BackBrowse
BackAbout Us
BackMembers
BackEvents
Did we miss something?
Searching 'Resources' found 1720 items:
Yes, I'm collecting old computers! The progress in the computer industry is so lightning fast that computers will very quick become museum items. I tr...
his page is supposed to hold all sorts of information about the late (the last original BESM-6 I knew about has been dismantled in 1995) great Soviet...
In addition to the English and Japanese editions, Elements of Programming is now available in a Russian edition translated by Konstantin Ptitsyn ( ...
A virtual museum listing Russian computer scientists and other articles...
S is a statistical programming language developed primarily by John Chambers and (in earlier versions) Rick Becker and Allan Wilks of Bell Laboratorie...
Summary: The S-1 project was an attempt to build a family of multiprocessor supercomputers. The project was envisioned by Lowell Wood at the Lawrence...
This web site is setup for people who are interested in vintage S-100 bus based computers. These computers were the first home computers people used b...
SAC (Single Assignment C) is a strict purely functional programming language which design is focused on the needs of numerical applications. Emphasis...
SAM76 is a macro programming language used from the late 1970s to the present 2007 initially ran on CP/M. The SAM76 language is a list and string p...
The San Francisco Computer Museum and accompanying Computer Institute are being founded to provide a global center for bringing together the scientifi...
The Systems Biology Markup Language (SBML) is a representation format, based on XML, for communicating and storing computational models of biological...
Scala is a multi-paradigm programming language designed to integrate features of object-oriented programming and functional programming.The name Scala...
Scala was designed from 2001 by Martin Odersky and his group at EPFL in Lausanne, Switzerland. Previously, (1986-1989) Martin worked as a Ph.D. stu...
Computer programmers often use the word scalable to describe a desirable feature of a program or algorithm. The idea is that something that is scalabl...
The Scalable Computing Laboratory (SCL) was created in 1989 as a joint effort of the Department of Energy through Ames Laboratory and Iowa State Unive...
Scheme is one of the two main dialects of the programming language Lisp. Unlike Common Lisp, the other main dialect, Scheme follows a minimalist desig...
With over 50 academics and 1000 students we are one of the UKs largest computing departments. Our range of courses is second to none: from creative...
Welcome to SciconConnect - an online presence of the company that started out as C-E-I-R in 1960, then was known as Scientific Control Systems during...
The Science Museum was founded in 1857 with objects shown at the Great Exhibition held in the Crystal Palace. Today the Museum is world renowned for i...
Scientific Data Systems, or SDS, was an American computer company founded in September 1961 by Max Palevsky, a veteran of Packard Bell and Bendix, alo...
Scribus is a desktop publishing (DTP) application, released under the GNU General Public License as free software. It is based on the free Qt toolkit,...
Introduction Here is a brief guide to available scripting and programming languages. It is not complete (I won't cover IRAF scripting here), and of...
In this article we will discuss how you can use Mono to increase your productivity and make your software applications extensible without having to re...
SeaMonkey is a free and open source cross-platform Internet suite. It is the continuation of the former Mozilla Application Suite, based on the same s...
Welcome to the Selectric Typewriter Museum! I am Jim Forbes, curator. The Museum started out as my "new" home page in 1999, just after I bought nine...
Sempron has been the marketing name used by AMD for several different budget desktop CPUs, using several different technologies and CPU socket formats...
Sendmail provides message processing appliances, applications, and services that enable enterprises to modernize their messaging infrastructures resul...
The machines in the series There Honeywell Series 16 machines spanned the life of the minicomputer. The DDP-116 was the very first 16-bit minicompute...
In the context of client-server architecture, a server is a computer program running to serve the requests of other programs, the "clients". Thus, the...
SETL (SET Language) is a very-high level programming language based on the mathematical theory of sets. It was originally developed by Jack Schwartz a...
The SHARE Operating System, also known as SOS, was created in 1959 as an improvement on the General Motors GM-NAA I/O operating system, the first oper...
Short Code was one of the first higher-level languages ever developed for an electronic computer. Unlike machine code, Short Code statements represent...
Ancient to modern: The origins go back to libraries, governmental, business, and medical records. There is a very long history of information storage,...
One of the earliest machines designed to assist people in calculations was the abacus which is still being used some 5000 years after its invention....
There are several uses of the term “virtual machine”. In general they seem to describe a program that behaves somehow as a machine. The “Java Vi...
Now that the Internet has exploded in popularity on a world wide scale, with a major component of its success (the World Wide Web) being developed at...
Development of MSDOS/PCDOS began in October 1980, when IBM began searching the market for an operating system for the yet-to-be-introduced IBM PC....
Known variously as Seattle Computer 86-DOS, IBM Personal Computer DOS, and Zenith Z-DOS, MS-DOS was developed by Seattle Computer Products for its 808...
In the Beginning DOS - 1981 In 1981 when the original IBM Personal Computer was announced, IBM released three operating systems for it. How many...
One of the revolutionary technological breakthroughs of the late 20th Century was the creation of the compact disc. The CD technology was first develo...
The Internet and the WWW are not the same thing! The Internet is a communication structure which began in the 1960's and the WWW is a protocol, a part...
Silicon Graphics, Inc. (commonly initialised to SGI, historically sometimes referred to as Silicon Graphics Computer Systems or SGCS) was a manufactur...
Online image of SGI timeline...
This project was supported in part by the U.S. Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Ac...
Simula is a name for two programming languages, Simula I and Simula 67, developed in the 1960s at the Norwegian Computing Center in Oslo, by Ole-Johan...
QDOS (sometimes written as Qdos in official literature; the name is not regarded as an acronym; also see the identically-pronounced word kudos) is the...
Sing# is a concurrent programming language that is a superset of the Spec# programming language; in turn, Spec# is an extension of the C# programming...