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* Ada Lovelace Contribution Notes [2024-01-31 Wed 15:17] :journal:
- For a group project detailing an important person in Computer Science history
- Based upon Stephen Wolfram's writing found [[https://writings.stephenwolfram.com/2015/12/untangling-the-tale-of-ada-lovelace/][here]]
** Analytical Engine while she was alive
- Babbage never published serious account of Difference Engine or the Analytical Engine
- Babbage talked about the Analytical Engine in Turin in 1840 and a man named Luigi Menabrea took
notes of his lecture
- Menabrea went on to publish the paper in French in 1842
- Ada saw the paper and chose to translate it to English and submit it to a British publication
in 1843
- Ada took extensive notes of her own to add to the translation, the notes ended up being longer
than the translation itself
- Ada exchanged /many/ letters with Babbage, she felt she was explaining Babbage's work, not
discovering something
- She only wanted to validate things with Babbage, got annoyed when Babbage tried to make his
own corrections to her manuscript
- She originally wasn't going to sign the translation or notes, she was convinced to do so by
William King (her husband)
- Signed it "AAL"
- Saw herself primarily as an interpreter of Babbage's work
- Finished notes and translation at the end of July 1843
- Wrote to Babbage asking for him to join in bringing the Analytical Engine to fruition with her
as a sort of CEO after writing her translation — she seemingly became wholly enraptured by the
machine
- Unfortunately for Ada her health began failing her and the Analytical Engine had to be
sidelined
- She died of cancer in November 27, 1852 at the age of 36
** Rediscover of Her Work After Death
- In 1953 Bertram Bowden rediscovered Ada's work
- Researching for his book /Faster than Thought/ about computer he came across Ada's
granddaughter who told him about Ada and showed him some of Ada's papers
- As more research was done difference engines and mechanical computer's were researched and
inevitably so too was Babbage's Analytical Engine
- Remember, Babbage's Analytical Engine's primary source was Ada's translation and notes she
wrote about it
** Why is Ada important?
- Ada had some thoughts of what the Analytical Engine should be capable of — namely general
computation
- She asked Babbage many times on how to achieve this general computation and distilled his
likely extremely detailed answers to a clear explanation of the operation of the Analytical
Machine
- She actually published and simplified ideas about the Analytical Engine — something that
Babbage never did
- If you scream and nothing hears it, did you really scream?
- Ada had a more developed abstract understanding of the Analytical Machine than Babbage
possessed due to her work in creating her notes and translation about the Analytical Engine
- Due to this more developed abstract understanding, she had ideas of general/universal
computation which are the hallmark of modern day computers
- Babbage only saw the Analytical Engine as a more efficient way of producing mathematical
tables and just so happened to design a universal computer
- When writing about the Analytical Engine, Ada was trying to explain it as clearly as possible
- To do this she had to look at the machine in a more abstract sense and this resulted in her
seeing the machine as a gateway to universal computation
- She was seemingly the first recorded person to have ideas of universal computation in regards
to machines
- This is the most important element, the entirety of the modern world are built on the back
of universal computation
** Is it possible Ada could have discovered modern computing had her health not failed?
- It's not far-fetched to say that if Ada had not died so early of cancer she likely would have
played a major role in a mechanical machine capable of universal computation
- After creating the machine it's not a stretch at all that she might then create a new
machine (or perhaps even the first machine) as an electromechanical device and thus being
much closer to modern computers
- She and had a friend working with electronic communications, Charles Wheatstone who was
involved with the creation of the electric telegraph
- Ideas around Binary were beginning to show up around Ada's time, but it wasn't well known

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#+FILETAGS: :college:cs1011:
* Lecture 1 Introduction (What is Computer Science)
[2024-01-22]
** CS 1011 Topics
- What is Computer Science
- How Computers Work
- Data And Resource Management
- Networks and Internet
- Security
- Artificial Intelligence
- Diversity and Social Impact
- Might not get to this
** Group Project
- Sign up for a Group under the =People= tab in Canvas