Ada Lovelace
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Augusta Ada King, Countess of Lovelace (December 10, 1815 – November 27, 1852), born Augusta Ada Byron, is mainly known for having written a description of Charles Babbage's early mechanical general-purpose computer, the analytical engine.
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[edit] Life
Ada was the only fully legitimate child of the poet Lord Byron and his wife, Annabella Milbanke. She was named after Byron's half-sister, Augusta Leigh, by whom he was rumoured to have fathered a child. It was Augusta who encouraged Byron to marry to avoid scandal, and he reluctantly chose Annabella. On January 16, 1816, Annabella left Byron, taking 1-month old Ada with her. On April 21, Byron signed the Deed of Separation and left England for good a few days later. He was never allowed to see either again.
Ada lived with her mother, as is apparent in her father's correspondence concerning her. Lady Byron was also highly interested in mathematics (Lord Byron once called her "the princess of parallelograms"), which dominated her life, even after marriage. Her obsession with rooting out any of the insanity of which she accused Lord Byron was one of the reasons why Annabella taught Ada mathematics at an early age. Ada was privately home schooled in mathematics and science by William Frend, William King and Mary Somerville. One of her later tutors was Augustus De Morgan. An active member of London society, she was a member of the Bluestockings in her youth.
In 1835 she married William King, 8th Baron King, later 1st Earl of Lovelace. They had three children; Byron born 12 May 1836, Annabella (Lady Anne Blunt) born 22 September 1837 and Ralph Gordon born 2 July 1839. The family lived at Ockham Park, at Ockham, Surrey. Her full name and title for most of her married life was The Right Honourable Augusta Ada, Countess of Lovelace. She is widely known in modern times simply as Ada Lovelace, or by her birth name, Ada Byron.
She knew Mary Somerville, noted researcher and scientific author of the 19th century, who introduced her in turn to Charles Babbage on June 5, 1833. Other acquaintances were Sir David Brewster, Charles Wheatstone, Charles Dickens and Michael Faraday.
During a nine-month period in 1842-1843, Ada translated Italian mathematician Luigi Menabrea's memoir on Babbage's newest proposed machine, the Analytical Engine. With the article, she appended a set of notes which specified in complete detail a method for calculating Bernoulli numbers with the Engine, recognized by historians as the world's first computer program. Biographers debate the extent of her original contributions, with some holding that the programs were written by Babbage himself. Babbage wrote the following on the subject, in his Passages from the Life of a Philosopher (1846) (from an excerpt found in Perspectives on the Computer Revolution (1970), edited by Zenon Pylyshyn):
I then suggested that she add some notes to Menabrea's memoir, an idea which was immediately adopted. We discussed together the various illustrations that might be introduced: I suggested several but the selection was entirely her own. So also was the algebraic working out of the different problems, except, indeed, that relating to the numbers of Bernoulli, which I had offered to do to save Lady Lovelace the trouble. This she sent back to me for an amendment, having detected a grave mistake which I had made in the process.
Lovelace's prose also acknowledged some possibilities of the machine which Babbage never published, such as speculating that "the Engine might compose elaborate and scientific pieces of music of any degree of complexity or extent."
Ada Lovelace was bled to death at the age of 36 by her physicians, who were trying to treat her uterine cancer. Thus, she perished, coincidentally, at the same age as her father and from the same cause - medicinal bloodletting. She left two sons and a daughter, Lady Anne Blunt, famous in her own right as a traveller in the Middle East and a breeder of Arabian horses.
At her request, Lovelace was buried next to the father she never knew at the Church of St. Mary Magdalene in Hucknall, Nottingham.
[edit] Trivia
- On December 10, 1980, (Ada's birthday), the U.S. Defense Department approved the reference manual for its new computer programming language, called "Ada".
- The U.S. Department of Defense Military Standard for Ada (MIL-STD-1815) was assigned a number to commemorate the year of her birth.
- On episode #203 ("Hugs and Witches") of the math-mystery cartoon, Cyberchase, she appears as the animated character Lady Ada Lovelace, voiced by Saturday Night Live comedian Jane Curtin.
- She is one of the main characters in the alternate history "Steampunk" novel The Difference Engine by Bruce Sterling and William Gibson, which posits a world in which Babbage's machines were mass produced and the computer age started a century early.
- Lord Byron's Novel by John Crowley is a pastiche of a novel supposedly by Byron (in real life he did begin writing one, but is not known to have completed it), discovered after his death by his daughter, edited and with commentary by her.
- Her image can be seen on the Microsoft product authenticity hologram stickers.
- George Gordon, Lord Byron also had two illegitimate daughters. Allegra Byron, his daughter by Claire Clairmont, died at age five in 1822 and never met her half-sister. Ada did later have contact with Elizabeth Medora Leigh, the daughter of Byron's half-sister Augusta Leigh. Annabella Milbanke told Ada and Medora that Byron was Medora's father.
- She is a main character in the 1997 film Conceiving Ada.
[edit] Quick Summary
Ada Lovelace was born on the 10th December 1815 in London and died on the 27th November 1852. Her parents were Lord Byron and Lady Byron however they divorced five weeks after Lovelace’s birth. Her father Lord Byron was a famous poet and her mother Lady Byron was a famous mathematician and scientist. She designed the computer calculator in 1843 with the help of Charles Babbage. Ada had high hopes for the future as she wanted to invent the first computer. She wanted her computer calculator to store data and do arithmetic. She thought that technology and computers were going to “rule” in the future, this prediction was correct. Ada died at the age of 36 due to an illness. She ended up dying a century before the “real” computer to came out.
[edit] Publications
- Menabrea, Luigi Federico, Ada Lovelace (1843). "Sketch of the Analytical Engine Invented by Charles Babbage". Scientific Memoirs 3. With notes upon the Memoir by the Translator
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Ada Lovelace: Founder of Scientific Computing (SDSC Women in Science)
- O'Connor, John J., and Edmund F. Robertson. "Ada Lovelace". MacTutor History of Mathematics archive.
- WISE Project biography (archive link, was dead)
- A page of (mostly broken) links to biographies, etc
- Ada Lovelace's Notes and The Ladies Diary
- Ada & the Analytical Engine
- Ada Picture Gallery includes freely copyable pictures of Ada
- Full text of translation of "Sketch of the Analytical Engine" by L. F. Menabrea with Ada's notes and extensive commentary
- An article on the Ada controversy, and Was Ada really the first programmer?
- Jim Holt's "The Ada Perplex," from the New Yorker
- A brief biography of Ada Augusta, Countess of Lovelace with links to other resources related to Ada
- Hucknall Parish Church, Ada's final resting place
- Repurposing Ada - Examining the "Ada myth" at Salon.com
- [1] Thoughts on Ada, from a lecture given by the Earl of Lytton, at International Byron Society.org.
- Black and white sketch of the child Augusta Ada Byron by an unknown artist [2]ar:أدا أوجستا بايرون
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