Posts Tagged ‘Computer Science’

Ada Lovelace Day

Ada Lovelace

Photo courtesy of Wikipedia

March 24th is celebrated as Ada Lovelace Day, a day dedicated to celebrate the achievements of women in science and technology. On this day, people across the world have pledged to blog about their favorite female scientist.

Agusta Ada King, or simply Ada Lovelace, is credited as writing the first computer program. Ada was born in 1815 and taught mathematics at an early age, helping her develop skills that would aid her later in life. In 1833, she met Charles Babbage, inventor of the Analytical Engine.

According to Wikipedia, “During a nine-month period in 1842-43, Lovelace translated Italian mathematician Luigi Menabrea’s memoir on Babbage’s newest proposed machine, the Analytical Engine. With the article, she appended a set of notes. The notes are longer than the memoir itself and include in complete detail, a method for calculating a sequence of Bernoulli numbers with the Engine, which would have run correctly had the Analytical Engine ever been built. Based on his work, Lovelace is now widely credited with being the first computer programmer and her method is recognized as the world’s first computer program…In 1953, over one hundred years after her death, Lovelace’s notes on Babbage’s Analytical Engine were republished. The engine has now been recognized as an early model for a computer and Lovelace’s notes as a description of a computer and software.”

Letters from Lovelace

Photo courtesy of www.cs.kuleuven.ac.be/…/pictures.html

Lovelace’s name is still highly well known. A U.S. Department of Defense computer language has been named after her, as well as another language named after her birth year, a sticker representing her image, and a medal in her name.

Image courtesy of findingada.com


Undergraduate Researchers Win Big at “Energy Challenge” With New Turbine Converter

International Future Energy Challenge winners, Jonathan Baker and Christopher Hamilton created a low-cost wind turbine that transfers a maximum amount of energy to a battery. How did they do it? They contribute their success to time spent doing undergraduate research.

Photo Courtesy of Gustavo Gamboa from CentralFloridaFuture.com

Photo Courtesy of Gustavo Gamboa from CentralFloridaFuture.com

Baker, Hamilton, and two fellow electrical engineering majors spent over a year preparing their “low-cost wind turbine energy maximizer” for the International Future Energy Challenge in Australia last July.

The two-some invented a three-phase AC/DC converter (also known as “The Pegador” to its creators) to make the energy produced by wind turbines more efficient. The Pegador took home first prize.

After enjoying the success of placing first, Baker and Hamilton garnered success among engineering peers from universities worldwide.

Their participation in undergraduate research is what they claim to be the ultimate stepping-stone for future success within the scientific community and public-at-large.

“Going from book knowledge to tangibility experience has really accelerated my future career,” Baker said. “I’ve graduated with not only an honors degree, but an actual invention and experience.”

“Today’s engineering students want to make difference in the world … they want to make the world a better place through technological innovations that save lives and help clear the environment.” – Issa Batarseh, professor and director of the School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. Batarseh also oversaw the project.

There is no release date for the turbine at this time.


New Classes Hope to Bring More Females into Computer Science

Recently, several articles have expressed concern for the low number of women in computer science. This is nothing new except, rather then blaming male and female stereotypes that may influence female�s decision to go into the field or emphasizing the lack of female professor role models, new ideas are challenging the way computer science is taught. The thinking here is that currently computer science courses, especially introductory ones, place too much emphasis on computer programming and technology rather then design and other problem solving aspects of the curriculum. There is hope that new classes being introduced at Universities will bring more women into the field.

Title IX: new Quotas for Women in Math and Science-In computer science, a growing gender gap: Women shunning a field once seen as welcoming-Wanted: Female Computer-Science Students


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