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(Contact Info: larry at larryblakeley dot com)

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I manage this Web site and the following Web sites: Leslie (Blakeley) Adkins - my oldest daughter

Lori Ann Blakeley (June 20, 1985 - May 4, 2005) - my middle daughter

Evan Blakeley- my youngest child

 Iterations: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Software History

About Iterations (Iterations: An interdisciplinary journal of software history)

Iterations is a new journal published by the Charles Babbage Institute http://www.larryblakeley.com/Computer_History/Charles_Babbage_Institute/charles_babbage_institute.html

(CBI) to provide an electronic forum for scholarship and other discourse on the history of software. It is launched as a component of CBI's NSF-sponsored software history project, "Building a Future for Software History."

Editorial Board

Dr. Martin Campbell-Kelly, Prof. of Computer Science, University of Warwick
Dr. Mary Croarken, Sackler Fellow at the National Maritime Museum-Greenwich
Dr. Peter Denning, Prof. of Computer Science, George Mason University
Dr. Paul Edwards, Prof. of STS, University of Michigan
Dr. Bernard Galler, Prof. of Computer Science, Emeritus, University of Michigan
Mr. Martin Goetz, President of Goetz Associates and Past President of ADR
Dr. Casimir Kulikowski, Prof. of Computer Science, Rutgers University
Dr. Michael Mahoney, Prof. of History, Princeton University
Dr. Raúl Rojas, Prof. of Mathematics and Computer Science, Freie Univ. Berlin

Editor: Jeffrey R. Yost
Associate Editor: Philip L. Frana

What is the Charles Babbage Institute?

Established in 1977, the Charles Babbage Institute (CBI) is a research center and archives at the University of Minnesota dedicated to promoting study of the history of information technology. CBI conducts and fosters research, preserves relevant documentation, offers graduate fellowships, and sponsors symposia, conferences, and publications. See the CBI home page for additional information.

What is the Software History Project?

The Software History Project, "Building a Future for Software History," is a Charles Babbage Institute (CBI) project sponsored by the National Science Foundation (NSF). The NSF awarded a grant to CBI in September 1999 to develop, organize, and disseminate resources and knowledge on the history of software. The project has four components: (1) organizing a knowledge network of individuals in the software community, (2) creating a Web-based historical dictionary of software, (3) publishing an online journal of software history, and (4) conducting an oral history initiative to interview pioneering individuals in software from academe and industry.