Ada Lovelace ada Byron, Lady lovelace, was one of the most picturesque characters in computerhistory. augusta ada Byron is born in London (December 10) http://www.thocp.net/biographies/lovelace_ada.html
Extractions: "If you are as fastidious about the acts of your friendship as you are about those of your pen, I much fear I shall equally lose your friendship and your Notes. I am very reluctant to return your admirable & philosophic 'Note A.' Pray do not alter it . . . All this was impossible for you to know by intuition and the more I read your notes the more surprised I am at them and regret not having earlier explored so rich a vein of the noblest metal." Ada Byron King
Extractions: Home Browse Newsletters Store ... Subscribe Already a member? Log in Content Related to this Topic This Article's Table of Contents Introduction Additional Reading Print this Table of Contents Shopping Price: USD $1495 Revised, updated, and still unrivaled. The Official Scrabble Players Dictionary (Hardcover) Price: USD $15.95 The Scrabble player's bible on sale! Save 30%. Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary Price: USD $19.95 Save big on America's best-selling dictionary. Discounted 38%! More Britannica products Lovelace, Augusta Ada King, countess of
Extractions: Home Browse Newsletters Store ... Subscribe Already a member? Log in Content Related to this Topic This Article's Table of Contents Introduction Additional Reading Print this Table of Contents Shopping Price: USD $1495 Revised, updated, and still unrivaled. The Official Scrabble Players Dictionary (Hardcover) Price: USD $15.95 The Scrabble player's bible on sale! Save 30%. Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary Price: USD $19.95 Save big on America's best-selling dictionary. Discounted 38%! More Britannica products Lovelace, Augusta Ada King, countess of  Encyclopædia Britannica Article Page 2 of 2 Additional Reading Biographies include Doris Langley Moore Ada, Countess of Lovelace: Byron's Legitimate Daughter Dorothy Stein Ada: A Life and Legacy (1985); and Joan Baum The Calculating Passion of Ada Byron Lovelace, Augusta Ada King, countess of... (75 of 286 words) var mm = [["Jan.","January"],["Feb.","February"],["Mar.","March"],["Apr.","April"],["May","May"],["June","June"],["July","July"],["Aug.","August"],["Sept.","September"],["Oct.","October"],["Nov.","November"],["Dec.","December"]];
Inventor Ada Augusta Lovelace Fascinating facts about ada augusta lovelace inventor of an early computer, theAnalytical Engine in 1842. http://www.ideafinder.com/history/inventors/lovelace.htm
Extractions: Fascinating facts about Ada Augusta Lovelace inventor of an early computer, the Analytical Engine in 1842. Byron, (Augusta) Ada, Countess of Lovelace (1815-1852), British mathematician. Byron laid some of the early conceptual and technical groundwork for high technology by helping develop an early computer. The daughter of English poet Lord Byron, Ada Byron was born in London. With the help of friends and tutors, she taught herself geometry and later attended classes in astronomy and mathematics. In 1833 she met British mathematician and inventor Charles Babbage. He had invented the Difference Engine, a mechanical device designed to handle complicated mathematical problems. Byron showed her understanding of the concept of a programmed computer in 1842, when she translated from French and annotated a paper by the Italian engineer Luigi F. Menabrea on Babbage's Difference Engine. She also collaborated with Babbage to invent the Analytical Engine, an archetype of the modern digital computer. The technology of their time was not capable of translating their ideas into practical use, but the Analytical Engine had many features of the modern computer. It could read data from a deck of punched cards, store data, and perform arithmetic operations. Components of Byron's work remain in the modern digital electronic computer that receives a set of instructions, then carries out those instructions. Byron's set of instructions was a forerunner of modern programming languages and historians have credited Byron as the first computer programmer.
Extractions: an Ada Lovelace Biography Related Writings by Dr. Toole Ada Byron, Lady Lovelace contributed to Biographies of Women Mathematicians at Agnes Scott College, Atlanta, GA A Selection and Adaptation From Ada's Notes found in "Ada, The Enchantress of Numbers" Ada's endeavors as a child by Betty Toole Ada: Enchantress of numbers excerpts from "Ada, The Enchantress of Numbers" Ada Byron, Lady Lovelace , An Analyst and Metaphysician. IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, Vol. 18, No. 3, Fall 1996 Excerpts from the narrative and correspondence of Augusta Ada Byron, Lady Lovelace Dr. B.A. Toole's Home Page includes a photo of Dr. Toole Related Books Ada, a life and a legacy by Dorothy Stein by Elisabeth Freeman Ada, Countess of Lovelace : Byron's legitimate daughter by Doris Langley Moore Ada Byron Lovelace : the Lady and the Computer by Mary Dodson Wade The calculating passion of Ada Byron by Joan Baum Related links for girls Ada Lovelace drawings by Jeanette and Janet Lady Ada Lovelace Who was she, and why do we remember her name? By Heidi Hoechst
AWC: Augusta Ada Lovelace Award The Association for Women in Computing awards the 2004 augusta ada lovelace Awardto Anita Jones, Lawrence R. Quarles Who was augusta ada lovelace? http://www.awc-hq.org/lovelace/
Extractions: 2004 Lovelace Award Recipient The Association for Women in Computing awards the 2004 Augusta Ada Lovelace Award to Anita Jones, Lawrence R. Quarles Professor of Engineering and Applied Science, University of Virginia, has been named the recipient of the 2004 Augusta Ada Lovelace (AAL) Award, to be given by the Association for Women in Computing (AWC) for outstanding scientific and technical achievement. Dr. Jones has had many exemplary technical accomplishments in computer architecture, programming, and operating systems, combined with an extraordinary record of public service, including five years as Director of Defense Research and Engineering at the U. S. Department of Defense.
Augusta Ada Byron (1815-1852) Additional information about ada lovelace. augusta ada Byron at Simon FraserUniversity; biography of ada lovelace by James and Morrill. ada Byron King. http://www.cs.fit.edu/~ryan/ada/lovelace.html
Extractions: Augusta Ada Byron was born to Anna Isabella Milbanke and George Gordon Noel Byron (1788-1824), the famous poet Lord Byron, on 10 December 1815 in London, England. Lord Byron separated from his wife within months after Ada's birth. He left England in 1816 and never returned. He lived in Switzerland and Italy, and finally died of illness in 1824 at Missolonghi, Greece, where he had gone to fight for Greek independence from Turkey. Ada received mathematical tutoring from Augustus DeMorgan (1806-1871) . Ada's mother had an interest in mathematics and the desire to encourage the rational aspects of Ada's character in opposition to the romantic influences of her father. When she was 18, Ada heard a lecture about the difference engine designed by Charles Babbage (1791-1871) At 19 Ada married William King. Several years later he become the Earl of Lovelace, so she gained the title the Countess of Lovelace. They had two sons and a daughter: Byron Noel (1836), Anne Isabella (1837), and Ralph Gordon (1839). Beginning with a letter dated 18 January 1836 and continuing until her death, Ada wrote a large numbers of letters to Babbage.
Ada Lovelace - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia ada lovelace. augusta ada King, Countess of lovelace (December 10, 1815 November27, 1852) is mainly known for having written a description of Charles http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ada_Lovelace
Extractions: Over US$220,000 has been donated since the drive began on 19 August. Thank you for your generosity! Ada Lovelace Augusta Ada King, Countess of Lovelace December 10 November 27 ) is mainly known for having written a description of Charles Babbage 's early mechanical general-purpose computer, the analytical engine edit Ada was the only legitimate child of the poet Lord Byron and his wife, Annabella Milbanke . Ada was named after Byron's half-sister Augusta Leigh , by whom he was rumoured to have fathered a child. It was Augusta who encouraged Byron to marry to avoid scandal, and he reluctantly chose Annabella. On January 16 , Annabella left Byron, taking 1-month old Ada with her. On April 21 , Byron signed the Deed of Separation and left England for good a few days later. He never saw either again. Biographies differ as to whether Ada lived with her mother: one claims that her mother dominated her life, even after marriage; another claims she never knew either parent. One source tells that Annabella was fond of mathematics and taught Ada this art at an early stage of her life. She was privately schooled in
Talk:Ada Lovelace - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia As best I can figure out, Lady ada was born augusta ada Byron, ada being hermiddle name ada lovelace has sometimes been acclaimed as the world s first http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Ada_Lovelace
Extractions: Over US$220,000 has been donated since the drive began on 19 August. Thank you for your generosity! This seems to be getting close to a definitive work now. Thanks for all the contributions and the first two links. I learned a lot researching this! Buz Cory As best I can figure out, Lady Ada was born Augusta Ada Byron, Ada being her middle name. Can anyone confirm this for certain? There are fragments of her notes on the analytical engine in one of the links I added. These will be put in the /notes page as I get the chance. Does anyone have access to the full notes as published in either The Ladies Diary or Taylors Memoirs Buz Cory The full article she translated and annotated is online. Link is on the analytical engine page. I think it is exaggerated to claim that "she anticipated much of what is now taught as computer science". She described a general purpose computer and produced several example programs, that's it. She deserves the title of first programmer. If you look at contemporary computer science, you see stacks, trees, queues, sorting algorithms, graph algorithms, object oriented paradigm, compiler construction, operating systems etc. None of this was anticipated by Ada. AxelBoldt Thanks. That comment about "much of computer science" was based on the opinion of another. Now that I have read (or at least skimmed) the "Notes" myself, I am inclined to agree with you. And BTW
Ada Lovelace Also known as augusta ada Byron, Countess of lovelace; ada King lovelace.About ada lovelace Daughter of the Romantic poet George Gordon, Lord Byron, http://womenshistory.about.com/cs/sciencemath1/p/p_ada_lovelace.htm
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Ada Byron Lovelace ada s husband Lord William King, became the Earl of lovelace in 1838. computing machines was no longer ada Byron, but rather augusta ada lovelace (or http://www.sonoma.edu/Math/faculty/falbo/AdaByron.html
Extractions: Excerpt from from Math Odyssey 2000 Ada Byron, the only legitimate child of Lord Byron, was born in December of 1815, and one month later her mother in a bitter and celebrated separation, left the "mad and bad" Byron and took Ada with her. Ada was educated at home by governesses and tutors hired by her mother. The Lady Byron strongly believed in mathematics as a discipline of the mind and saw to it that Ada was well grounded in this subject. She felt that it would be a way to provide a stable mental state and a good antidote to the "heedlessness, imprudence, vanity, prevarication and conceit" that Ada was bound to have inherited from her immoral father. One of her tutors was William Frend, a mathematician who didn't believe in negative numbers; another was Augustus DeMorgan, the great English logician. In 1830, when she was 15, Ada met Mary Fairfax Somerville, a well known female mathematician from Scotland. Mary had two daughters the same age as Ada, and the four women, Ada, Mary and her daughters, attended geography lectures at the University of London. (It seems that the mathematician, Charles Babbage, had persuaded the university to allow women to attend lectures in 1830, a privilege which was rescinded within a year). Ada corresponded with Mary Somerville on mathematical topics for the next twenty years, until Ada's death. During her teenage years, Ada was a member of the bluestockings, a group of ladies that visited together, holding conversations, and literary discussions. They often invited learned men to their gatherings, which were meant to replace frivolous social evenings with something more intellectual. They would sometimes visit museums or residences of well known scientists, and it was during one of these visits that Ada actually got to meet Charles Babbage.
Extractions: Send it to a friend! Augusta Ada Byron was the only child of the poet, Lord Byron. His marriage to Annabella was stormy and short; they separated in February 1816 when Ada was only an infant, and he never saw her again. She was raised by her mother, who was an impressive mathematician and ensured that she was rigorously tutored. She was also shown around factories, was demonstrated the machines of the industrial revolution, and was encouraged to meet with famous scientists. In 1833 she met Babbage, who had already made his Difference Engine, and in 1839 she asked him to tutor her. The following year she resumed her studies of mathematics by correspondence. When, in 1842, the Italian mathematician Luigi Menabrea published an article about Babbage's Analytical Engine, she read and translated it, adding her own notes. These notes were labelled A to G, and were three times the length of the translation. Note A highlighted the differences between the Difference Engine and the Analytical Engine. She said the analytical engine 'weaves algebraic patterns just as the Jaquard loom weaves flowers and leaves', going on to predict computer generated music. Note B detailed the operation of the store and mill, using cards. Note C discussed feeding the cards through backwards and then forwards repeatedly in order to perform iterations, and Note D was a technical discussion of notation used for describing the operation of the machine. Note F was about trigonometric functions and gave illustrations of some of the basic tasks the Analytical Engine might be expected to complete. Note G was the one held up as an example of programming, as it devised a method for computing Bernoulli numbers.
Extractions: Search our IT-specific encyclopedia for: or jump to a topic: Choose a topic... CIO CRM Data Center Domino Enterprise Linux Enterprise Voice Exchange IBM S/390 IBM AS/400 Mobile Computing Networking Oracle SAP Security Small Medium Business SQL Server Storage Visual Basic Web Services Windows 2000 Windows Security Windows Systems Advanced Search Browse alphabetically: Augusta Ada King, countess of Lovelace, nee Lady Byron, was an English mathematician often credited as the first computer programmer for her writings about Charles Babbage 's Analytical Engine . She was born in 1815, in Middlesex (now part of London) and died in London in 1852. Ada, as she was called, was the daughter of the famous poet, Lord Byron and Annabella Milbanke Byron, who was, herself, an accomplished mathematician. Ada was rigorously trained in the arts and sciences by a succession of tutors, and through self-education. She married William King, 8th Baron King, in 1835 and became countess of Lovelace in 1838 when her husband was made an earl. Ada had met Babbage when she was still in her teens and asked him to serve as her tutor several years later. While translating Luigi Menabrea's
Augusta Ada Byron augusta ada Byron, Countess of lovelace (1815 1852). augusta ada Byron wasa complex, somewhat eccentric character, and it is probable that none of http://www.kerryr.net/pioneers/ada.htm
Extractions: The only child of British Poet Lord George Gordon Byron and Annabella Milkbanke (who was herself a proficient mathematician in an age when ladies just didn't do that sort of thing), Augusta Ada Byron showed an early flair for math and logical thought in what was to be a sadly short life. Mostly self-educated in mathematics, as her studies advanced Ada found a mentor in Augustus de Morgan, first professor of Mathematics at the University of London - and one of the people that can be held accountable for the development of modern algebra. Ada kept up regular correspondence with the leading scientific lights of her day, and it was through her friendship with writer Mary Somerville that she was eventually (and perhaps inevitably) introduced to Charles Babbage Ada was fascinated with Babbage's theoretical ‘difference’ and ‘analytical’ engines, and in 1842 agreed to translate a French account of his technical presentations into English. By 1843 the original "Notions sur la machine analytique de Charles Babbage" (Elements of Charles Babbage's Analytical Engine, Luigi Frederico Menabrea, 1842) had tripled in size with the addition of her own notes and observations.
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The My Hero Project - Ada Lovelace Lady augusta ada Byron, or ada lovelace, was an influential force on current augusta ada Byron lovelace had a burning desire to discuss issues that were http://myhero.com/hero.asp?hero=a_lovelace