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Programming Turns 70 by MrAwePresident: 7:15am On Apr 20, 2017
April 12th, 1947: ENIAC, the world's first general-purpose programmable electronic computer, ran the first code written in the modern paradigm, marking the birth of computer programming as a profession.

This first test code ran computations for the hydrogen bomb.
ENIAC could perform complex coded operations like loops, seen today in languages like JavaScript, Ruby and Python.

These first professional programmers were all WOMEN, a fact that took 50 years to be recognized.

Coding ENIAC to solve a single problem would take weeks. Today, you can build a website in a matter of hours!
MAKE HISTORY: CODE SOMETHING
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Re: Programming Turns 70 by MrAwePresident: 7:38am On Apr 20, 2017
LALA this is front page worthy
To encourage women to consider programming
When last has a thread from programming section make FP
Re: Programming Turns 70 by MrAwePresident: 3:32pm On Apr 20, 2017
grin
Re: Programming Turns 70 by Nobody: 10:31am On Apr 21, 2017
The first programmers started out as "Computers." This was the name given by the Army to a group of over 80 women working at the University of Pennsylvania during World War II calculating ballistics trajectories - complex differential equations - by hand.

When the Army agreed to fund an experimental project, the first all-electronic digital computer, six "Computers" were selected in 1945 to be its first programmers.

They were Kathleen McNulty Mauchly Antonelli, Jean Jennings Bartik, Frances Snyder Holberton, Marlyn Wescoff Meltzer, Frances Bilas Spence and Ruth Lichterman Teitelbaum.
Re: Programming Turns 70 by Nobody: 10:32am On Apr 21, 2017
The ENIAC was the first all-electronic digital computer, a machine of approximately 18,000 vacuum tubes and forty black 8-foot panels. Because the ENIAC project was classified, the programmers were denied access to the machine they were supposed to tame into usefulness until they received their security clearances. As the first programmers, they had no programming manuals or courses, only the logical diagrams to help them figure out how to make the ENIAC work.

They had none of the programming tools of today. Instead, the programmers had to physically program the ballistics program by using the 3000 switches and dozens of cables and digit trays to physically route the data and program pulses through the machine. Therefore, the description for the first programming job might have read: "Requires physical effort, mental creativity, innovative spirit, and a high degree of patience."

On February 15, 1946, the ENIAC Computer was unveiled to the public and press. It ran the ballistics trajectory programmed by the six programmers and captured the world's imagination.

In 1947, the ENIAC was turned into a "stored program" computer, the world's first. Thus, these six programmers were the only generation of programmers to program it at the machine level.

All six women contributed to the programming the ENIAC. Many of these pioneer programmers went on to develop innovative tools for future software engineers and to teach others early programming techniques.

http://www.witi.com/center/witimuseum/halloffame/298369/ENIAC-Programmers-Kathleen-McNulty,-Mauchly-Antonelli,-Jean-Jennings-Bartik,-Frances-Synder-Holber-Marlyn-Wescoff-Meltzer,-Frances-Bilas-Spence-and-Ruth-Lichterman-Teitelbaum/
Re: Programming Turns 70 by Cannicus: 10:52am On Apr 21, 2017
1bkaye:
The first programmers started out as "Computers." This was the name given by the Army to a group of over 80 women working at the University of Pennsylvania during World War II calculating ballistics trajectories - complex differential equations - by hand.

When the Army agreed to fund an experimental project, the first all-electronic digital computer, six "Computers" were selected in 1945 to be its first programmers.

They were Kathleen McNulty Mauchly Antonelli, Jean Jennings Bartik, Frances Snyder Holberton, Marlyn Wescoff Meltzer, Frances Bilas Spence and Ruth Lichterman Teitelbaum.


You studied computer science?
Re: Programming Turns 70 by Nobody: 10:52am On Apr 21, 2017
Cannicus:


You studied computer science?

Yeah
Re: Programming Turns 70 by Cannicus: 10:55am On Apr 21, 2017
1bkaye:

Yeah

Darn! Broke my jinx.

First time posting outside that section.
Re: Programming Turns 70 by Nobody: 10:56am On Apr 21, 2017
Cannicus:


Darn! Broke my jinx.

First time posting outside that section.

Lol you intentionally don't post outside of it?
Re: Programming Turns 70 by Cannicus: 10:58am On Apr 21, 2017
1bkaye:

Lol you intentionally don't post outside of it?

That was the plan. Now its botched. Its freefall from here on.

#Hangover.
Re: Programming Turns 70 by Nobody: 11:00am On Apr 21, 2017
Cannicus:


That was the plan. Now its botched. Its freefall from here on.

#Hangover.
*dusts shoulders* cool

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