Rankine, John (L. John)2011-06-172011-06-171980-09-11John Rankine, OH 32. Oral history interview by George D. Green for American Business History series, 11 September 1980, Valhalla, New York. Charles Babbage Institute, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis. http://purl.umn.edu/107604OH 32https://hdl.handle.net/11299/107604Transcript not available electronically. Please contact CBI.Rankine discusses changes in digital computing from card- programmed calculators to microprocessors and supercomputers. He explains how the move from electromechanical to vacuum tubes to solid state technology improved speed and decreased size, and describes the accompanying development of software. He reviews IBM's role in the transition of the computer from a scientific to a commercial tool. Finally, he assesses the possibilities of computing to improve various social conditions, as well as the danger of its threat to privacy, which he believes can be easily minimalized.en-USComputer historyPrivacy, Right of -- United StatesInternational Business Machines Corporation.Computers -- United States -- HistoryComputer software -- History.Computer industry -- United States -- HistoryOral history interview with John RankineOral History