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But at least we can live vicariously through Sam Wintermute, who hacked up his own Doodle Dome for computer-based arbitrary imaging. Along with that whole 3D thing, ...
To highlight Stais' discovery, 115 years ago Wednesday, Google dedicated its Doodle to the Antikythera mechanism, a complex clockwork mechanism believed to have been designed and constructed by ...
The woman known as the “human computer” died in April, and Monday would have been her 84th birthday. On Monday, Google paid tribute to the woman once known as the human computer with this doodle .
Google celebrated the 1902 finding with a new Doodle depicting the Antikythera Mechanism; an ancient astronomical computer that could track the stars and predict eclipses.
Google’s latest Doodle celebrates the life of Michael Dertouzos, the Greek computer scientist who anticipated how the internet would come to dominate almost every aspect of our lives.
Dec. 9, 2013— -- In an age of smartphones and tablets, it can be hard to imagine a time when the typical computer weighed 5 tons and took up more space than your boss's office. Grace Hopper ...
Google Doodle Honors Computer Programmer Grace Hopper. The naval officer, who died in 1992 at age 85, was one of the first programmers on the Navy's Mark I computer. By Jane J. Lee.
Grace Hopper, known as "the first lady of software," is celebrated for her computer genius, with a Google Doodle on what would have been her 107th birthday.
Google Doodle pays tribute to the computer scientist who predicted smartphones. THIS computer scientist anticipated how important the internet would be in everyday life, and now Google is giving ...
GREEK web whizz Michael Dertouzos is being honoured with a Google Doodle on what would have been his 82nd birthday. He is famed for his groundbreaking work in computer science, which included helpi… ...
Today's Google Doodle pays homage to Shakuntala Devi, also known as "the human computer." Google Nov. 4, 2013— -- High school memories of math class may come flooding back to people who visit ...
A Google Doodle That Honors Computer Programmer Grace Hopper Hopper was a U.S. Navy Rear Admiral, and in 1959 she helped create COBOL—a program that the military and banks still use today.
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