Author: Pete Galati
Date: 12:38:16 04/21/00
Go up one level in this thread
On April 21, 2000 at 15:04:38, Flemming Rodler wrote: >On April 21, 2000 at 13:59:27, Pete Galati wrote: > >>On April 21, 2000 at 13:40:36, Sean Empey wrote: >> >>>On April 21, 2000 at 00:32:00, Pete Galati wrote: >>> >>>>On April 20, 2000 at 20:53:28, Pete Galati wrote: >>>> >>>>>On April 20, 2000 at 19:51:02, Pete Galati wrote: >>>>> >>>>>>I've seen Alen Turning's Chess program that only existed on paper mentioned a >>>>>>few times, but I don't think I've seen any mention of how it actually worked. >>>>>> >>>>>>Has his program ever been published? >>>>>> >>>>>>Thanks. >>>>>> >>>>>>Pete >>>>> >>>>>Sorry, his name is spelled Alan Turing, I spelled both his names wrong! >>>>> >>>>>Pete >>>> >>>>Best I can do is dig up it's name at the moment, "Turochamp". He should have >>>>been in marketing, good name, but it sounds more like a bicycle. >>>> >>>>Pete >>> >>>He was very much into riding bicycle's. Another Book you might want to look at, >>>though long is Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson. It's a novel that switches >>>between WWII and present. Dr. Alan Turing is a main focus in a lot of it. It >>>goes over a lot of his work and explains it in some detail. >> >>There seems to be an awfull lot written about Turing, I've only been looking >>into this this week. He seems to be very pivitol to the outcome of the digital >>age, and yet he's somehow a mostly unknown footnote. > >If you studie Computer Science he certainly not a footnote. He made a very >powerful mathematical model of computation called the Turing Machine. This model >is so powerful because computers can be viewed as Turing Machines and because it >makes it possible to prove a lot of interesting theorems about the computational >power of computers. The Turing machine is the one mention that I find of him in this Barron's "Dictionary of Computer Terms". > >Also one of the most (if not the most) prestigous awards that you can get in CS >is the Turing Award (something similar to the Nobel Prize). > The Turing awards sounds familier, I think that computer show that gets broadcast on PBS does a show from those awards every year, I could be mistaken. I wouldn't have grasped the significance of the award's name until starting to look into Turing some. Pete >> >>He was rather important to computers, and my guess at this point is that this >>CCC forum would not have existed (as it is) without his work creating the first >>Chess program. It's embaressing how little I know about this. >> >>Pete
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