This is a volume of chapters on the historical study of information,
computing, and society written by seven of the most senior,
distinguished members of the History of Computing field. These are
edited, expanded versions of papers presented in a distinguished lecture
series in 2018 at the University of Colorado Boulder - in the shadow of
the Flatirons, the front range of the Rocky Mountains.
Topics range widely across the history of computing. They include the
digitalization of computer and communication technologies, gender
history of computing, the history of data science, incentives for
innovation in the computing field, labor history of computing, and the
process of standardization. Authors were given wide latitude to write on
a topic of their own choice, so long as the result is an exemplary
article that represents the highest level of scholarship in the field,
producing articles that scholars in the field will still look to read
twenty years from now. The intention is to publish articles of general
interest, well situated in the research literature, well grounded in
source material, and well-polished pieces of writing.
The volume is primarily of interest to historians of computing, but
individual articles will be of interest to scholars in media studies,
communication, computer science, cognitive science, general and
technology history, and business.