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Computing and the National Science Foundation, 1950-2016. William AsprayЧитать онлайн книгу.

Computing and the National Science Foundation, 1950-2016 - William  Aspray


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of infrastructure. McCarthy started working at BBN with JCR Licklider and others at around that time, and it is said that McCarthy influenced Licklider’s thinking about time-sharing. Licklider later went to ARPA, where he funded Project MAC at MIT, based on CTSS, and many other important initiatives.

      NSF established the Office of Computing Activities (OCA) in July 1967 to provide federal leadership in the use of computers for research and education. Later, the directive was added as a statutory requirement to the NSF charter. Faced with ever-increasing demand for computing facilities from all sectors of academe, OCA established regional centers. In fiscal years 1968 and 1969, the Foundation explored various computer-based cooperative arrangements. Typically, each regional activity was centered on a major university, which provided computer services and technical assistance to help a cluster of nearby institutions introduce computing. Altogether, 15 regional centers were established, including 12 major universities, 116 participating colleges, 11 junior colleges, and 27 secondary schools located in 21 states. By the early 1970s, 30 regional computing networks were connecting approximately 300 institutions at all levels of education and including minority institutions.

      As the number of college and university computing centers grew, NSF also began to recognize the need for programmers and technicians to staff these centers. In its 1957 Annual Report, it noted:

      The rapid development of computing machines and their usefulness in a wide variety of research investigations have created a demand for persons trained in the use and operation of computers. Although such training may be considered a proper responsibility of colleges and universities, there is a severe shortage of teachers competent to give instruction. The Foundation has provided support for a program of training for experienced mathematicians on the faculties of colleges and universities to prepare them to develop courses of instruction in the use and operation of modern computing machines.

      Andrew Molnar, a leader in the computing education field, asserted that:

      When OCA was created, Molnar moved over to the NSF from the Department of Education, first on detail and later as a program director, to work on the computers in education programs.

      PLATO, the first large-scale, computer-based education system, was developed at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign under the guidance of Donald Bitzer beginning in 1959. With NSF support, Bitzer showed that computers could serve thousands of students, at many different geographic locations, with hundreds of courses, at a reasonable cost. Most of the financial support for PLATO initially came from NSF. Control Data Corp. (CDC) was eventually licensed by the University of Illinois to produce and market the PLATO system.

      One unique feature of the PLATO system was a plasma display that provided high quality, low-cost graphics. The PLATO authoring language helped educators create thousands of instructional programs. Bitzer eventually moved PLATO to a Control Data 6000-class machine that served several thousand student stations and provided hundreds of lessons simultaneously. When distributed by Control Data Corporation, PLATO primarily was used for in-service training in industry, but it continued in use in many universities and secondary schools through the 1980s.


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