- Alan Turing saved my life. In early September 1940, when bombing industrial sites alone seemed inconclusive, the German Luftwaffe began round-the-clock bombing of British civilian targets, particularly London and other key cities. (Atlantic Online)
- If Alan Turing had not existed, would we have had to invent him? The question seems to answer itself: Alan Turing very much did exist, and yet we have persisted in inventing him still. (BBC News)
- Ivana said she was from Russia, which would help explain her idiosyncratic English. But there was something else that was odd about her prose. (The Christian Science Monitor)
- Alan Turing was a code-breaker, a computer scientist, a mathematician, an ideas man. His work on breaking the code of the German naval Enigma machines at Bletchley Park in the 1940s is credited with considerably hastening the end of World War II. (YAHOO!)
- Google on Saturday challenged searchers to a puzzle in homage to what would have been Alan Turings 100th birthday. Turing, a brilliant British mathematician and codebreaker, worked for the British government during World War II. (Huffington Post)
- Alan Turing would have turned 100 this week, an event that would have, no doubt, been greeted with all manner of pomp -- the centennial of a man whose mid-century concepts would set the stage for modern computing. (engadget)
- Celebrations of Alan Turings life and work reach a peak this week with the centenary of his birth. The chair of the project, Professor S. (The Guardian)
- Alan Turing, the computer science legend best known for his part in breaking the German Enigma code at Bletchley Park in World War II, may have died of an accident rather than suicide, according to a new claim. Accidental cyanide poisoning? Do go on. (science20.com)
- The 40-year-old man appeared disheveled, even unkempt — his hair uncombed, his pants hitched up with string — when he approached the 19-year-old male on the sidewalk in front of the Regal Cinema in Manchester, England, in December 1951. (The Star-Ledger - NJ.com (blog))
Monday, June 25, 2012
Alan Turing
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