The Computer Boys Take Over : Computers, Programmers, and the Politics of Technical Expertise.
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9780262289351
- 005.1
Intro -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Chapter 1. Introduction -- The Computer People -- A Brief History of Programming -- The "Labor Crisis" in Programming -- A Crisis in Programmer Management -- Computing as a Human Activity -- Chapter 2. The Black Art of Programming -- An Unexpected Revolution -- The Origins of Computer Programming -- " Glorifi ed Clerical Workers " -- The Art of Programming -- Building Castles in the Air -- Chapter 3. Chess Players, Music Lovers, and Mathematicians -- In Search of "Clever Fellows" -- The Persistent Personnel Problem -- Wayne State Conference -- Aptitude Tests and Psychological Profi les -- IBM PAT -- Personality Profi les -- The Situation Can Only Get Worse -- Making Programming Masculine -- The Search for Solutions -- Chapter 4. Tower of Babel -- Automatic Programmers -- Assemblers, Compilers, and the Origins of the Subroutine -- FORTRAN -- COBOL -- ALGOL, Pascal, ADA, and Beyond -- No Silver Bullet -- Chapter 5. The Rise of Computer Science -- The Humble Programmer -- Comptologist, Turingeer, or Applied Epistomologist? -- Computer Bureaus and Computing Laboratories -- Trading Zones -- Is Computer Science Science? -- Fundamental Algorithms -- "Cute Programming Tricks" -- Science as Professional Identity -- Chapter 6. The Cosa Nostra of the Data Processing Industry -- Unsettling the Desk Set -- Computers Can't Solve Everything -- Seat-of-the-Pants Management -- Management, Information, and Systems -- A New Theocracy-or Industrial Carpetbaggers? -- The Revolt of the Managers -- The Road to Garmisch -- Chapter 7. The Professionalization of Programming -- The Certified Public Programmer -- The Association for Computing Machinery -- The Data Processing Management Association -- Professional Societies or Technician Associations? -- The Limits of Professionalism -- Chapter 8. Engineering a Solution.
Industrializing Software Development -- Aristocracy, Democracy, and Systems Design -- Armies of Programmers -- Superprogrammer to the Rescue -- Computer Programming as a Human Activity -- From Exhilaration to Disillusionment -- Chapter 9. Conclusions -- Software's Chronic Crisis -- Drawing Boundaries/Construction Disciplines -- Visible Technicians -- Where Did All the Women Go? -- From Crisis to Opportunity -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.
The contentious history of the computer programmers who developed the software that made the computer revolution possible.
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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