Professor: Mike Erlinger
Office: Olin 1258b
Phone: x-18912
E-mail: mike@cs.hmc.edu
Meeting Times: Monday 7:00 - 10:00 PM
Meeting Place: Hum/Soc Conf Rm - 1264
Mail lists: cs-162-l@hmc.edu for admin issues
Mail lists: 162dis@cs.hmc.edu for discussion
Graders: Mike and Class
Secretary: Joyce Greene, Olin 1258, 621-8225,
(Catalogue) Description: Students will review the history of computing, the current state of computing, and various predictions of the future of computing. The reviews will encompass social and economic aspects of computing along with the technical. Using these three views of computing and their breath in science and the humanities, the students will produce their own prediction of computing in ten, fifteen, twenty, or twenty-five years. This prediction will include all aspects of the computing equation: scientific, economic, and social.
There are 4 books, 2 of which I am still deciding on. The choice will depend on our direction as a class. The 2 you should get ASAP are:
This course is a discussion and seminar course. Thus the success of the course depends on students taking responsibility for investigating the course material and expressing themselves in class discussions, papers, and projects. There will be three critical essays (on papers or chapters not in the class texts), two major projects, (one a group project and one an individual project/paper), and students will each moderate multiple class discussions.
There will NOT be a class email discuss list. I have let the class grow beyond the 'desired' number and realize that the size will make on-line discussion difficult. If we were doing on-line discussion, then:
For each class, designated individuals will be responsible for leading the class discussion parts of the readings, they are the moderator. Also for each class individuals will be responsible for preparing additional questions and issues related to the readings, i.e., adversaries. The rest of the class is responsible for joining the discussions. Besides doing the readings come to class having thought a little about the topics.
There will be three general focus areas: History of Computing, Current State of Computing, and Future of Computing. We will investigate computing at each of these stages including technical, economic, and societal issues. We will try to give equal time to all areas.
Discussion of History of Computing from various aspects including, but not limited to: Technical, Economic, and Social. The class discussions will evaluate the history of computing from all three aspects, showing whether (any maybe how) things other than technology have dictated or influenced the direction of computing.
Discussion of Current State of Computing from a current (no more than a 3 year historical perspective) i.e., what in the last 3 years has been most influential on the current state of computing. These discussions will be from various aspects including, but not limited to: Technical, Economic, and Social.
The Future of Computing will also be investigated. There are numerous predictions. We will investigate some through various books, movies, and papers. Again trying to understand more than the technology itself, including who will really be using the advances and how will society in general be affected. Students will do a final project paper on their view of the future state of some particular aspect of computing, e.g., computing in the home or educational computing, etc. The topic and time frame need to be discussed and approved by me. Hopefully, during the semester, the class will uncover some aspect of computing that perks your interest. These papers must combine all of the aspects covered in the Historical and Current State of Computing discussions, e.g., scientific, economic, and social.
There is also a group project/presentation which can focus on current or historical aspects of computing. The project contents and directions must be coordinate with me. The group projects will be chosen in the first 2 lectures with the 1st Group presentation, in week 4. The idea is to doing group presentations periodically during the semester.
The first 2 books are where we will start. I am still not sure about the others.
The following are topics to be covered in depth during the semester, and our discussions will be based on the books and other readings. It is impossible to delineate where material will come for each of the topics, but the required books and other readings should provide the background.
Group Projects are major presentations to the class. They involve particular areas, looking at history and current trends. The goal of such presentations is to provide a basis for predicting the future for this particular area. BUT such presentations are NOT to predict the future.
Groups are 3 to 4 people who have gotten together for this particular project. Projects will be reviewed by me after an appropriate outline. The outline MUST contain the questions that are being answered by the presentation (see examples below for types of questions). They will be mixed with our normal review of books.
While some possible project areas are presented below, the field is open.
"Computer Ethics",
Tom Forester and Perry Morrison,
MIT Press, 1997,
ISBN 0-262-06164-3.
"John Von Neumann and the Origins of Modern Computing",
William Aspray,
MIT Press, 1990,
ISBN 0-262-01121-2.
"Things that make us Smart",
Donald Norman,
Perseus Books
1993,
ISBN - 0-201-62695-0.
"Let Them Eat Data",
C.A. Bowers,
University of Georgia Press,
2000,
ISBN 0-8203-2230-X.
"Ethics in an Age of Technology",
Ian Barbour,
Harper San Francisco,
1991,
ISBN0-060934-6.
"The transnational dimension of cyber crime and terrorism",
Edited by Abraham Dofaer and Seymour Goodman,
Hoover Institution Press, 2001,
ISBN 0-8179-9982-5.
"The Information Age, Economy, Society, and Culture,
Vol II, The Power of Identity",
Manuel Castells,
Blackwell Publishers, Inc.
1997,
ISBN 1-55786-873-5
"The Future Does not Compute",
Stephen Talbott,
O'Reilly & Associates,
1995
ISBN 1-56592-085-6.
"The Victorian Internet",
Tom Standage,
Berkeley Book, 1998,
ISBN 0-425-17169-8
"Computer Media and Communication"
Paul Mayer,
Oxford University Press, 1999,
ISBN - 0-19-874257-6
"The First Computers, History and Architectures",
edited by Raul Rojas and Ulf Hashagen,
MIT Press, 2000,
ISBN 0-262-18197-5.
"Computer-Related Risks",
P.G. Neumann,
Addison-Wesley, 1995.
"Yesterday's Tomorrows: Past Visions of the American Future",
Joseph J. Corn and Brian Horrigan,
John Hopkins, 1996,
ISBN 0-8018-5399-0,
Last modified Apr 17, 2002 by mike@cs.hmc.edu