![]() Fr om a modern perspective, her work is visionary. Her scientific work, which is outstanding – regardless of the person behind it.Ībout a century before Konrad Zuse designed the first programmable computing machine, in the 1840s, Ada Lovelace wrote the first computer programme in the world. ![]() Ms Siffert, what fascinates you about Ada Lovelace? Are there any aspects of her life and work that you strike you as particularly remarkable? In her now famous note "G", Lovelace also adds a step-by-step description for computation of Bernoulli numbers with Babbage's machine - basically an algorithm - which, in effect, make her the world's first computer programmer. Her vision of a machine that could also process musical notes, letters and images, anticipates modern computers by a hundred years. Since the functions of the Analytical Engine are not defined, they can also be applied to other things than numbers. The Analytical Engine, Ada writes 'holds a position wholly its own'. They show that Ada recognizes the machine's potential beyond a device for numerical calculations. Her annotations, simply called "notes", turn out to be three times as long as the actual transcript. She also provides her own comments on the text. In 1848, Ada translates a French article about his second project, the "Analytical Engine", into English. Ada and Babbage strike up a correspondence over mathematical ideas that lasts for many years. Babbage is working on a prototype of a calculating machine called "The Difference Engine", and Ada is intrigued by his ideas. But the love for machines is the foundation of Ada Lovelace's later friendship with mathematician Charles Babbage, whom she meets at a reception when she is 17. Out of fear that Ada might inherit the stormy and unpredictable temper of her poet father, the mathematically talented Annabella, once called 'the princess of parallelograms' by Byron, makes sure that her daughter receives a scientific education.ġ2-year-old Ada, who is especially interested in mechanics, wants to invent a flying machine - unfortunately, with no success. Shortly after her birth, her parents' marriage is already over. Augusta Ada Byron is born 10th December 1815, as the daughter of Anne Isabella Noel-Byron (known as Annabella) and famous English poet Lord Byron.
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