copies of research papers available at http://ideas.repec.org/e/pba14.html ----------------------- ? ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS to be presented at the One-Day Conference on ? ?Global Change and Information Technology for Financial Institutions: The turn of the seventies? Athens, Historical Archives of the National Bank of Greece, November 29, 2008 ? ? ? ? Bernardo B?tiz-Lazo and Claudia Reese (University of Leicester) ? Is the future of the ATM past? ? Just over 40 years ago the first cash dispensers became operational in the UK. From its modest beginnings this industry specific application evolved into the backbone of self service technology. In this article we consider their past and present to reflect on their future with the assistance of the so called ?social construction of technology? and ?path dependence? theories while supported by archival research and interviews with ?actors? in the UK. We tell how machine, functionality and shared networks will continue to interact in shaping the future of the cash dispensing market. ? ? ? Stefano Battilossi (Universidad Carlos III Madrid) ? The 1970s Revolution in Financial Technology: The role of regulation, deregulation and IT ? Modern financial theories based on the economics of information suggest that banks arise as a response to existing frictions in the process of acquiring information and making transactions. Financial intermediaries ameliorate frictions by performing two basic functions: a) brokerage, by which they enhance the matching of borrowers and lenders by overcoming information asymmetries (adverse selection, moral hazard, costly state verification) and extracting, processing and circulating information; b) portfolio transformation, by which they act as delegated monitors and provides of liquidity insurance. Given the information-intensive nature of financial intermediation, the wave in innovations in IT that started in the 1960s and 70s had a major impact on banking industry. At the same time, market forces began successfully to press in favor of a withdrawal of the state as financial regulator. Financial restriction (or repression), that is, ?a set of policies, laws, regulation, taxes, distortions, qualitative and quantitative restrictions, which do not allow financial intermediaries to operate at their full technological potential? (Roubini and Sala-i-Martin 1995). As a consequence, the 1970s witnessed a twofold process of liberation of existing financial technology and, at one time, a rapid shift forward of the frontier of financial technology. The understanding of the causal connections between financial deregulation, financial innovations and technological change calls for a systematic approach. We can define financial technology as a body of knowledge that specifies all activities creating economic value in financial intermediation; this includes product, process and organizational technologies. Financial innovations can occur in each of these areas and affect the efficiency with which intermediaries perform their basic functions: (a) mobilize savings; (b) facilitate the exchange of goods; (c) allow risk amelioration; (d) acquire information about investments and allocate resources; (e) monitor managers and exert corporate control (Levine 1997). In order properly to understand the causes of financial innovations in each of these functions, we need to explore the incentives to innovate that were generated both at micro- and macro level. We can finally assess to what extent changes in IT technologies, originating mainly outside the financial sector, plaid a role in the process of financial innovation. We explore some of these issues by focusing on possibly the most important and far-reaching change in financial technology that took place around the 1970s: the rise of liability management (aka ?marketization? of banking), a process innovation based on the development of wholesale interbank markets, both domestic and international. This innovation dramatically changed the concept of liquidity in banking, forced banks to implement totally new strategies of active liability marketing, and required a new interactive banking management of the structure of assets and liabilities. We will analyze how it emerged as a response to existing regulation, how it set in motion an epoch-making process of deregulation, and how these forces interacted with the ongoing process of IT change. ? ? ? David Gugerli (ETH Zurich) ? Data Banking in the Age of Flexibility ? Both the opening of the Chicago Securities Exchange and the adoption of floating exchange rates on global currency markets are institutionally feasible expressions of a new economic era: The Age of Flexibility. Of course, the almost perfect coincidence in time of these two events should not be overestimated. There is probably no causal connection between the end of the Bretton Woods System and the institutionalized trading of futures. There is, however, a common denominator of both innovations: Since the last third of the 20th century we can observe (in nearly all fields of social practice) a shift to a more flexible allocation of resources which leads from hierarchical organization to temporary projects, from centralized control to distributed networks, from serial fabrication to lean production, from a modern agenda of homogeneity to a postmodern program of heterogeneity. Working hours and family structures, professional education and the allocation of military forces, innovative procedures in the political system and new patterns of management in the corporate world ? they all experience a programmatic change towards an increased flexibility, towards a modus operandi which counts on creative patchwork and powerful recombination. As we all know, economic changes do not occur independently from social, political, and cultural change. I will argue that the newly developed architecture of relational databank systems in the 1970s is (1) deeply rooted in the culture of flexibility and (2) served as a means for transforming both the operations and the structures of financial institutions. In order to do so, I will sketch the principal issues of competing databank concepts in the 1970s, and I will try to illustrate their importance for what I would like to call ?Data Banking in the Age of Flexibility?.? ? ? ? Alexandros-Andreas Kyrtsis (University of Athens) ? Financial Deregulation and Technological Change: The impact of the turn of the 1970s ? Banks and other organisations of the financial sector have played a significant role in one of the most important chapters in the history of technological change in the 20th century. However, although the interdependence between financial and technological evolution seems to be obvious, subtler mechanisms of the emergence of this relationship, especially the ones concerning the impact of financial history on technological history, have not been thoroughly discussed. The aim of this paper is to facilitate the search for missing links which can be found in the discussion of the wider impact of technological processes in the financial sector. The question would be then whether in the case of the financial sector we can solely observe mere processes of adoption of technological innovations emerging in other sectors, or whether the financial sector has brought about its own technological innovations, induced by financial innovations, which have had an impact on the overall development of information and communication technologies during the last quarter of the 20th century and the first decade of the 21st.? In particular, the relevant questions in this context are the following: What were the main features of the co-evolution of financial organisations and markets, on the one hand, and technological patters on the other? In what sense have technologies contributed in the shaping of the financial world as the basis of business practices and the dynamics of whole economies? And more importantly: In what sense have the financial processes of the era of deregulation contributed to technological change in the field of information and communication technologies with consequences also for other fields?? What are the main features of the resulting technological processes and of the technological landscapes that emerged from the process of financial deregulation? How does this interplay between the dynamics of deregulation and the evolution of technology markets define the way managers of the financial sector decide on technologies and technology-based business practices? What does this co-evolution of the characteristics of financial operations and the characteristics of ICTs mean in terms of technological and operational risk exposure of financial organisations? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? Hermann-Josef Lamberti (Deutsche Bank) ? ????????????? Information technology as a driver of global change ?In the last 50 years, we have been witness of a technological revolution: Following Moore?s Law computational power as well as storage capacity has doubled every 18-24 months ? with no limit to be reached until now. In contrast to traditional manufacturing industries, banking in general and transaction banking in particular handles with information and data instead of physical goods. Not astonishing, information technology had a significant influenced on banking business. This technological development together with deregulation allowed establishing a global financial market, asset securitization and sales of receivables. New products were established, allowing clients to invest according to their personal strategy. Despite the current crises, this global financial market is a necessary pendant of the globalization in real economy. We are now in a phase of reconstruction. In this situation, technology may help to increase transparency and therefore stabilize the whole system. ? ? ? Donald MacKenzie (University of Edinburgh) ? $100 for Every Human Being on Earth: Models and the Growth of Financial Derivatives Markets ? In January 1970, there was no organized financial-derivatives exchange anywhere in the world.? Derivatives were often regarded (including by market regulators) as little better than bets on price movements, and indeed many of today?s derivatives contracts would have been regarded legally as wagers, and hence prohibited in the US and unenforceable in the UK. At the end of December 2007, the total notional amount of financial derivatives outstanding worldwide was $677 trillion, the equivalent of around $100,000 for every human being on Earth.? While the figure exaggerates the economic significance of financial derivatives, they have become crucial to the functioning of modern financial markets. This talk will discuss the role of economic models in this transformation, and in particular will examine the extent to which the adoption of those models brought into being the ?world? (market conditions and price patterns) they posited.? The focus will be on the 1970s: the emergence of the Black-Scholes-Merton option pricing model (published in 1973), the development of the Chicago Board Options Exchange (launched in 1973) and the interaction between the two. ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? Jocelyn Pixley (Global Policy Institute, London Metropolitan University) Tensions between economic policies, technology and bankers? professional perceptions ? This paper looks at one of the ?causal directions? of technical change, in which technologies are created from demands from the financial sector in a particular historical context. Specific demands analysed here focus on banks? pressing needs (in a changing industry) to cope with newly-created uncertainties from competition and asset-inflation, in waves of deregulation from the 1970s. From Keynesian controls by nation-states (with their uncertainties such as wage-inflation), banks faced re-regulation in favour of market rules. That culminated in 2004 with US Secretary of Treasury Henry Paulson convincing the SEC Commissioners to exempt non-bank investment banks from maintaining reserves to cover losses on investments. A former Reagan administrator describes this ?greatest mistake? as one where ?in place of time-proven standards of prudence, computer models engineered by hot shots determined acceptable risk?.? Why did market (self) regulation go so far and what were the effects of demands for computer-generated risk models? The paper outlines the new cognitive and ?emotional? rules that evolved to cope with market-driven uncertainties. Former personal trust between central bankers, treasury and top financiers gave way to impersonal distrust about financial products. Increased ?internalisation? of cognitive rules (emotional at heart), less of prudence but caveat emptor and ceteris paribus, required technical models to assay every conceivable detail of the past (assuming continuation in future). ?Distrust? procedures gave some comfort to investment and bank CEOs but (my studies of professional bankers show), never conclusively. The growth in impersonal distrust agencies to assess future reputations, credit-worthiness, confidence, profits, and through managing pension funds, was matched by ever more competition audits and performance benchmarks. Banks are intermediaries but tensions between data generated from within and without; unintended results of pro-market regulations; and bankers? professional judgments does not encourage ?pro-active vision? (Kyrtsis) by bankers or regulators, but anxiety. ? ? ? ? Susan V. Scott (London School of Economics and Political Science) ? Understanding techno-innovation in an era of self-regulated financial services ? Kyrtsis (2008) calls for us to deepen our understanding of the relationship between financial services, deregulation, and technological innovation. He proposes that the main features characterising the financial services landscape are a blend of ?sophisticated architectural concepts? which emerge in the form of international electronic financial networks and tactical ?solution technologies?. According to Kyrtsis, solution technologies are developed to overcome relatively short-term issues rather than innovations that grow from strategic vision. In this presentation, the proposition that technical practices in banks and other financial organizations are reactive rather than proactive will be explored further. We trace what Abolafia (1996) calls ?cycles of opportunism? against a backdrop of key case studies in order to consider what it means to be a techno-innovator in an era of self-regulated financial services. ? ? ? ? George I. Stasinopoulos (National Technical University of Athens) ? Driving ICT Innovation and Growth: Causal Relationships & Analogues ? ICT (Information & Communication Technologies) offers a ubiquitous infrastructure, is one of the main factors shaping the business environment and plays the role of a catalyst for new goods and services across most domains of modern society. It influences banking and finance in a direct way as well as a common denominator as in all other economic and societal environments. On the reverse direction the growth and globalization of finance and banking drives the development and omnipresence of ICT. However this influence has to be seen in a wider setting as well as in the context of quantitative vs. qualitative requirements posed to and fulfilled by ICT. Particular needs push innovation in particular targeted scientific and technological fields. Examples can be readily drawn from the cold war, the space race, star wars and lastly the consumer society. All lead to quantum advances or significant improvements of devices, systems, integrating infrastructure and application methodologies. Clear, causal relationships are easily visible. The situation is somewhat more abstract with banking and finance. Telecoms are the closest analogue to banking w.r.t. ICT. On a truly global infrastructure many players assume well demarcated roles on largely common resources. At operational level millions of users interact with a giant global machine across well defined rigid interfaces. The case is not clear cut with banking and finance. A distributed ICT infrastructure coexists hand in hand with a multilayered system of staff with different roles and rights. Here ICT works in parallel, assisting operations and decision making at all levels:? that of the simple user / client up to high management and consulting. Telecom providers interact with each other in strict real time for service delivery, management, billing and interadministartion accounting. Banks are also faced with strict real time constraints. However their task is not just forwarding information flows. Processing and storage are salient functions of the common, lower layer infrastructure. Horizontal aspects like security, resilience, availability, maintainability and scalability come in the foreground not as particular isolated requirements but as a well balanced whole. Lastly higher level tools in investing and financing have become prime application areas for modeling, system identification, control and decision theory. Conceptual and theoretical advances have long been dormant in these classical domains, always in need of real life applications and everyday use. These have now, thanks to financing and the underlying ICT infrastructure, come out to the test provoking productive exposure and vivid criticism. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://sigcis.org/pipermail/members/attachments/20081111/7a365484/attachment-0001.htm From petpaju at utu.fi Fri Nov 14 04:11:26 2008 From: petpaju at utu.fi (Petri Paju) Date: Fri, 14 Nov 2008 11:11:26 +0200 Subject: [SIGCIS-Members] A new PhD on nationalism and information technology in the 1950s Finland Message-ID: <491D40BE.8090604@utu.fi> Hi all, For your information, here's a new book that deals with history of information technology and nationalism in the 1950s Finland, with a title: "Building 'Ilmarinen's Finland': The Committee for Mathematical Machines and computer construction as a national project in the 1950s" (540 pages, in Finnish). - Ilmarinen is a character, a blacksmith, in the Finnish national epic, the Kalevala, and later used as a symbol of technical skills. I also deal and continue with the scientist's international interactions that were a major part of making this 'national project' in the forthcoming article in IEEE Annals of the history of computing (4/2008). The thesis can be found electronically (a PDF file) in: https://oa.doria.fi/handle/10024/37737 And here's the abstract for it (there's an almost ten page Summary in the end of the PDF file): The dissertation ?Building ?Ilmarinen?s Finland?: The Committee for Mathematical Machines and computer construction as a national project in the 1950s? examines the history of information technology and nationalism in the 1950?s Finland. The study focuses on the Committee for Mathematical Machines (1954-1960), which was designated to acquire the country?s first computer, and its associates and asks, how was the Committee justified, especially from the perspective of the national good, and what kind of motives did the actions of the Committee manifest. The motives studied are the Committee?s goals in the field of computing, in developing science and technology in society, and in imagining Finland anew. The materials for the study consist of a multifaceted collection of sources from Finland, Sweden and Germany. The Committee chose to duplicate a G1a computer from G?ttingen, Western Germany. In Finland the computer was named ESKO. However, the copying was delayed several times and eventually produced an old-fashioned computer. In addition to building the ESKO, the Committee early on intended to create a national computing center in Helsinki. This master plan can be regarded as a scientific and technological policy prior to state involvement in such matters in Finland. The projects of the Committee greatly benefitted the field, particularly the companies of IBM Finland and the Finnish Cable Works, which started a computing center similar to that planned by the Committee. This business unit later evolved into a part of the Nokia Corporation. The term ?Ilmarinen?s Finland? is used to argue that technology did not just become a ?national project? in postwar Finland, but was explicitly made so. -- Petri Paju, FT, tutkija, Turun yliopisto -- Ph.D. Researcher, Univ. of Turku http://users.utu.fi/petpaju/ From jwcorta at us.ibm.com Fri Nov 14 08:21:51 2008 From: jwcorta at us.ibm.com (James Cortada) Date: Fri, 14 Nov 2008 07:21:51 -0600 Subject: [SIGCIS-Members] A new PhD on nationalism and information technology in the 1950s Finland In-Reply-To: <491D40BE.8090604@utu.fi> References: <491D40BE.8090604@utu.fi> Message-ID: Petri, thank you for sharing this information. What you did is really quite important because we do not always know what is being written or published in various countries and so if we can all share this kind of information from our own countries it helps everyone. I especially appreciate the fact that you made it possible for us to download a copy of the history. Well done! Jim (James) W. Cortada IBM Institute for Business Value 3001 West Beltline Highway Madison, WI 53713 USA jwcorta at us.ibm.com 608-270-4462 From: Petri Paju To: members at sigcis.org Date: 11/14/08 03:15 AM Subject: [SIGCIS-Members] A new PhD on nationalism and information technology in the 1950s Finland Hi all, For your information, here's a new book that deals with history of information technology and nationalism in the 1950s Finland, with a title: "Building 'Ilmarinen's Finland': The Committee for Mathematical Machines and computer construction as a national project in the 1950s" (540 pages, in Finnish). - Ilmarinen is a character, a blacksmith, in the Finnish national epic, the Kalevala, and later used as a symbol of technical skills. I also deal and continue with the scientist's international interactions that were a major part of making this 'national project' in the forthcoming article in IEEE Annals of the history of computing (4/2008). The thesis can be found electronically (a PDF file) in: https://oa.doria.fi/handle/10024/37737 And here's the abstract for it (there's an almost ten page Summary in the end of the PDF file): The dissertation ?Building ?Ilmarinen?s Finland?: The Committee for Mathematical Machines and computer construction as a national project in the 1950s? examines the history of information technology and nationalism in the 1950?s Finland. The study focuses on the Committee for Mathematical Machines (1954-1960), which was designated to acquire the country?s first computer, and its associates and asks, how was the Committee justified, especially from the perspective of the national good, and what kind of motives did the actions of the Committee manifest. The motives studied are the Committee?s goals in the field of computing, in developing science and technology in society, and in imagining Finland anew. The materials for the study consist of a multifaceted collection of sources from Finland, Sweden and Germany. The Committee chose to duplicate a G1a computer from G?ttingen, Western Germany. In Finland the computer was named ESKO. However, the copying was delayed several times and eventually produced an old-fashioned computer. In addition to building the ESKO, the Committee early on intended to create a national computing center in Helsinki. This master plan can be regarded as a scientific and technological policy prior to state involvement in such matters in Finland. The projects of the Committee greatly benefitted the field, particularly the companies of IBM Finland and the Finnish Cable Works, which started a computing center similar to that planned by the Committee. This business unit later evolved into a part of the Nokia Corporation. The term ?Ilmarinen?s Finland? is used to argue that technology did not just become a ?national project? in postwar Finland, but was explicitly made so. -- Petri Paju, FT, tutkija, Turun yliopisto -- Ph.D. Researcher, Univ. of Turku http://users.utu.fi/petpaju/ _______________________________________________ This email is relayed from members at sigcis.org, the email discussion list of SHOT SIGCIS. The list archives are at http://sigcis.org/pipermail/members/ and you can change your subscription options at http://sigcis.org/mailman/listinfo/members -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://sigcis.org/pipermail/members/attachments/20081114/82b1436c/attachment.htm -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: graycol.gif Type: image/gif Size: 105 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://sigcis.org/pipermail/members/attachments/20081114/82b1436c/attachment.gif -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: ecblank.gif Type: image/gif Size: 45 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://sigcis.org/pipermail/members/attachments/20081114/82b1436c/attachment-0001.gif From c.c.bissell at open.ac.uk Fri Nov 14 09:07:57 2008 From: c.c.bissell at open.ac.uk (Chris Bissell) Date: Fri, 14 Nov 2008 14:07:57 -0000 Subject: [SIGCIS-Members] About "Chris Bissell" Message-ID: <007501c94662$744b48c0$0201a8c0@open.ac.uk> I'm a prof at the UK Open University with research interests in the history of control, telecommuncations, signal processing and related areas. Particularly in Germany and the former USSR, as this has been under-researched. So not quite history of computing but in the same ball park. I believe in keeping things short. More info at: http://technology.open.ac.uk/tel/people/bissell/ Chris From bbl4 at btinternet.com Wed Nov 19 05:36:42 2008 From: bbl4 at btinternet.com (Bernardo Batiz-Lazo) Date: Wed, 19 Nov 2008 10:36:42 +0000 (GMT) Subject: [SIGCIS-Members] cfp: Business History, Special Edition on not-for-profit financial institutions Message-ID: <152770.25092.qm@web86603.mail.ird.yahoo.com> * Apologies for multiple postings * CALL FOR PAPERS Business History, Special Edition on not-for-profit financial institutions This special issue of Business History will address financial institutions established and operated on a not-for-profit basis. The term ?not-for-profit financial institution? (NFPFI) covers a wide range of organisations, for example: building societies; friendly societies; mutual or co-operative banks; savings banks; community banks; mutual insurers; buildings and loan associations; savings and loan associations; and credit unions. Many NFPFIs sprung from philanthropic or charitable origins, reflecting particular economic or social aims; others adopted the form for commercial reasons later in their history. Yet others emerged from moves for self regulation, as well as the creation of jointly-owned technology platforms such as Link, Cirrus and Tarjeta 6000 in retail payments and Swift in wholesale, cross-border payments. NFPFIs might be thought to be in tune with current times in which the interests of a broad range of stakeholder groups have been given more explicit recognition by many organisations. On the other hand, although NFPFIs continue to be important in many countries, their significance has diminished in others in which they were previously more prominent. Many NFPFIs have merged together, mirroring consolidation among other financial institutions. Some NFPFIs have converted to proprietary corporate form (for example, through the demutualisation of building societies and insurers in Australia and Britain), while some have failed (for example savings and loan associations in the US and the Equitable Life Assurance Company in the UK). Papers are sought that offer theoretical innovations, and/or original empirical analysis relating to the long term development of NFPFIs. We encourage contributions from a range of perspectives, to reflect the organisational and geographical diversity of NFPFIs. Papers may be stand-alone or comparative. The following themes are suggested to indicate the breadth of possible topics: ? the historical origins of NFPFIs; ? their regulation/self-regulation, including the role of industry bodies/trade associations; ? the long-term decline of NFPFIs in many countries and its impact - economic, social, competitive, etc.; ? the governance of NFPFIs - failures and successes; ? crisis/failure in NFPFIs; ? commercial strategy of NFPFIs; ? the relative performance of NFPFIs; ? the adoption of, and problems, constraints and limitations arising from not-for-profit organisational form/structure; ? NFPFIs and the ?managerial revolution?; ? innovation by NFPFIs in services, technology, marketing, organisation etc.; ? the role of significant individuals in NFPFIs. The special issue will be edited by Bernardo B?tiz-Lazo (University of Leicester) and Mark Billings (Nottingham University Business School) as guest editors, and John Wilson and Steve Toms as executive editors of the journal. All articles will be between 6,000 and a maximum of 8,000 words, including notes. Proposals of between 1,500 and 3,000 words are invited and should be in the following format: Title Author(s), institution(s), contact details Topic Argument Sources Contribution Notes: use single space, 6 pt after paragraph, New Times Roman, size 11. Please add any references as endnotes and keep them to a minimum. Proposals should be sent to the following e-mail address: specialed_bh at lists.le.ac.uk The timetable for the special issue is as follows: November 2008 Issue Call for Papers 31 March 2009 Deadline for receipt of proposals 15 May 2009 Papers are commissioned 15 December 2009 Deadline for receipt of first draft manuscripts and sent to first round external refereeing 30 April 2010 Distribution of referees? and editorial reports June/July 2010 One-day workshop ? date and venue to be confirmed 01 September 2010 Deadline for submission of second draft manuscripts 15 November 2010 Distribution of referees? and editorial reports 31 January 2011 Deadline for submission of final revised manuscripts early 2011 Publication (volume 52) Guidance Notes 1. Articles should be based upon original research and/or innovative analysis. 2. The main findings of the research and analysis should not have been published elsewhere. 3. Proposals will be welcome from individuals or teams whose empirical research is already at an advanced stage. 4. The editors expect articles to be theoretically informed and explicitly address novel interpretations of history. 5. Authors who wish to implement social science or managerial instruments of analysis should consider how to adapt them to historical interpretation, explaining change over time rather than the description of static conditions. Authors are strongly encouraged to attend the workshop. It is seen by the editors as a way to create greater cohesion. It will be attended by both guest and executive editors. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://sigcis.org/pipermail/members/attachments/20081119/cfec5232/attachment-0001.htm -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: BH cfp final.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 16499 bytes Desc: BH cfp final.pdf Url : http://sigcis.org/pipermail/members/attachments/20081119/cfec5232/attachment-0001.pdf From bbl4 at btinternet.com Tue Nov 25 06:47:50 2008 From: bbl4 at btinternet.com (Bernardo Batiz-Lazo) Date: Tue, 25 Nov 2008 11:47:50 +0000 (GMT) Subject: [SIGCIS-Members] AHJ Award - congratulations! Message-ID: <855869.58921.qm@web86608.mail.ird.yahoo.com> Dear all, I am pleased to announced that Bill Wootton and Barbara Kemmerer won the best paper award in the Accounting Historians Journal vol 34 (2007) for their piece entitled "The Emergence of Mechanical Accounting in the U.S., 1880-1930" Saludos / best wishes, Bernardo _______________________________________ see History of ATM Homepage: http://atm.sigcis.org __________________? Contact details Dr Bernardo Batiz-Lazo Senior Lecturer in Business and Accounting History School of Management Ken Edwards Building University of Leicester Leicester LE1 7RH (England) Tel +44(0) 116 252 5647? ? Fax +44(0) 116 252 5515 Email: b.batiz-lazo [AT] leicester.ac.uk? Skype: bbatiz ********* If you want to keep updated with working papers follow this link: http://nep.repec.org * ********* Personal page http://www.le.ac.uk/ulmc/academics/bbatizlazo.html * ********* Copies of research papers available at http://ideas.repec.org/e/pba14.html _______________________________________________ Comban mailing list Comban at sigcis.org http://sigcis.org/mailman/listinfo/comban -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://sigcis.org/pipermail/members/attachments/20081125/14386b36/attachment.htm From timo at timo-leimbach.de Thu Nov 27 08:53:49 2008 From: timo at timo-leimbach.de (Timo Leimbach) Date: Thu, 27 Nov 2008 14:53:49 +0100 (CET) Subject: [SIGCIS-Members] 5th European Symposium on Gender & ICT Message-ID: <0588d85821253a2ede11564b3af9cdf3.squirrel@webmailer.hosteurope.de> 5th European Symposium on Gender & ICT "Digital Cultures: Participation -- Empowerment -- Diversity" *Early Bird Registration ends Januar 5, 2009* Registration is now open for the 5th European Symposium on Gender & ICT: March 5 - 7 2009, University of Bremen, Germany. To register for the conference please consult: http://www.conftool.com/gict2009 Preliminary program The preliminary program has been posted. The conference includes 13 paper sessions in 3 parallel streams, a poster session, a research exhibit, and a pre-conference workshop. For more information please consult: http://gict2009.de Keynotes Lucy Suchman: Lancaster University, UK, and MIT, Boston, US Tanja Paulitz: University of Graz, Austria Chat Garcia Ramilo: APC, Manila, Philippines Pre-conference workshop IT Expertise in Industry - Building a Better Model Integrating Women's Potentials Claudia Morrell: Executive Director Maryland Women in Technology, Baltimore, MD, USA About the European Symposium on Gender & ICT Information Society with its variety of new information and communication media offers many new options to participate in today's social, cultural, political and economic activities. However, chances are still distributed unequally, e.g. by class, ethnicity, age -- and by gender. Access to and the ability to use information and communication technology (ICT) are necessary prerequisites for participation. On top of this, involvement in ICT design is a highly prestigious activity. On the 5th European Gender and ICT Symposium we will take a closer look at the complex interdependence between gender and ICT. We will explore ways to increase appreciation of diversity in design and use and to strengthen empowerment and participation by means of ICT. This Conference, the fifth in a row of symposia held in Europe since 2003, traditionally provides a meeting point for researchers from various disciplines and research schools dealing with gender and ICT. Contact gict at informatik.uni-bremen.de - http://gict2009.de Program chairs Prof. Dr. Susanne Maass, Prof. Dr. Heidi Schelhowe Conference organisation Maike Hecht, Carola Schirmer, Bettina Rabe, Marlott Hederich, Susanne Maass, Heidi Schelhowe University of Bremen Department of Computer Science Postbox 330 440 28334 Bremen, Germany Phone (49) 421 -- 218 64390