Entry Beidler:1973:MIC from sigcse1970.bib

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BibTeX entry

@Article{Beidler:1973:MIC,
  author =       "John A. Beidler",
  title =        "A machine independent course in processor organization
                 and assembler language programming",
  journal =      j-SIGCSE,
  volume =       "5",
  number =       "1",
  pages =        "149--152",
  month =        feb,
  year =         "1973",
  CODEN =        "SIGSD3",
  DOI =          "https://doi.org/10.1145/953053.808099",
  ISSN =         "0097-8418 (print), 2331-3927 (electronic)",
  ISSN-L =       "0097-8418",
  bibdate =      "Sun Nov 18 08:53:45 MST 2012",
  bibsource =    "http://portal.acm.org/;
                 http://www.math.utah.edu/pub/tex/bib/sigcse1970.bib",
  note =         "Proceedings of the 3rd SIGCSE symposium on Computer
                 science education.",
  abstract =     "Over the past three years the University of Scranton
                 has been developing a computer science program. Since
                 we could not hope to obtain the type of equipment, fast
                 processors and compilers which many of the larger
                 schools have, we developed several ``canned programs''
                 which could accept and act upon student input and give
                 the student some degree of experience with computers
                 which are not within our financial means. The heart of
                 this development was a simulator we refer to as the
                 SLIC (Scranton's Little Instructional Computer)
                 processor. We feel this simulator has a different
                 purpose for its existence than some of the others which
                 have been developed. The original purpose and the one
                 on which we are concentrating in this paper was to give
                 students some practical programming experience on
                 ``computers'' which have different addressing schemes.
                 We feel SLIC met this original purpose with great
                 success. Its most important contribution to date is in
                 the development of our course in Processor Organization
                 and Assembler Programming. In making this course SLIC
                 dependent, we believe we made it machine independent
                 and as a result we feel we give our students a ``feel''
                 for computing which transcends the machine we have on
                 campus.",
  acknowledgement = ack-nhfb,
  fjournal =     "SIGCSE Bulletin (ACM Special Interest Group on
                 Computer Science Education)",
  journal-URL =  "http://portal.acm.org/browse_dl.cfm?idx=J688",
}

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