APL conference: Difference between revisions

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Berkeley conference (1971)
(References section)
(Berkeley conference (1971))
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* '''An APL Implementation on the Univac 1108'''. Pat Haggerty ([[wikipedia:University of Maryland|University of Maryland]]).
* '''An APL Implementation on the Univac 1108'''. Pat Haggerty ([[wikipedia:University of Maryland|University of Maryland]]).
* Possible extensions to APL notation for graphics. Lynn Yarbrough (Arcon Corp).
* Possible extensions to APL notation for graphics. Lynn Yarbrough (Arcon Corp).
==== 1971 ====
The next APL conference was held at [[wikipedia:University of California, Berkeley|University of California]] on April 20 and 21, 1971. Again there were no formal proceedings, but summaries of each talk were printed in the next issue of the [[APL Quote-Quad]].<ref>John R. Clark, Thomas R. Dickson, William H. Marshall, and Angeloa Segalla. [https://dl.acm.org/doi/abs/10.1145/1317460.1317464 "A summary of the presentations at APL users conference workshop 3"]. [[APL Quote-Quad]] Vol. 2, No. 1. 1971-06-11.</ref> Following the failure of the petition to form [[SIGAPL]] produced at the previous conference, some attendees suggested forming an organization independed of the [[wikipedia:Association for Computing Machinery|ACM]], but [[Alan Perlis]], a former ACM president, argued instead to continue working with the ACM.<ref name="foster"/>
* '''APL as a Conversational Language - What is Missing?''' [[Alan Perlis]].
* '''A Set of APL Programs for Use in Network Theory'''. Paul Penfield, Jr. ([[wikipedia:MIT|MIT]]).
* '''An On-Line Proof Checker Operating under APL/360, with Applications for Computer-Aided Instruction in Logic, Mathematics, and Computer Science'''. Paul Page ([[wikipedia:UCLA|UCLA]]).
* '''The [[wikipedia:CDC Star-100|CDC Star-100]]: An APL Oriented Machine'''.
* '''Conditional Branch, APL Compiler'''. John Williams ([[wikipedia:Cornell|Cornell]])
* '''A Language Machine'''. Zaks and Steingart ([[wikipedia:UC Berkeley]]).
* '''Bulk I/O and Communications with LTSS'''. Jerry L. Owens (Livermore Time Sharing System).
* '''Generalized Lists and Other Extensions'''. Jim Ryan ([[Burroughs]]).
* '''LRL APL Implementation on the [[wikipedia:CDC 6000|CDC 6000]]-7600'''. Ned Dairike ([[wikipedia:Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory|Livermore Radiation Laboratory]]).
* '''Time Sharing APL for IBM 1130 Systems'''. Thomas P. Daniell ([[IBM]])
* '''APL on the Honeywell 635'''. Norman Glick and Richard Schrader ([[wikipedia:NSA|NSA]]).
* '''A Micro-Programmed Implementation of an APL Machine'''. A. Hassitt, J. W. Lageshulte, and L. G. Lyon ([[IBM]]).
* '''APL/700 - An APL Implementation for the Burroughs 6700 and 7700'''. Jim Ryan ([[Burroughs]]).
* '''An 8-bit ASCII code'''. John Fletcher.
* '''The MRX 1240 Communication Terminal and 1270 Transmission Control Unit'''. David Sant (Memorex Corporation).
* '''A Plotter of APL'''. Mike Dayton (Time Share Peripherals).


==== 1972 ====
==== 1972 ====

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