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Software History Center
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Software History Center
CHM Releases AlexNet Source Code
Thursday, March 20, 2025
In partnership with Google, CHM releases the source code to AlexNet, the neural network that in 2012 kick-started today’s prevailing approach to AI.
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Software History Center
For Whom Does Data Work?
Tuesday, March 9, 2021
Private sector firms create, gather, and sell data about us for their profit, and not necessarily—or even secondarily—for our benefit. But India is creating a new market structure aimed at putting data to work for people.
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Software History Center
Introducing the Smalltalk Zoo
Thursday, December 17, 2020
In commemoration of the 40th anniversary of the release of Smalltalk-80, the Computer History Museum is proud to announce a collaboration with Dan Ingalls to preserve and host the “Smalltalk Zoo.”
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From the Collection, Software History Center
CHM Releases New Recordings and Personal Stories with AI Expert Systems Pioneers
Thursday, June 25, 2020
As CHM continues its commitment to decoding the history and impact of AI, we are honored to preserve and make accessible these unique discussions with some of the field’s leading pioneers
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From the Collection, Software History Center
The Earliest Unix Code: An Anniversary Source Code Release
Thursday, October 17, 2019
In celebration of Unix’s 50th anniversary, the CHM Software History Center is delighted to make publicly accessible for the first time some of the earliest source code produced in the Unix story.
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From the Collection, Software History Center
Math Miracles for Missileers: The Aerospace Industry, Computer Programming, and the Rise of IBM
Friday, April 26, 2019
Robert W. “Bob” Bemer - who worked at Lockheed's Missile Systems Division in Van Nuys and who would become its IBM 650's power user - carefully cut out the article and placed it into a scrapbook. In 2018, through its Access to Historical Records grant from the National Archives' National Publications and Records Commis
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Remarkable People, Software History Center
If Discrimination, Then Branch: Ann Hardy’s Contributions to Computing
Monday, March 25, 2019
In the realm of software, a “branch” is a computer instruction that causes a shift from the default pattern of activity to a different sequence of actions, a different way of moving ahead if you will. For Ann Hardy, a pioneer in timesharing software and business, her contributions to computing were achieved through rep
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From the Collection, Software History Center
Meeting Whirlwind’s Joe Thompson
Wednesday, February 20, 2019
The photograph was dated 1950, a date when a now unimaginably small number of humans had ever beheld a computer, no less touched one, and when unabashed racism and discrimination was endemic on the American scene. Who was the young African-American man who nevertheless sat at the controls of this storied machine? What
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Curatorial Insights, From the Collection, Software History Center
An Inflection Point in the History of Multimedia: Video Ethnographies of Visual Almanac and News Navigator
Thursday, October 18, 2018
CHM's Software History Center has been conducting “video ethnographies” to record and preserve the experience of running historical software. Over the course of 2018, the center has conducted two video ethnographies surrounding a key moment at the end of the late 1980s and early 1990s, the birth of multimedia. Watch an
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CHM Live, Curatorial Insights, Software History Center
Navigating the Quantum Computing Frontier
Friday, August 24, 2018
Perhaps you are like me: You’ve aware that quantum computing is a hot topic today but have a nagging feeling that you don’t really have a good picture of what it’s all about. Sure, you know it has something to do with the unintuitive behavior of the world described by quantum mechanics—cats in boxes that are blends of
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