User:Silviolorusso/thematic1/punch: Difference between revisions

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From the W.E.B.  DuBois Club newsletter, Bancroft Library, Berkeley. Courtesy Bancroft Library; reproduced from Rorabaugh  
From the W.E.B.  DuBois Club newsletter, Bancroft Library, Berkeley. Courtesy Bancroft Library; reproduced from Rorabaugh  
(after p. 50)
(after p. 50)
[[File:computerdating.png]] <br/>
Drawing from advertisment for computer dating




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'''3'''. During the 60's and 70's punch cards' technology became familiar in the U.S. Punch cards were sent as bills from companies. They also became common in advertisements and even as ornament for christmas trees.  
'''3'''. During the 60's and 70's punch cards' technology became familiar in the U.S. Punch cards were sent as bills from companies. They also became common in advertisements and even as ornament for christmas trees.  
[[File:computerdating.png]] <br/>
Drawing from advertisment for computer dating




(prisoner)
(prisoner)


<span style="font-size:30px;">''Number 6: I will not make any deals with you. I've resigned. I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own. I resign.'''</span>




== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 14:50, 27 November 2011

Once Upon a Time...

Once upon a time Aymeric explained us computing starting from the very beginning. He talked about punch cards and how these existed way before computers in textile industry.


Jacquard.loom.cards.jpg

Punched cards in use in a Jacquard loom.


Why I consider those cards fascinating

1. Punch cards were crucial for Nazism in order to accomplish the logistic tasks of the concentration camps and the final solution. This story was for long time forgotten. More info in the book "IBM and the holocaust" by Edwin Black.


nazi-hollerith-punch-card.jpg

Nazi Punch card

0,1425,sz=1&i=11032,00.jpg

German Punch Card ad

{{#ev:youtube|2gNXfrMR_Lw|500}}




2. Since 1964, the Free Speech Movement, in their fight agains beaurocracy, took punch cards as symbol of alienation and hyper-rationalization. {{#ev:youtube|tcx9BJRadfw|500}}


Punchcards.jpg
Punch cads punched with words, from the phonogram album cover for "FSM's Sounds and Soungs of the Demonstration!"


Universitycomic.png
From the W.E.B. DuBois Club newsletter, Bancroft Library, Berkeley. Courtesy Bancroft Library; reproduced from Rorabaugh (after p. 50)




3. During the 60's and 70's punch cards' technology became familiar in the U.S. Punch cards were sent as bills from companies. They also became common in advertisements and even as ornament for christmas trees.

Computerdating.png
Drawing from advertisment for computer dating


(prisoner)


Number 6: I will not make any deals with you. I've resigned. I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own. I resign.'


References