Bio/CV Publications Teaching Research Talks/Media Blog


Tue, 04 Mar 2008

The Mechanical Body: Building Humans, Challenging Humanity

This Tuesday, March 4, I will be giving a talk called "Cyborgs, Artificial Intelligences, and Meat Machines: Computers and the Reinvention of the Body" at Drexel University as part of their Great Works Symposium. The talk is from 3:30-4:50 in Curtis Hall, Room 340

The video of this talk is now available.

category: /media

Mon, 16 Jul 2007

Top-Secret Rosies

I just finished filming a segment for a documentary by local film-maker LeAnn Erikson. I was just one of the talking-head historians. The real heroes of the film are the women who worked as mathematicians and "human computers" during the Second World War (including those who programmed the ENIAC computer right here at the Moore School of Electrical Engineering).

View the trailer online.

category: /media

The Research Channel II

Case Files in the History of Computing

This is the second in a series of symposium hosted by the Franklin Institute and the History & Sociology of Science department celebrating the opening of a new section of the electronic case files archives.

The focus of the presentation was on the early history of the computing industry, featuring key individuals including Hollerith, Burroughs, Eckert, Mauchly, Bardeen, Brittain, and Shannon. Professor Ensmenger provided a general overview of the history of computing.

The full video can be is running on the Research Channel.

category: /media

Thu, 10 May 2007

University of Wisconsin

On February 20th, 2007, Dr. Ensmenger will be giving a talk at the University of Wisconsin entitled "Neither Luddites nor Sages: Physicians and Professors as Reluctant Users of the Internet."

The seminar is funded by the UW-Madison Holtz Center for Science and Technology Studies, and sponsored by the UW-Madison School of Library and Information Studies.

See the full poster.

category: /media

Wed, 13 Dec 2006

Society for the History of Technology Annual Conference 2006

This paper was based on some research that I am currently developing on the history of decision technologies.

From the paper:

"It is also clear that no-one quite knows what to do with software; computer science focuses on software as algorithm; history of computer science is often told as old-style intellectual history; this is obviously insufficient, software sits uncomfortably between science technology; not a thing, an yet clearly constructed; invisible, ethereal, often ephemeral; also not clear what exactly constitutes software; programs, practices, people; software is perhaps the ultimate heterogenous system...

"And so his paper represents an attempt to think seriously about software as a material artifact, as a technology embedded in systems of practice, networks of exchange..."

category: /media

Wed, 09 Aug 2006

Research Channel I

The History of Communications in America

The Franklin Institute offers an electronic presentation of its Case Files, a collection of primary source documents that exists as an unknown repository of the history of science and technology. The University of PennsylvaniaÕs Department of History and Sociology of Science hosted a Symposium to discuss the historical, scientific, and educational merit of the Case Files, which date from the 1820s, as a modern day resource for undergraduate, graduate, and professional scholars, as well as K-12 students.

Research Channel

category: /media

Tue, 10 May 2005

Radio Odyssey - WBEZ Chicago

The Social History of Computers

Paul Edwards -- Associate Professor, School of Information; University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Nathan Ensmenger -- Assistant Professor of History and Sociology of Science, University of Pennsylvania

As rapidly as computer technology has changed, so have our hopes for -- and fears about -- its potential. How do we imagine the place of computers in our lives?

Historians of science and technology Nathan Ensmenger and Paul Edwards join Chicago Public Radio's Gretchen Helfrich for the discussion. Ensmenger writes and researches on the history of software, artificial intelligence, and the information age. Edwards is author of The World in a Machine: Computer Models, Data Networks, and Global Atmospheric Politics.

Listen online

category: /media