History of women and computers Let's consider your personal computer and the job you want every day if you wish. Your answer will include calculations, word processors, communication, and research. Does John A.N. make sense? Mr. Lee called the woman "computer" (14). What Li pointed out in his editorial is that since the late 1800 's, women have been doing calculations and secretarial work for male superiors, so they can equal them with computers.
Hackernoon's Feature Article: A Brief History of Women in Computing: Women invented the field. Men introduced them. (Faruk Ate 08/08/09) The National Computer Museum (TNMOC) introduces the results of women in computing. As a fan of movies and technologies, I am most interested in Hedy Lammar. As Farouk recalls:
This woman's history moon reminds me of a woman who forms technology as we know it today. Until theoretical calculations, computer algorithms, block chains, these women helped build the technological empire we know today, without signs of slowing down. Please see this infograph for details of computer and encrypted symbolic women, and why you need to know them by name.
I think there are several aspects. This research is very weak. I know when history exists. In the process of growth, all games - handheld games, Atari games, computer games - are sexually neutral. Then we experienced this gaming that became a very male. I am not sure, but it seems that there is a correlation when the game industry becomes very male. And suddenly you have a woman engaged in computer science. This is a minor change, but I'd like to think about whether I can actually find these correlations, so I will not make the same mistake again.
In the history of male-led computer science, several women have received attention and trust in their contributions. As everyone knows, Ada Lovelace wrote the first algorithm designed for computers, and predicts that such machines can do more than mathematics by themselves. After writing the Harvard Mark 1 computer during World War II, Grace Hopper continued to develop the first program compiler and helped more people access software programming. But as Claire Evans wrote in her new book, Broadband: Internet Women's Unknown Story, In this process more women become the rise of the Internet in every step. It is part of it. As programmers and information organizers, they are often important to solve new problems. Radia Perlman, the network pioneer, invented a protocol that allows Ethernet to handle large networks.