Today is Ada Lovelace Day, a day to celebrate and encourage women in the fields of science and technology. The day is named after “Augusta Ada King-Noel, Countess of Lovelace, born Byron”, or ...
This Tuesday is Ada Lovelace Day - an annual celebration of women working in the male-dominated science, technology, engineering and maths (Stem) sectors. And, this year, it has a very different vibe.
Today (8 October) marks Ada Lovelace Day. To celebrate Lovelace’s ground-breaking work, here are the modern-day trailblazers who are making their own legacies in tech. Ada Lovelace was a ...
Today is Ada Lovelace Day, a day to celebrate and encourage women in the fields of science and technology. It’s a perfect time to look back and catch up on biographies of some incredible people ...
In honor of Ada Lovelace Day, we look back at May 23, 1921, when the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania hosted a distinguished visitor – Marie Curie. Dean Martha Tracy (herself a WMC alumna, ...
This Ada Lovelace Day, let’s not just celebrate the achievements of female tech pioneers, but inspire the next generation too, says Julia Adamson As we celebrate Ada Lovelace day, we must reflect on ...
October the 13th is Ada Lovelace day, designed to celebrate the achievements of women in science, technology, engineering and maths. It is held annually on the second Tuesday of October.
Computing celebrates Ada Lovelace Day, the second Tuesday in October when the achievements of women working in STEM are recognised and celebrated. Ada Lovelace Day has become much more widely ...
Ada Lovelace recognized the potential of computers beyond number crunching and is considered one of the first programmers. Some dispute that she was the first computer programmer but agree that ...
And that’s exactly why she is the ideal inspirational figure. Give me Ada Lovelace every day of the week. A woman who swore and smoked and said what she damn well thought. It’s a beautiful ...
The name Ada Lovelace probably who won’t mean anything ... and how she escaped the social expectations put upon a rich heiresses of the day to become a visionary mathematician.
Ada Lovelace and Alan Turing both loved maths and computers. But the thing is that Ada was born in 1815, and Alan was born in 1912. They both started writing computer programs before any computers ...