Dear Colleagues, I am pleased to announce that the proceedings volume from our Histories of Computing in Eastern Europe workshop in Poznan has been published by Springer. Details are available on their website: https://www.springer.com/cn/book/9783030291594 The Proceedings come from an event organized by IFIP Working Group 9.7 at the last IFIP World Congress. WG 9.7 is composed of industry professionals, historians, archivists, and others with an interest in the history of computing broadly defined. The contents of the volume are divided into six parts: 1. EASTERN EUROPE. The papers in this section offer new glimpses into the history of computing in Armenia, Czechoslovakia, and Hungary. For instance, Szabo offers a compelling portrait of a computing class conducted with a chalkboard in Hungary. Armenian Computers: First Generations Sergey B. Oganjanyan, Valery V. Shilov, and Sergey A. Silantiev The Emergence of Computing Disciplines in Communist Czechoslovakia: What’s in a (Sovietized) Name? Michal Doležel and Zdeněk Smutný László Kalmár and the First University-Level Programming and Computer Science Training in Hungary Máté Szabó 2. POLAND. These papers were part of our collaboration with the Polish Information Processing Society and the Enigma Live event in Poznan. Early Computer Development in Poland Marek Hołyński The Long Road toward the Rejewski-Różycki-Zygalski Cipher Center Marek Grajek 3. SOVIET UNION. A highlight of these papers is co-authored by the children of two great names in the USSR: Anatoly Kitov and Victor Glushkov. They challenge the notion that Soviet computer science was a failure because it did not result in an ARPA-style national network. Kitov also details his own work in the first article to discuss Soviet control programs that monitored data transfer between multiple terminals for collaborative work. Anatoly Kitov and Victor Glushkov: Pioneers of Russian Digital Economy and Informatics Olga V. Kitova and Vladimir A. Kitov On the History of Gosplan, the Main Computer Center of the State Planning Committee of the USSR Vladimir A. Kitov Main Teleprocessing Monitors for Third-Generation Computers in the USSR Vladimir A. Kitov 4. COCOM AND COMECOM. Sikora and Schmitt offer extended examinations of the permutations of the cold war blockades based on their archival research. My own paper, an outgrowth of my presentation to TC 9 in 2014 for the Turku Human Choice in Computing workshop, rounds out the group. Socialist Life of a U.S. Army Computer in the GDR’s Financial Sector Martin Schmitt Cooperating with Moscow, Stealing in California: Poland’s Legal and Illicit Acquisition of Microelectronics Knowhow from 1960 to 1990 Mirosław Sikora From CoCom to Dot-Com: Technological Determinisms in Computing Blockades, 1949 to 1994 Christopher Leslie 5. ANALOG COMPUTING. Two papers about computing before digital computing. Leipälä, Shilov, and Silantiev also include a translation of the book they found in their appendix. Israel Abraham Staffel: Lost Book Is Found Timo Leipälä, Valery V. Shilov, Sergey A. Silantiev Mathematicians at the Scottish Café Chris Zielinski 6. PUBLIC HISTORY. Bodrato, Caruso, and Cignoni demonstrate what insights can be gleaned by their project of collecting and reverse-engineering early hardware. Smolevitskaya offers not just an overview of an archive but has also painstakingly tallied Rameev’s inventions, including the iterations of Ural computers. Discovering Eastern Europe PCs by Hacking Them ... Today Stefano Bodrato, Fabrizio Caruso, Giovanni A. Cignoni Twentieth Anniversary of the Russian Virtual Museum of Computing and Information Technology History Vladimir A. Kitov and Edward M. Proydakov ICT History Study as Corporate Philanthropy in Latvia Inara Opmane and Rihards Balodis The Engineering Heritage of Bashir Rameev at the Polytechnic Museum: Honoring the 100th Anniversary of His Birth Marina Smolevitskaya WG 9.7 meets roughly every other year; more information about our past workshops is available on our website (http://ifipwg97.org). Our next meeting will hopefully be in Asia in 2020 … more information on that coming soon. Sincerely, Chris Leslie Chair, IFIP Working Group 9.7 - History of Computing Lecturer, School of Foreign Languages, South China University of Technology