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May 5, 2008

Science Fiction, Science Fact, and the Future of Computing

By Paul Ceruzzi

Last February I had the privilege of attending a conference on “Imagining Outer Space,” held in Bielefeld, Germany. I have been to many conferences on the history of rocketry and space travel, and on the social and cultural implications of the Space Age, but none of them were as stimulating as this...

Clouds — reflecting on what we don't yet know.

April 16, 2008

What we don't know

By Paul Ceruzzi

An obituary in a recent Washington Post brought back a flood of memories for me, and reminded me of a topic I had been meaning to discuss but had put aside. Samuel S. Snyder is a name that should be familiar to many historians of computing—he authored an article on “Computer Advances Pioneered by...

An analog computer.

April 4, 2008

"Cybernetics is the Universal Solvent of Technology"

By Paul Ceruzzi

Those words were spoken by the late Professor W. David Lewis, of Auburn University, discussing a talk I had given about the relationship of computing to aerospace. We all know the corollary: if you discover a universal solvent, in what container can you hold it? For myself, working at the National...

Semiconductor memory modules — the kind of components whose density Moore's Law describes.

March 26, 2008

Moore's Law, Steve Case, and YouTube

By Paul Ceruzzi

Moore’s Law is an empirical observation—that the density of computer memory chips doubles about every 18 months, and it has been doing so for the past four decades. Magnetic storage capacity, and to a less-regular extent, processor speeds and telecommunications bandwidth have also been increasing...

A BlackBerry smartphone.

March 10, 2008

An Alternative Universe

By Paul Ceruzzi

Within the past decade, the cell phone has spread around the world. The iPod is a permanent appendage to teen-agers, while the Blackberry plays the same role for "grown-ups." All these, of course, are based on the microprocessor, whose architecture in turn is based on computer designs that go back...

The Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum, where Paul Ceruzzi curates computing history.

February 25, 2008

Introduction

By Paul Ceruzzi

At first I assumed that everyone out there knows who I am, but perhaps I had better introduce myself. I am Paul Ceruzzi, Curator of Aerospace Computing and Electronics at the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum, in Washington, D.C. My interests in the history of computing go back to my...