The Mathematical Tables Committee of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, and latterly of the Royal Society, led British table making activity for nearly a century. During this period, table making evolved from the private passion of solitary table makers to organized groups of human computers augmented by calculating machines. The most tangible output of the committee was the Mathematical Tables Series-volumes that became a byword for perfection in accuracy and typography. After World War II the scientific community expected that the electronic computer would take over the role of the table maker. It did, but not in the way table makers had supposed
This study examines the organization of scientific computation in Britain over the period 1925-1955....
It has often been observed that the early years of the 20th century witnessed a significant and noti...
International audienceIn the eighteenth century and before, the systems of measurement (length, weig...
Quarter-Squares were in use both earlier and more recently than the era from 1876 to 1951 covered in...
The aim of this chapter is to study the history of the design and use of calculating machines to pro...
International audienceNumerical tables were one of the most commonly used instruments of calculation...
Throughout recorded history, devices have been created in order to assist with the doing of mathemat...
The article first discusses the earliest extant instances of such tables in Antiquity, and then move...
"Prepared by the 'Project for the computation of mathematical tables' sponsored by Dr. Lyman J. Brig...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>This project aims to s...
Astronomers and those interested in machine computing honour Comrie for his work in these fields. Th...
"It is now over ninety years since the first edition of Kaye and Laby's tables was published. Over t...
AbstractThe London Mathematical Society had been founded in 1865 as little more than a college club....
There is a very intriguing book from 1893, with a second edition in 1905. Written by Maurice d’Ocag...
This thesis demonstrates how the book industry shaped knowledge formation by mediating the selection...
This study examines the organization of scientific computation in Britain over the period 1925-1955....
It has often been observed that the early years of the 20th century witnessed a significant and noti...
International audienceIn the eighteenth century and before, the systems of measurement (length, weig...
Quarter-Squares were in use both earlier and more recently than the era from 1876 to 1951 covered in...
The aim of this chapter is to study the history of the design and use of calculating machines to pro...
International audienceNumerical tables were one of the most commonly used instruments of calculation...
Throughout recorded history, devices have been created in order to assist with the doing of mathemat...
The article first discusses the earliest extant instances of such tables in Antiquity, and then move...
"Prepared by the 'Project for the computation of mathematical tables' sponsored by Dr. Lyman J. Brig...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>This project aims to s...
Astronomers and those interested in machine computing honour Comrie for his work in these fields. Th...
"It is now over ninety years since the first edition of Kaye and Laby's tables was published. Over t...
AbstractThe London Mathematical Society had been founded in 1865 as little more than a college club....
There is a very intriguing book from 1893, with a second edition in 1905. Written by Maurice d’Ocag...
This thesis demonstrates how the book industry shaped knowledge formation by mediating the selection...
This study examines the organization of scientific computation in Britain over the period 1925-1955....
It has often been observed that the early years of the 20th century witnessed a significant and noti...
International audienceIn the eighteenth century and before, the systems of measurement (length, weig...