HCC - Club Historyhttp://hcc.chebucto.org/history.html
meeting. We conducted a programming contest for members during our time at Leeds Street. There were three contestants. The problem was to write a program to play tic-tac-toe. One
History Page of The Halifax Computer Club.
History of Computing Science: BASIC & Other Languageshttp://lecture.eingang.org/other.html
the standard choice for programming requiring detailed control of hardware. After that came COBOL--COmmon Business Oriented Language. COBOL was developed in 1960 by a joint commit
Part of a multipage presentation on the history of computers. This page talks about BASIC and other computer languages.
net.techhttp://www.kushaldave.com/nettech.htm
allows for modular programming, perhaps opening the way for apps over the net. OpenSpace is a new technology based on resuable software components that enables the transmission of
The Retrocomputing Museumhttp://www.catb.org/retro/
in the history of programming languages. More Algol68 resources can be found at the Software Preservation Group . ADVSYS ADVenture SYStem, another adventure-writing system by Davi
A museum of archaic computer languages
Regulating Robocar Safetyhttps://www.templetons.com/brad/robocars/regulation.html
rather than specifying programming techniques. Functional standards are important when a field is changing rapidly and subject to innovation. If specifications and standards are w
Zuse's Thesis - Zuse hypothesis -Algorithmic Theory of Everything - Digital Physics, Rechnender Raum (Computing Space, Computing Cosmos) - Cohttps://people.idsia.ch/~juergen/digitalphysics.html
the first higher-level programming language (1945), but also was the first to suggest (in 1967) that the entire universe is being computed on a computer, possibly a cellular autom
The Edinburgh Multi Access Systemhttp://www.bobeager.uk/emas/index.html
entirely in the IMP programming language, based on Atlas Autocode. This describes the language, and the workings of its compiler. Edinburgh IMP Language Manual Describes the versi
SAGEhttps://ed-thelen.org/sage-1.html
in this type of programming. While light pens did exist in that period, SAGE actually used light _guns_, complete with pistol grip and trigger, in keeping with military traditions
What This Blog Ishttps://riggraz.dev/intro.html
some articles, he mixed programming with philosophy. Since I like philosophy, I’d be lying if I didn’t say that I’d have liked to come up with that idea first… arp242’s blog , fro
Hey, it’s riggraz.
https://www.humprog.org/~stephen/https://www.humprog.org/~stephen/
has mostly focused on programming languages and the systems that support them—including language runtimes and operating systems. Micro-blog and calendar December 2025. A new
Papers on ML/I and related topicshttp://www.ml1.org.uk/papers.html
review in Automatic Programming , 6 , 2, Pergamon Press, Oxford, pp. 37-88 (1969). Eager, Bob, ' ML/I - Son of GPM? ', Resurrection - The Journal of the Computer Conservation Soci
SPACEWAR - by Stewart Brand - Fanatic Life and Symbolic Death Among the Computer Bums.https://www.wheels.org/spacewar/stone/rolling_stone.html
Spacewar: “The programming of the thing was a remarkable tour de forge, because the machine did not have a multiply or divide, The way that the outline of the spaceship was
Find more...