Catalogue description Archives of IT: Oral Histories of IT and tech Online Resource

This record is held by Archives of IT

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Title: Archives of IT: Oral Histories of IT and tech Online Resource
Description:

AIT's online resource is a website that contains oral history interviews and transcripts, digitised publications, (including magazines, annual reports and films) blogs on IT themes, and reports from independent academic research projects using the archive. A selection of external blogs and other online databases of information about the IT industry are linked to from this resource as well as lesson plans and other tools for teachers.

Oral history interviews have been (and continue to be) recorded with leading figures from the anglophone IT industry. Interviewees are scientists, policymakers, business people and users of technology. Examples include:

Pioneering entrepreneur Dame Stephanie Shirley,
Computer scientist, mathematician and hardware engineer Dr Steve Furber CBE co-inventor of the RISC chip which powers mobile devices,
The first ever Minister for IT, politician Lord Kenneth Baker CH,
Computer scientist Dame Wendy Hall DBE who developed the Microcosm hypermedia system in the 1980s, a forerunner of the world wide web,
Businessman and philanthropist Sir Kenneth Olisa OBE,
Sir Clive Sinclair, entrepreneur, inventor and computing industry pioneer,
Computer scientist Mandy Chessell CBE, first woman awarded Silver medal from the Royal Academy of Engineering,
Edwina Dunn OBE, co-inventor of the clubcard loyalty scheme, the first of its kind in the world using data science to help businesses understand customer behaviour.

External databases linked from the website includes the INPUT iCenter, created by founder Peter Cunningham. INPUT (1975-2000) were leading software and services market researchers of their time with great influence in the IT Industry. Peter Cunningham has contributed an oral history interview.

Significant publications available online include reports from the Butler Cox Foundation (1977-1991) and System House magazine (1990-2008). Butler Cox PLC (originally Butler Cox and Partners Ltd) was an independent consulting and research company formed in 1977 by David Butler and George Cox along with five colleagues, specialising in the strategic application of information technology. The Foundation was its research service and was influential on UK government policy. System House was a review magazine published monthly by leading IT Analyst Richard Holway MBE, about the financial performance of the UK computing services industry in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Richard Holway , Sir George Cox and David Butler have contributed oral history interviews to the website.

In films, one example is Sir Desmond Pitcher's 1974/75 Faraday Lecture 'The Social Computer' , in which he predicted the many future developments of the IT industry. Sir Desmond's oral history interview is also in this resource.

As part of its charitable aims, AIT works to promote the IT Industry as a career to students and offers teacher tools including careers advice for students and lesson plans for primary school pupils at Key Stage 1 and 2. It shares the history of IT to the general public and researchers, producing occasional webinars and other blogs and publications. A recent example is a presentation on the history of the internet by one of the fathers of the internet Vint Cerf.

Note:

This is a description of an online resource . Online Resources are websites that describe, interpret and provide access to archives. They often provide access to digital content but they may also describe physical materials. They usually cover a theme or topic, such as an individual, a movement, or an important historical event.

Date: 2015-ongoing
Held by: Archives of IT, not available at The National Archives
Language: English
Creator:

Archives of IT 2015-

Physical description: 250 oral history interviews
Physical condition: Researchers need to have access to the internet and an internet browser to be able to use this online resource.
Access conditions:

All materials (including text and images) on the site are the copyright of AIT or third parties. Anyone may reproduce reasonable extracts from the site for their personal use or private study and save a copy of them on their local hard disk for their personal use or private study only. Resources for teachers may be used, adapted and shared by educational establishments for non-commercial purposes in the normal course of operations e.g. by teachers in classrooms.For further information, please see our Terms and Conditions page at https://archivesit.org.uk/terms/ .

Publication note:

Ahmed, Sophia. 60 years of progress for women in Tech. Available at: https://archivesit.org.uk/60-years-of-progress-for-women-in-tech/ (Accessed 21 December 2022).

Blaxland, Sam. The Archives of Information Technology: More Than Just Computers. Available at: https://archivesit.org.uk/the-archives-of-information-technology-more-than-just-computers/ (Accessed 21 December 2022).

Li, Yuequi. The UK IT Industry after World War II: The National Research and Development Corporation. (NRDC) Available at https://archivesit.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/Final-Report-Yueqi-Li-.pdf (Accessed 21 December 2022).

Subjects:
  • Information technology
  • Artificial intelligence
  • Telecommunication services
  • World Wide Web
Unpublished finding aids:

Access this resource online: https://archivesit.org.uk/

Administrative / biographical background:

Archives of IT (AIT) was founded in 2015 by IT executive and entrepreneur Roger Graham OBE and is a Charitable Incorporated Organisation (CIO) registered with the Charity Commission in England and Wales on 2 November 2015 , no. 1164198.

The archive is web based and brings together important historical information about the development of the IT Industry in the UK, which cannot be found anywhere else and would otherwise be lost.

To achieve this, AIT conducts oral interviews with leading members of the IT industry from the 1950s onwards in video and audio. Interviews are transcribed and both the interview and transcription are made available for research on their online resource website. The interviews are complemented with company reports and other media, donated by participants and supporters.

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