On Ada Lovelace's 197th birthday Google doodles the evolution of computers

749 views

From the first program that Ada Lovelace created for the Analytical Engine to present day laptops and tablet PCs, Google has doodled the evolution of computers on the occasion of the world's first computer programmer's 197th birth anniversary.
The doodle shows Ada Lovelace writing the pioneering computer program with a quill pen seated on a desk and the paper scroll she is writing her algorithm on twirls in the shape of the letters of the Google logo.
Ada King, the countess of Lovelace, was born on December 10, 1815 in Piccadilly Terrace, Middlesex, England and was the daughter of the famous poet Lord Byron, but as her parents separated soon after her birth and she did not get to know her father well.
Her original name was Augusta Ada Byron and on her marriage to William King she became Ada King and later her husband became an earl, she became the countess of Lovelace.
While she was educated at home by tutors, her mathematical skills were further honed by Augustus De Morgan, the first professor of mathematics at the University of London, who helped her in advanced studies.
Her association with Charles Babbage, father of the computer, began when she translated an article by Italian mathematician and engineer Luigi Federico on Babbage's proposed Analytical Engine. She not only translated the work but added her notes that were more elaborate and longer than the work she was translating.
Ada Lovelace died at the young age o.

You may also like

  • Watch On Ada Lovelace
    On Ada Lovelace's 197th birthday Google doodles the evolution of computers

    From the first program that Ada Lovelace created for the Analytical Engine to present day laptops and tablet PCs, Google has doodled the evolution of computers on the occasion of the world's first computer programmer's 197th birth anniversary.
    The doodle shows Ada Lovelace writing the pioneering computer program with a quill pen seated on a desk and the paper scroll she is writing her algorithm on twirls in the shape of the letters of the Google logo.
    Ada King, the countess of Lovelace, was born on December 10, 1815 in Piccadilly Terrace, Middlesex, England and was the daughter of the famous poet Lord Byron, but as her parents separated soon after her birth and she did not get to know her father well.
    Her original name was Augusta Ada Byron and on her marriage to William King she became Ada King and later her husband became an earl, she became the countess of Lovelace.
    While she was educated at home by tutors, her mathematical skills were further honed by Augustus De Morgan, the first professor of mathematics at the University of London, who helped her in advanced studies.
    Her association with Charles Babbage, father of the computer, began when she translated an article by Italian mathematician and engineer Luigi Federico on Babbage's proposed Analytical Engine. She not only translated the work but added her notes that were more elaborate and longer than the work she was translating.
    Ada Lovelace died at the young age o

    Technology video | 749 views

  • Watch Ada Lovelace
    Ada Lovelace's 197th birthday marked by Google doodle

    Ada Lovelace, born Augusta Ada Byron, was an English mathematician and writer widely known for her work on Charles Babbage's early mechanical general-purpose computer, the Analytical Engine. She worked on what is believed to be the first algorithm intended to be processed by a machine, making her the world's first known computer programmer.

    Charles Babbage was an English mathematician, considered to be the father of the computer. He first proposed the use of a mechanical computer in 1822 for computing in the fields of astronomy and mathematics. He received funding from British government to build such a machine in 1823, and spent the next several years trying to build the Difference Engine.

    By the time the government killed the project in 1842, they had given Babbage over ₤17,000, without receiving a working engine. By then, Babbage had moved on to building his more general purpose Analytical Engine, something he first described in 1837.

    The Analytical Engine consisted of an arithmetic logic unit, control flow in the form of conditional branching and loops, and integrated memory, a design that continues to form the backbone of modern-day computers.

    Ada Lovelace met and corresponded with Charles Babbage on many occasions, including socially and in relation to Babbage's Difference Engine and Analytical Engine. Ada became fascinated with his Difference Engine and translated Italian mathematician

    Technology video | 730 views

  • Watch Education revolution in Punjab ❤️The transformation we all deserve! #punjab #punjabgovernmentschool Video
    Education revolution in Punjab ❤️The transformation we all deserve! #punjab #punjabgovernmentschool

    Education revolution in Punjab ❤️The transformation we all deserve! #punjab #punjabgovernmentschool

    Arvind Kejriwal All Interviews:
    https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLiN7YZXz4nOc23gNiOivcdgeYUEpUUqlU

    Arvind Kejriwal All Townhalls:
    https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLiN7YZXz4nOdQ-o4kATbxyeNHjD1SyT8n

    Arvind Kejriwal in Punjab Series:
    https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLiN7YZXz4nOcJRxl8iqYDKsL26FKUvmSr

    Arvind Kejriwal in Goa Series:
    https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLiN7YZXz4nOflmK5x_tdfrryxrSc3SBzm

    Arvind Kejriwal In Uttarakhand Series:
    https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLiN7YZXz4nOcZ5TuqFQsJUmwRdNwvKsCT

    Arvind Kejriwal on Baba Saheb Ambedkar:
    https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLiN7YZXz4nOfWtKqvMU22KihHk2jiUXdS


    Follow Arvind Kejriwal on Social Media :

    Follow Arvind Kejriwal on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/ArvindKejriwal


    Follow Arvind Kejriwal on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AAPkaArvind/


    Follow Aam Aadmi Party on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AamAadmiParty


    Follow Aam Aadmi Party on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/AamAamAadmiParty

    Education revolution in Punjab ❤️The transformation we all deserve! #punjab #punjabgovernmentschool

    News video | 726 views

  • Watch Google doodles Maria Montessori
    Google doodles Maria Montessori's 142nd birthday

    Educational tools adorn the Google home page on Friday in honour of the Italian educator Maria Montessori on her 142nd birth anniversary.
    Montessori is best known for developing an educational system that bears her name and is practised in thousands of schools around the world. The Montessori system of education tries to uncover a child's creative potential and gives emphasis on independence.
    Born on August 31, 1870, Maria Montessori was the first Italian woman to get a degree in medicine. She graduated from the University of Rome in 1896.
    In 1907 she opened her first preschool for children and its success led to the opening of other Montessori schools. She travelled to different countries, including India, to disseminate her educational system. Maria Montessori was in India from 1939 to 1946.
    On May 6, 1952, Montessori died of a cerebral haemorrhage in the Netherlands. She was 81.

    Technology video | 658 views

  • Watch Google doodles Clara Schumann
    Google doodles Clara Schumann's 193rd birthday

    To mark the 193rd birth anniversary of Clara Schumann, the German musician and composer, Google has posted a new doodle on its homepage.
    The doodle features Clara Schumann playing the piano, with her eight children clinging to her, thereby replacing the two O's and the second G of the Google logo. The colours of the doodle are in sync with Google's official logo colours - blue, red, yellow and green.
    Born on 13 September 1819, Clara Schumann was raised by her father. Her parents divorced when Clara was only four years old.
    In March 1828, whe she was eight years old, Clara performed at the Leipzig home of Dr Ernst Carus, director of a mental hospital at Colditz Castle, and met Robert Schumann, who was nine years older than her. Schumann admired Clara's performance and so much that he asked permission from his mother to discontinue his studies of the law, and take music lessons with Clara's father, Friedrich Wieck. She later married him.
    Clara made her public debut in a concert in the Leipziger Gewandhaus at the age of 9. She was acknowledged throughout Europe as a phenomenally talented child prodigy. She was also instrumental in transforming the kind of programs expected of concert pianists.
    At the age of 18, Clara Wieck performed a series of recitals in Vienna from December 1837 to April 1838. Clara Schumann's reputation brought her into contact with the leading musicians of the day.
    In 1839, Robert Schumann a

    Technology video | 560 views

  • Watch Bram Stoker books: Google doodles
    Bram Stoker books: Google doodles 'Dracula' author's 165th birthday

    Google's latest doodle celebrates the 165th birthday of Bram Stoker, the Irish novelist and short story writer best known as the creator of Dracula, despite writing 19 books.

    Born in Dublin in 1847, Stoker studied at Trinity College while working as a civil servant in Dublin Castle and moonlighting as a newspaper drama critic.

    He moved to London in 1878 with his new wife, Florence Balcombe, and became an administrator of the Irving Company at the Lyceum theatre.

    Stoker's first full-length book, written earlier in Dublin, was a piece on non-fiction entitled The Duties of Clerks of Petty Sessions in Ireland, and was followed by novels, lectures, short stories, articles, serials and a two-volume memoir of Irving.

    Dracula, his fifth novel, was published in 1897 after Stoker spent several years researching European folklore and mythological stories of vampires.

    He died in London in 1912 after suffering a number of strokes. One hundred years after Stoker's death, Dracula continues to fascinate and forms the basis for a film and literary industry based around vampires.

    A new edition, with an introduction by the Irish writer Colm Tóibín, was published this year to mark the centenary of Stoker's death.

    Technology video | 2212 views

  • Watch Google doodles for Mary Leakey
    Google doodles for Mary Leakey's 100th birthday

    Google, today, commemorates Mary Leakey's 100th birthday anniversary with an attractive doodle. Leakey, a renowned British archaeologist and anthropologist, was born on February 6, 1913 in London, England and is well known for her significant discoveries and exploring the fossils of the ancient hominines. She collaborated with her husband Louis Leakey through a large part of her career and her three sons also entered the same field. She died on December 9, 1996 at the age of 83.

    Leakey's discoveries included the fossilised Proconsul skull, an extinct ape that is believed to be ancestor to humans. Another discovery was that of the Zinjanthropus skull, an early hominin, at Olduvai Gorge. She is also credited with developing a system to classify stone tools found at Olduvai as well as discovering Laetoli footprints. Over the course of her career, Leakey wrote four books.

    Her passion towards unearthing the fossils was somewhat influenced by John Frere, an antiquarian, and Sheppard Frere, an archaeologist. Moreover, she had a chance to accompany Elie Peyrony during an excavation at Les Eyzies, where she came across collection scrapers and other tools from the dump. It is believed that at this phase her interest in prehistory gradually sparked.

    Google's doodle to mark the 100th birth anniversary of Mary Leakey with an image of a female archaeologist working at an excavation site marked with footprints. She is surrounded by

    Technology video | 743 views

  • Watch Google doodles Mary Leakey
    Google doodles Mary Leakey's 100th birthday

    Commemorating the 100th birthday of the British archaeologist and anthropologist Mary Leakey, Google has posted a doodle on its homepage. The doodle features Mary Leakey on an archaeological site, who looks busy with her excavation work.
    The doodle features two Dalmatians as Mary was an animal lover who was almost always accompanied in the field by three or four dalmatians. It also exhibits one of her major discoveries 'the Laetoli footprints', and some tools used in archaeology.
    The first and last two letters of the word Google are seen in the backdrop, while Mary Leakey and one of the Dalmatians replace the second O and second G of the word Google, respectively.
    Born on February 6 1913, Mary Leakey is widely known for discovering the first fossilised Proconsul skull, an extinct ape now believed to be ancestral to humans, and the robust Zinjanthropus skull at Olduvai Gorge.
    Along with her husband Louis Leakey, Mary uncovered the tools and fossils of ancient hominines. She is also credited for developing a system for classifying the stone tools found at Olduvai, and discovering the Laetoli footprints, which received recognition by the public for providing convincing evidence of bipedalism in Pliocene hominids.
    In 1933, she was a 20-year-old archaeological illustrator in London when she met Louis Leakey. A married man with two children, Leakey left his family to begin a new life with Mary that revolved around the search for the orig

    Technology video | 908 views

  • Watch Google Doodles for ace graphic designer Saul Bass on his 93rd birthday Video
    Google Doodles for ace graphic designer Saul Bass on his 93rd birthday

    n one of its best doodles so far, Google has honoured ace graphic designer Saul Bass on what would have been his 93rd Birthday. Bass is the name behind some of Hollywood and the Western world’s most iconic logos and designs.

    The doodle is animated elaborately and features sections on some of Bass’ most loved and remembered credit sequence designs including Anatomy of a Murder and Vertigo. The video is set to the tune of a jazz piece, reminiscent of the old world charms of American cinema.

    Why opening sequences? Bass was responsible for revolutionising the way credits were shown before movies in the US. Before Bass, credits were usually simply projected on to the screen. With his innovative designs, he put up credits against an animated backdrop, changing the way opening sequences were perceived in Hollywood.
    Bass worked with some of the biggest names in Hollywood like Alfred Hitchcock, Stanley Kubrick, Martin Scorsese and Billy Wilder. In his career that spanned over 40 years, he designed opening sequences for North by Northwest, Psycho, Vertigo, Ocean’s 11 and Goodfellas.

    He also designed iconic logos for AT&T Corporation, Girl Scouts of the USA, NCR Corporation, Quaker Oats and more.

    Born into a Jewish immigrant family in New York in 1920, Bass studied art part-time at the Art Students League in Manhattan. He started off in Hollywood by doing print work for ads at the age of 20 until he collaborated w

    Technology video | 892 views

  • Watch Google doodles Léon Foucault
    Google doodles Léon Foucault's pendulum for his 194th birthday

    Watch Google doodles Léon Foucault's pendulum for his 194th birthday Video

    Technology video | 667 views

Vlogs Video

Commedy Video