Mark D. Bowles U.S. Technological Enthusiasm and British Technological Skepticism in the Age of the Analog Brain. [Citation Graph (0, 0)][DBLP] IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, 1996, v:18, n:4, pp:5-15 [Journal]
Per A. Holst Svein Rosseland and the Oslo Analyzer. [Citation Graph (0, 0)][DBLP] IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, 1996, v:18, n:4, pp:16-26 [Journal]
Magnus Johansson Early Analog Computers in Sweden-With Examples From Chalmers University of Technology and the Swedish Aerospace Industry. [Citation Graph (0, 0)][DBLP] IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, 1996, v:18, n:4, pp:27-33 [Journal]
Larry Owens Where Are We Going, Phil Morse? Changing Agendas and the Rhetoric of Obviousness in the Transformation of Computing at MIT, 1939-1957. [Citation Graph (0, 0)][DBLP] IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, 1996, v:18, n:4, pp:34-41 [Journal]
Aristotle Tympas From Digital to Analog and Back: The Ideology of Intelligent Machines in the History of the Electrical Analyzer, 1870s-1960s. [Citation Graph (0, 0)][DBLP] IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, 1996, v:18, n:4, pp:42-48 [Journal]
Susann Puchta On the Role of Mathematics and Mathematical Knowledge in the Invention of Vannevar Bush's Early Analog Computers. [Citation Graph (0, 0)][DBLP] IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, 1996, v:18, n:4, pp:49-59 [Journal]