The computing universe: origins of computational thinking
- š¤ Speaker: Tony Hey
- š Date & Time: Wednesday 29 October 2014, 18:00 - 19:00
- š Venue: Mill Lane Lecture Rooms , Room 3, 8 Mill Lane, CB2 1RW
Abstract
This talk will explore the origins of computers and of ācomputational thinkingā. The story begins with the key contributions of Alan Turing and John von Neumann and the twin concepts of universality and hierarchical abstraction. As an illustration of the importance of abstraction, the āFile clerkā model of Nobel prize-winning physicist Richard Feynman computing will be described. Our examination of computer hardware takes us from logic gates to the microprocessor and Mooreās Law. On the software side, our discussion of algorithms begins with Euclidās algorithm for the Greatest Common Divisor and ends with a description of PageRank, the ābillion dollarā algorithm that launched the search giant Google. An account of the origins of the personal computer, the Internet and Web then brings us up to the present. We end the talk with a look to the future with the rise of AI and Machine Learning and Butler Lampsonās āThird Age of Computingā. The event is free but booking in advance is required.
See more at: www.festivalofideas.cam.ac.uk/events/computing-universe-origins-computational-thinking#sthash.
Series This talk is part of the Cambridge Festival of Ideas 2014 series.
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Tony Hey
Wednesday 29 October 2014, 18:00-19:00