Ada’s algorithm : how Lord Byron’s daughter Ada Lovelace launched the digital age / James Essinger.

Essinger, James, 1957-
Brooklyn, NY : Melville House, [2014]
Added to CLICnet on 11/18/2015


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Notes:

  • Includes bibliographical references (pages 239-244) and index.
  • Poetic beginnings — Lord Byron : a scandalous ancestry — Annabella : Anglo-Saxon attitudes — The manor of parallelograms — The art of flying — Love — Silken threads — When Ada met Charles — The thinking machine — Kinship — Mad scientist — The analytical engine — The Jacquard loom — A mind with a view — Ada’s offer to Babbage — The Enchantress of Number — A horrible death — Redemption.
  • Behind every great man, there’s a great woman no other adage more aptly describes the relationship between Charles Babbage, the man credited with thinking up the concept of the programmable computer, and mathematician Ada Lovelace, whose contributions, according to Essinger, proved indispensable to Babbage’s invention. The Analytical Engine was a series of cogwheels, gear-shafts, camshafts, and power transmission rods controlled by a punch-card system based on the Jacquard loom. Lovelace, the only legitimate child of English poet Lord Byron, wrote extensive notes about the machine, including an algorithm to compute a long sequence of Bernoulli numbers, which some observers now consider to be the world’s first computer program.

Subjects:

Requested by Bloomberg, M.

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