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Ada Lovelace

Augusta Ada King, Countess of Lovelace (née Byron; 10 December 1815 – 27 November 1852) was an English mathematician and writer, chiefly known for her work on Charles Babbage's proposed mechanical general-purpose computer, the Analytical Engine. She was the first to recognise that the machine had applications beyond pure calculation, and to have published the first algorithm intended to be carried out by such a machine. As a result, she is often regarded as the first computer programmer.[2][3][4]


The Countess of Lovelace
Daguerreotype by Antoine Claudet (c. 1843). One of only two known photographs.[1]
Born
The Hon. Augusta Ada Byron

(1815-12-10)10 December 1815
London, England
Died27 November 1852(1852-11-27) (aged 36)
Marylebone, London, England
Resting placeChurch of St. Mary Magdalene, Hucknall, Nottingham, England
Known forMathematics, computing
Spouse
Children
Parents
Signature

Ada Byron was the only legitimate child of poet Lord Byron and Lady Byron.[5] All of Byron's other children were born out of wedlock to other women.[6] Byron separated from his wife a month after Ada was born and left England forever. Four months later, he commemorated the parting in a poem that begins, "Is thy face like thy mother's my fair child! ADA! sole daughter of my house and heart?"[7] He died in Greece when Ada was eight. Her mother remained bitter and promoted Ada's interest in mathematics and logic in an effort to prevent her from developing her father's perceived insanity. Despite this, Ada remained interested in him, naming her two sons Byron and Gordon. Upon her death, she was buried next to him at her request. Although often ill in her childhood, Ada pursued her studies assiduously. She married William King in 1835. King was made Earl of Lovelace in 1838, Ada thereby becoming Countess of Lovelace.

Her educational and social exploits brought her into contact with scientists such as Andrew Crosse, Charles Babbage, Sir David Brewster, Charles Wheatstone, Michael Faraday, and the author Charles Dickens, contacts which she used to further her education. Ada described her approach as "poetical science"[8] and herself as an "Analyst (& Metaphysician)".[9]

When she was eighteen, her mathematical talents led her to a long working relationship and friendship with fellow British mathematician Charles Babbage, who is known as "the father of computers". She was in particular interested in Babbage's work on the Analytical Engine. Lovelace first met him in June 1833, through their mutual friend, and her private tutor, Mary Somerville.

Between 1842 and 1843, Ada translated an article by the military engineer Luigi Menabrea (later Prime Minister of Italy) about the Analytical Engine, supplementing it with an elaborate set of notes, simply called "Notes". Lovelace's notes are important in the early history of computers, containing what many consider to be the first computer program—that is, an algorithm designed to be carried out by a machine. Other historians reject this perspective and point out that Babbage's personal notes from the years 1836/1837 contain the first programs for the engine.[10] She also developed a vision of the capability of computers to go beyond mere calculating or number-crunching, while many others, including Babbage himself, focused only on those capabilities.[11] Her mindset of "poetical science" led her to ask questions about the Analytical Engine (as shown in her notes) examining how individuals and society relate to technology as a collaborative tool.[6]

Biography

Childhood

Lord Byron expected his child to be a "glorious boy" and was disappointed when Lady Byron gave birth to a girl.[12] The child was named after Byron's half-sister, Augusta Leigh, and was called "Ada" by Byron himself.[13] On 16 January 1816, at Lord Byron's command, Lady Byron left for her parents' home at Kirkby Mallory, taking their five-week-old daughter with her.[12] Although English law at the time granted full custody of children to the father in cases of separation, Lord Byron made no attempt to claim his parental rights,[14] but did request that his sister keep him informed of Ada's welfare.[15]

 
Ada Byron, aged four

On 21 April, Lord Byron signed the deed of separation, although very reluctantly, and left England for good a few days later.[16] Aside from an acrimonious separation, Lady Byron continued throughout her life to make allegations about her husband's immoral behaviour.[17] This set of events made Lovelace infamous in Victorian society. Ada did not have a relationship with her father. He died in 1824 when she was eight years old. Her mother was the only significant parental figure in her life.[18] Lovelace was not shown the family portrait of her father until her 20th birthday.[19]

 
Ada Byron, aged seven, by Alfred d'Orsay, 1822, Somerville College, Oxford

Lovelace did not have a close relationship with her mother. She was often left in the care of her maternal grandmother Judith, Hon. Lady Milbanke, who doted on her. However, because of societal attitudes of the time—which favoured the husband in any separation, with the welfare of any child acting as mitigation—Lady Byron had to present herself as a loving mother to the rest of society. This included writing anxious letters to Lady Milbanke about her daughter's welfare, with a cover note saying to retain the letters in case she had to use them to show maternal concern.[20] In one letter to Lady Milbanke, she referred to her daughter as "it": "I talk to it for your satisfaction, not my own, and shall be very glad when you have it under your own."[21] Lady Byron had her teenage daughter watched by close friends for any sign of moral deviation. Lovelace dubbed these observers the "Furies" and later complained they exaggerated and invented stories about her.[22]

 
Ada Byron, aged seventeen, 1832

Lovelace was often ill, beginning in early childhood. At the age of eight, she experienced headaches that obscured her vision.[13] In June 1829, she was paralyzed after a bout of measles. She was subjected to continuous bed rest for nearly a year, something which may have extended her period of disability. By 1831, she was able to walk with crutches. Despite the illnesses, she developed her mathematical and technological skills.

When Ada was twelve years old, this future "Lady Fairy", as Charles Babbage affectionately called her, decided she wanted to fly. Ada Byron went about the project methodically, thoughtfully, with imagination and passion. Her first step, in February 1828, was to construct wings. She investigated different material and sizes. She considered various materials for the wings: paper, oilsilk, wires, and feathers. She examined the anatomy of birds to determine the right proportion between the wings and the body. She decided to write a book, Flyology, illustrating, with plates, some of her findings. She decided what equipment she would need; for example, a compass, to "cut across the country by the most direct road", so that she could surmount mountains, rivers, and valleys. Her final step was to integrate steam with the "art of flying".[6]

Ada Byron had an affair with a tutor in early 1833. She tried to elope with him after she was caught, but the tutor's relatives recognised her and contacted her mother. Lady Byron and her friends covered the incident up to prevent a public scandal.[23] Lovelace never met her younger half-sister, Allegra, the daughter of Lord Byron and Claire Clairmont. Allegra died in 1822 at the age of five. Lovelace did have some contact with Elizabeth Medora Leigh, the daughter of Byron's half-sister Augusta Leigh, who purposely avoided Lovelace as much as possible when introduced at court.[24]

Adult years

 
Watercolour portrait of Ada King, Countess of Lovelace, c. 1840, possibly by Alfred Edward Chalon

Lovelace became close friends with her tutor Mary Somerville, who introduced her to Charles Babbage in 1833. She had a strong respect and affection for Somerville,[25] and they corresponded for many years. Other acquaintances included the scientists Andrew Crosse, Sir David Brewster, Charles Wheatstone, Michael Faraday and the author Charles Dickens. She was presented at Court at the age of seventeen "and became a popular belle of the season" in part because of her "brilliant mind".[26] By 1834 Ada was a regular at Court and started attending various events. She danced often and was able to charm many people, and was described by most people as being dainty, although John Hobhouse, Byron's friend, described her as "a large, coarse-skinned young woman but with something of my friend's features, particularly the mouth".[27] This description followed their meeting on 24 February 1834 in which Ada made it clear to Hobhouse that she did not like him, probably due to her mother's influence, which led her to dislike all of her father's friends. This first impression was not to last, and they later became friends.[28]

On 8 July 1835, she married William, 8th Baron King, becoming Lady King. They had three homes: Ockham Park, Surrey; a Scottish estate on Loch Torridon in Ross-shire; and a house in London. They spent their honeymoon at Worthy Manor in Ashley Combe near Porlock Weir, Somerset. The Manor had been built as a hunting lodge in 1799 and was improved by King in preparation for their honeymoon. It later became their summer retreat and was further improved during this time. From 1845, the family's main house was Horsley Towers, built in the Tudorbethan fashion by the architect of the Houses of Parliament, Charles Barry,[29][30] and later greatly enlarged to Lovelace's own designs.

They had three children: Byron (born 1836); Anne Isabella (called Annabella, born 1837); and Ralph Gordon (born 1839). Immediately after the birth of Annabella, Lady King experienced "a tedious and suffering illness, which took months to cure".[28] Ada was a descendant of the extinct Barons Lovelace and in 1838, her husband was made Earl of Lovelace and Viscount Ockham, meaning Ada became the Countess of Lovelace.[31] In 1843–44, Ada's mother assigned William Benjamin Carpenter to teach Ada's children and to act as a "moral" instructor for Ada.[32] He quickly fell for her and encouraged her to express any frustrated affections, claiming that his marriage meant he would never act in an "unbecoming" manner. When it became clear that Carpenter was trying to start an affair, Ada cut it off.[33]

In 1841, Lovelace and Medora Leigh (the daughter of Lord Byron's half-sister Augusta Leigh) were told by Ada's mother that Ada's father was also Medora's father.[34] On 27 February 1841, Ada wrote to her mother: "I am not in the least astonished. In fact, you merely confirm what I have for years and years felt scarcely a doubt about, but should have considered it most improper in me to hint to you that I in any way suspected."[35] She did not blame the incestuous relationship on Byron, but instead blamed Augusta Leigh: "I fear she is more inherently wicked than he ever was."[36] In the 1840s, Ada flirted with scandals: firstly, from a relaxed approach to extra-marital relationships with men, leading to rumours of affairs;[37] and secondly, from her love of gambling. She apparently lost more than £3,000 on the horses during the later 1840s.[38] The gambling led to her forming a syndicate with male friends, and an ambitious attempt in 1851 to create a mathematical model for successful large bets. This went disastrously wrong, leaving her thousands of pounds in debt to the syndicate, forcing her to admit it all to her husband.[39] She had a shadowy relationship with Andrew Crosse's son John from 1844 onwards. John Crosse destroyed most of their correspondence after her death as part of a legal agreement. She bequeathed him the only heirlooms her father had personally left to her.[40] During her final illness, she would panic at the idea of the younger Crosse being kept from visiting her.[41]

Education

From 1832, when she was seventeen, her mathematical abilities began to emerge,[26] and her interest in mathematics dominated the majority of her adult life.[42] Her mother's obsession with rooting out any of the insanity of which she accused Byron was one of the reasons that Ada was taught mathematics from an early age. She was privately educated in mathematics and science by William Frend, William King,[a] and Mary Somerville, the noted 19th-century researcher and scientific author. In the 1840s, the mathematician Augustus De Morgan extended her "much help in her mathematical studies" including study of advanced calculus topics including the "numbers of Bernoulli" (that formed her celebrated algorithm for Babbage's Analytical Engine).[43] In a letter to Lady Byron, De Morgan suggested that Ada's skill in mathematics might lead her to become "an original mathematical investigator, perhaps of first-rate eminence".[44]

Lovelace often questioned basic assumptions through integrating poetry and science. Whilst studying differential calculus, she wrote to De Morgan:

I may remark that the curious transformations many formulae can undergo, the unsuspected and to a beginner apparently impossible identity of forms exceedingly dissimilar at first sight, is I think one of the chief difficulties in the early part of mathematical studies. I am often reminded of certain sprites and fairies one reads of, who are at one's elbows in one shape now, and the next minute in a form most dissimilar.[45]

 
Sonnet titled The Rainbow in Lovelace's own hand (Somerville College)

Lovelace believed that intuition and imagination were critical to effectively applying mathematical and scientific concepts. She valued metaphysics as much as mathematics, viewing both as tools for exploring "the unseen worlds around us".[46]

Death

 
Painting of Lovelace seated at a piano, by Henry Phillips (1852). Although in great pain at the time, she agreed to sit for the painting as her father, Lord Byron, had been painted by Phillips' father, Thomas Phillips.

Lovelace died at the age of 36 on 27 November 1852,[47] from uterine cancer.[48] The illness lasted several months, in which time Annabella took command over whom Ada saw, and excluded all of her friends and confidants. Under her mother's influence, Ada had a religious transformation and was coaxed into repenting of her previous conduct and making Annabella her executor.[49] She lost contact with her husband after confessing something to him on 30 August which caused him to abandon her bedside. It is not known what she told him.[50] She was buried, at her request, next to her father at the Church of St. Mary Magdalene in Hucknall, Nottinghamshire. A memorial plaque, written in Latin, to her and her father is in the chapel attached to Horsley Towers.[citation needed]

Work

Throughout her life, Lovelace was strongly interested in scientific developments and fads of the day, including phrenology[51] and mesmerism.[52] After her work with Babbage, Lovelace continued to work on other projects. In 1844, she commented to a friend Woronzow Greig about her desire to create a mathematical model for how the brain gives rise to thoughts and nerves to feelings ("a calculus of the nervous system").[53] She never achieved this, however. In part, her interest in the brain came from a long-running pre-occupation, inherited from her mother, about her "potential" madness. As part of her research into this project, she visited the electrical engineer Andrew Crosse in 1844 to learn how to carry out electrical experiments.[54] In the same year, she wrote a review of a paper by Baron Karl von Reichenbach, Researches on Magnetism, but this was not published and does not appear to have progressed past the first draft.[55] In 1851, the year before her cancer struck, she wrote to her mother mentioning "certain productions" she was working on regarding the relation of maths and music.[56]

 
Portrait of Ada by British painter Margaret Sarah Carpenter (1836)

Lovelace first met Charles Babbage in June 1833, through their mutual friend Mary Somerville. Later that month, Babbage invited Lovelace to see the prototype for his difference engine.[57] She became fascinated with the machine and used her relationship with Somerville to visit Babbage as often as she could. Babbage was impressed by Lovelace's intellect and analytic skills. He called her "The Enchantress of Number".[58][b] In 1843, he wrote to her:

Forget this world and all its troubles and if possible its multitudinous Charlatans—every thing in short but the Enchantress of Number.[58]

During a nine-month period in 1842–43, Lovelace translated the Italian mathematician Luigi Menabrea's article on Babbage's newest proposed machine, the Analytical Engine.[59] With the article, she appended a set of notes.[60] Explaining the Analytical Engine's function was a difficult task; many other scientists did not grasp the concept and the British establishment had shown little interest in it.[61] Lovelace's notes even had to explain how the Analytical Engine differed from the original Difference Engine.[62] Her work was well received at the time; the scientist Michael Faraday described himself as a supporter of her writing.[63]

The notes are around three times longer than the article itself and include (in Note G),[64] in complete detail, a method for calculating a sequence of Bernoulli numbers using the Analytical Engine, which might have run correctly had it ever been built[65] (only Babbage's Difference Engine has been built, completed in London in 2002).[66] Based on this work, Lovelace is now considered by many to be the first computer programmer[2] and her method has been called the world's first computer program.[67] Others dispute this because some of Charles Babbage's earlier writings could be considered computer programs.

Note G also contains Lovelace's dismissal of artificial intelligence. She wrote that "The Analytical Engine has no pretensions whatever to originate anything. It can do whatever we know how to order it to perform. It can follow analysis; but it has no power of anticipating any analytical relations or truths." This objection has been the subject of much debate and rebuttal, for example by Alan Turing in his paper "Computing Machinery and Intelligence".[68] Most modern computer scientists argue that this view is outdated and that computer software can develop in ways that cannot necessarily be anticipated by programmers.[69]

Lovelace and Babbage had a minor falling out when the papers were published, when he tried to leave his own statement (criticising the government's treatment of his Engine) as an unsigned preface, which could have been mistakenly interpreted as a joint declaration. When Taylor's Scientific Memoirs ruled that the statement should be signed, Babbage wrote to Lovelace asking her to withdraw the paper. This was the first that she knew he was leaving it unsigned, and she wrote back refusing to withdraw the paper. The historian Benjamin Woolley theorised that "His actions suggested he had so enthusiastically sought Ada's involvement, and so happily indulged her ... because of her 'celebrated name'."[70] Their friendship recovered, and they continued to correspond. On 12 August 1851, when she was dying of cancer, Lovelace wrote to him asking him to be her executor, though this letter did not give him the necessary legal authority. Part of the terrace at Worthy Manor was known as Philosopher's Walk; it was there that Lovelace and Babbage were reputed to have walked while discussing mathematical principles.[63]

First computer program

 
Lovelace's diagram from "note G", the first published computer algorithm

In 1840, Babbage was invited to give a seminar at the University of Turin about his Analytical Engine. Luigi Menabrea, a young Italian engineer and the future Prime Minister of Italy, transcribed Babbage's lecture into French, and this transcript was subsequently published in the Bibliothèque universelle de Genève in October 1842. Babbage's friend Charles Wheatstone commissioned Ada Lovelace to translate Menabrea's paper into English. She then augmented the paper with notes, which were added to the translation. Ada Lovelace spent the better part of a year doing this, assisted with input from Babbage. These notes, which are more extensive than Menabrea's paper, were then published in the September 1843 edition of Taylor's Scientific Memoirs under the initialism AAL.[71]

Ada Lovelace's notes were labelled alphabetically from A to G. In note G, she describes an algorithm for the Analytical Engine to compute Bernoulli numbers. It is considered to be the first published algorithm ever specifically tailored for implementation on a computer, and Ada Lovelace has often been cited as the first computer programmer for this reason.[72][73] The engine was never completed and so her program was never tested.[74]

In 1953, more than a century after her death, Ada Lovelace's notes on Babbage's Analytical Engine were republished as an appendix to B. V. Bowden's Faster than Thought: A Symposium on Digital Computing Machines.[75] The engine has now been recognised as an early model for a computer and her notes as a description of a computer and software.[65]

Insight into potential of computing devices

In her notes, Ada Lovelace emphasised the difference between the Analytical Engine and previous calculating machines, particularly its ability to be programmed to solve problems of any complexity.[76] She realised the potential of the device extended far beyond mere number crunching. In her notes, she wrote:

[The Analytical Engine] might act upon other things besides number, were objects found whose mutual fundamental relations could be expressed by those of the abstract science of operations, and which should be also susceptible of adaptations to the action of the operating notation and mechanism of the engine...Supposing, for instance, that the fundamental relations of pitched sounds in the science of harmony and of musical composition were susceptible of such expression and adaptations, the engine might compose elaborate and scientific pieces of music of any degree of complexity or extent.[77][78]

This analysis was an important development from previous ideas about the capabilities of computing devices and anticipated the implications of modern computing one hundred years before they were realised. Walter Isaacson ascribes Ada's insight regarding the application of computing to any process based on logical symbols to an observation about textiles: "When she saw some mechanical looms that used punchcards to direct the weaving of beautiful patterns, it reminded her of how Babbage's engine used punched cards to make calculations."[79] This insight is seen as significant by writers such as Betty Toole and Benjamin Woolley, as well as the programmer John Graham-Cumming, whose project Plan 28 has the aim of constructing the first complete Analytical Engine.[80][81][82]

According to the historian of computing and Babbage specialist Doron Swade:

Ada saw something that Babbage in some sense failed to see. In Babbage's world his engines were bound by number...What Lovelace saw...was that number could represent entities other than quantity. So once you had a machine for manipulating numbers, if those numbers represented other things, letters, musical notes, then the machine could manipulate symbols of which number was one instance, according to rules. It is this fundamental transition from a machine which is a number cruncher to a machine for manipulating symbols according to rules that is the fundamental transition from calculation to computation—to general-purpose computation—and looking back from the present high ground of modern computing, if we are looking and sifting history for that transition, then that transition was made explicitly by Ada in that 1843 paper.[2]

Distinction between mechanism and logical structure

Lovelace recognized the difference between the details of the computing mechanism, as covered in a 1834 article on the Difference Engine,[83] and the logical structure of the Analytical Engine, on which the article she was reviewing dwelt. She noted that different specialists might be required in each area.

The [1834 article] chiefly treats it under its mechanical aspect, entering but slightly into the mathematical principles of which that engine is the representative, but giving, in considerable length, many details of the mechanism and contrivances by means of which it tabulates the various orders of differences. M. Menabrea, on the contrary, exclusively developes the analytical view; taking it for granted that mechanism is able to perform certain processes, but without attempting to explain how; and devoting his whole attention to explanations and illustrations of the manner in which analytical laws can be so arranged and combined as to bring every branch of that vast subject within the grasp of the assumed powers of mechanism. It is obvious that, in the invention of a calculating engine, these two branches of the subject are equally essential fields of investigation... They are indissolubly connected, though so different in their intrinsic nature, that perhaps the same mind might not be likely to prove equally profound or successful in both.[64]: Note A 

Controversy over contribution

Though Lovelace is often referred to as the first computer programmer, some biographers, computer scientists and historians of computing claim otherwise.

Allan G. Bromley, in the 1990 article Difference and Analytical Engines:

All but one of the programs cited in her notes had been prepared by Babbage from three to seven years earlier. The exception was prepared by Babbage for her, although she did detect a "bug" in it. Not only is there no evidence that Ada ever prepared a program for the Analytical Engine, but her correspondence with Babbage shows that she did not have the knowledge to do so.[84]

Bruce Collier, who later wrote a biography of Babbage, wrote in his 1970 Harvard University PhD thesis that Lovelace "made a considerable contribution to publicizing the Analytical Engine, but there is no evidence that she advanced the design or theory of it in any way".[85]

Eugene Eric Kim and Betty Alexandra Toole consider it "incorrect" to regard Lovelace as the first computer programmer, as Babbage wrote the initial programs for his Analytical Engine, although the majority were never published.[86] Bromley notes several dozen sample programs prepared by Babbage between 1837 and 1840, all substantially predating Lovelace's notes.[87] Dorothy K. Stein regards Lovelace's notes as "more a reflection of the mathematical uncertainty of the author, the political purposes of the inventor, and, above all, of the social and cultural context in which it was written, than a blueprint for a scientific development".[88]

Doron Swade, a specialist on history of computing known for his work on Babbage, discussed Lovelace during a lecture on Babbage's analytical engine. He explained that Ada was only a "promising beginner" instead of genius in mathematics, that she began studying basic concepts of mathematics five years after Babbage conceived the analytical engine so she could not have made important contributions to it, and that she only published the first computer program instead of actually writing it. But he agrees that Ada was the only person to see the potential of the analytical engine as a machine capable of expressing entities other than quantities.[89]

In his book, Idea Makers, Stephen Wolfram defends Lovelace's contributions. While acknowledging that Babbage wrote several unpublished algorithms for the Analytical Engine prior to Lovelace's notes, Wolfram argues that "there's nothing as sophisticated—or as clean—as Ada's computation of the Bernoulli numbers. Babbage certainly helped and commented on Ada's work, but she was definitely the driver of it." Wolfram then suggests that Lovelace's main achievement was to distill from Babbage's correspondence "a clear exposition of the abstract operation of the machine—something which Babbage never did".[90]

In popular culture

 
An illustration inspired by the A. E. Chalon portrait created for the Ada Initiative, which supported open technology and women

1810s

Lord Byron wrote the poem "Fare Thee Well" to his wife Lady Byron in 1816, following their separation after the birth of Ada Lovelace. In the poem he writes:[91]

And when thou would'st solace gather—
When our child's first accents flow—
Wilt thou teach her to say "Father!"
Though his care she must forego?
When her little hands shall press thee—
When her lip to thine is pressed—
Think of him whose prayer shall bless thee—
Think of him thy love had blessed!
Should her lineaments resemble
Those thou never more may'st see,
Then thy heart will softly tremble
With a pulse yet true to me.

1970s

Lovelace is portrayed in Romulus Linney's 1977 play Childe Byron.[92]

1990s

In the 1990 steampunk novel The Difference Engine by William Gibson and Bruce Sterling,[93] Lovelace delivers a lecture on the "punched cards" programme which proves Gödel's incompleteness theorems decades before their actual discovery.

In the 1997 film Conceiving Ada,[94] a computer scientist obsessed with Ada finds a way of communicating with her in the past by means of "undying information waves".

In Tom Stoppard's 1993 play Arcadia, the precocious teenage genius Thomasina Coverly—a character "apparently based" on Ada Lovelace (the play also involves Lord Byron)—comes to understand chaos theory, and theorises the second law of thermodynamics, before either is officially recognised.[95][96]

2000s

Lovelace features in John Crowley's 2005 novel, Lord Byron's Novel: The Evening Land, as an unseen character whose personality is forcefully depicted in her annotations and anti-heroic efforts to archive her father's lost novel.[97]

2010s

The 2015 play Ada and the Engine by Lauren Gunderson portrays Lovelace and Charles Babbage in unrequited love, and it imagines a post-death meeting between Lovelace and her father.[98][99]

Lovelace and Babbage are the main characters in Sydney Padua's webcomic and graphic novel The Thrilling Adventures of Lovelace and Babbage. The comic features extensive footnotes on the history of Ada Lovelace, and many lines of dialogue are drawn from actual correspondence.[100]

Lovelace and Mary Shelley as teenagers are the central characters in Jordan Stratford's steampunk series, The Wollstonecraft Detective Agency.[101]

Lovelace, identified as Ada Augusta Byron, is portrayed by Lily Lesser in the second season of The Frankenstein Chronicles. She is employed as an "analyst" to provide the workings of a life-sized humanoid automaton. The brass workings of the machine are reminiscent of Babbage's analytical engine. Her employment is described as keeping her occupied until she returns to her studies in advanced mathematics.[102]

Lovelace and Babbage appear as characters in the second season of the ITV series Victoria (2017). Emerald Fennell portrays Lovelace in the episode, "The Green-Eyed Monster."[103]

The Cardano cryptocurrency platform, which was launched in 2017, uses Ada as the name for their cryptocurrency and Lovelace as the smallest sub-unit of an Ada.[104]

"Lovelace" is the name given to the operating system designed by the character Cameron Howe in Halt and Catch Fire.

Lovelace is a primary character in the 2019 Big Finish Doctor Who audio play The Enchantress of Numbers, starring Tom Baker as the Fourth Doctor and Jane Slavin as his current companion, WPC Ann Kelso. Lovelace is played by Finty Williams.

In 2019, Lovelace is a featured character in the play STEM FEMMES by Philadelphia theater company Applied Mechanics.[105]

2020s

Lovelace features as a character in "Spyfall, Part 2", the second episode of Doctor Who, series 12, which first aired on BBC One on 5 January 2020.[106] The character was portrayed by Sylvie Briggs, alongside characterisations of Charles Babbage and Noor Inayat Khan. In 2021, Nvidia named its GPU architecture featured in the RTX 4000 Series, "Ada Lovelace", after her. It is also the first Nvidia architecture to feature both a first and last name.[107][108]

Commemoration

 
Blue plaque to Ada Lovelace in St. James's Square, London

The computer language Ada, created on behalf of the United States Department of Defense, was named after Lovelace.[109] The reference manual for the language was approved on 10 December 1980 and the Department of Defense Military Standard for the language, MIL-STD-1815, was given the number of the year of her birth.

In 1981, the Association for Women in Computing inaugurated its Ada Lovelace Award.[110][111] Since 1998, the British Computer Society (BCS) has awarded the Lovelace Medal,[112] and in 2008 initiated an annual competition for women students.[113] BCSWomen sponsors the Lovelace Colloquium, an annual conference for women undergraduates.[113] Ada College is a further-education college in Tottenham Hale, London, focused on digital skills.[114]

Ada Lovelace Day is an annual event celebrated on the second Tuesday of October,[115] which began in 2009.[116] Its goal is to "... raise the profile of women in science, technology, engineering, and maths," and to "create new role models for girls and women" in these fields. Events have included Wikipedia edit-a-thons with the aim of improving the representation of women on Wikipedia in terms of articles and editors to reduce unintended gender bias on Wikipedia.

The Ada Initiative was a non-profit organisation dedicated to increasing the involvement of women in the free culture and open source movements.[117]

The Engineering in Computer Science and Telecommunications College building in Zaragoza University is called the Ada Byron Building.[118] The computer centre in the village of Porlock, near where Lovelace lived, is named after her. Ada Lovelace House is a council-owned building in Kirkby-in-Ashfield, Nottinghamshire, near where Lovelace spent her infancy.[119][120]

In 2012, a Google Doodle and blog post honoured her on her birthday.[4][121]

In 2013, Ada Developers Academy was founded and named after her. The mission of Ada Developers Academy is to diversify tech by providing women and gender diverse people the skills, experience, and community support to become professional software developers to change the face of tech.[122]

On 17 September 2013, the BBC Radio 4 biography programme Great Lives devoted an episode to Ada Lovelace; she was sponsored by TV presenter Konnie Huq.[123]

As of November 2015, all new British passports have included an illustration of Lovelace and Babbage.[124][125]

In 2017, a Google Doodle honoured her with other women on International Women's Day.[126]

On 2 February 2018, Satellogic, a high-resolution Earth observation imaging and analytics company, launched a ÑuSat type micro-satellite named in honour of Ada Lovelace.[127]

In March 2018, The New York Times published a belated obituary for Ada Lovelace.[128]

On 27 July 2018, Senator Ron Wyden submitted, in the United States Senate, the designation of 9 October 2018 as National Ada Lovelace Day: "To honor the life and contributions of Ada Lovelace as a leading woman in science and mathematics". The resolution (S.Res.592)[129] was considered, and agreed to without amendment and with a preamble by unanimous consent.

In November 2020 it was announced that Trinity College Dublin whose library had previously held forty busts, all of them of men, was commissioning four new busts of women, one of whom was to be Lovelace.[130]

External video
  “9 Millbank : Ada Lovelace Sculpture Takes Her Place In Westminster St Edward”, March 7, 2022.

In March 2022, a statue of Ada Lovelace was installed at the site of the former Ergon House in the City of Westminster, London, honoring its scientific history. The redevelopment was part of a complex with Imperial Chemical House.[131] The statue was sculpted by Etienne and Mary Millner and based on the portrait by Margaret Sarah Carpenter. The sculpture was unveiled on International Women's Day, 2022. It stands on the 7th floor of Millbank Quarter overlooking the junction of Dean Bradley Street and Horseferry Road.[132]

In September 2022, Nvidia announced the Ada Lovelace graphics processing unit (GPU) microarchitecture.[133]

Bicentenary

The bicentenary of Ada Lovelace's birth was celebrated with a number of events, including:[134]

Special exhibitions were displayed by the Science Museum in London, England[143] and the Weston Library[144] (part of the Bodleian Library) in Oxford, England.

Publications

  • Lovelace, Ada King. Ada, the Enchantress of Numbers: A Selection from the Letters of Lord Byron's Daughter and her Description of the First Computer. Mill Valley, CA: Strawberry Press, 1992. ISBN 978-0-912647-09-8.
  • Menabrea, Luigi Federico; Lovelace, Ada (1843). "Sketch of the Analytical Engine invented by Charles Babbage... with notes by the translator. Translated by Ada Lovelace". In Richard Taylor (ed.). Scientific Memoirs. Vol. 3. London: Richard and John E. Taylor. pp. 666–731.

Publication history

Six copies of the 1843 first edition of Sketch of the Analytical Engine with Ada Lovelace's "Notes"[64] have been located. Three are held at Harvard University, one at the University of Oklahoma, and one at the United States Air Force Academy.[145] On 20 July 2018, the sixth copy was sold at auction to an anonymous buyer for £95,000.[146] A digital facsimile of one of the copies in the Harvard University Library is available online.

In December 2016, a letter written by Ada Lovelace was forfeited by Martin Shkreli to the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance for unpaid taxes owed by Shkreli.[147]

See also

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ William King, her tutor, and William King, her future husband, were not related.
  2. ^ Some writers give it as "Enchantress of Numbers".

References

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General and cited sources

  • Baum, Joan (1986), The Calculating Passion of Ada Byron, Archon, ISBN 978-0-208-02119-9.
  • Elwin, Malcolm (1975), Lord Byron's Family, John Murray.
  • Essinger, James (2014), Ada's algorithm: How Lord Byron's daughter Ada Lovelace launched the digital age, Melville House Publishing, ISBN 978-1-61219-408-0.
  • Fuegi, J; Francis, J (October–December 2003), (PDF), Annals of the History of Computing, 25 (4): 16–26, doi:10.1109/MAHC.2003.1253887, S2CID 40077111, archived from the original (PDF) on 15 February 2020.
  • Hammerman, Robin; Russell, Andrew L. (2015), Ada's Legacy: Cultures of Computing from the Victorian to the Digital Age, Association for Computing Machinery and Morgan & Claypool, doi:10.1145/2809523, ISBN 978-1-970001-51-8, S2CID 62018931.
  • Isaacson, Walter (2014), The Innovators: How a Group of Hackers, Geniuses, and Geeks Created the Digital Revolution, Simon & Schuster.
  • Kim, Eugene; Toole, Betty Alexandra (1999). "Ada and the First Computer". Scientific American. 280 (5): 76–81. Bibcode:1999SciAm.280e..76E. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0599-76.
  • Lewis, Judith S. (July–August 1995). "Princess of Parallelograms and her daughter: Math and gender in the nineteenth century English aristocracy". Women's Studies International Forum. 18 (4): 387–394. doi:10.1016/0277-5395(95)80030-S.
  • Marchand, Leslie (1971), Byron A Portrait, John Murray.
  • Menabrea, Luigi Federico (1843), "Sketch of the Analytical Engine Invented by Charles Babbage", Scientific Memoirs, 3, from the original on 15 September 2008, retrieved 29 August 2008 With notes upon the memoir by the translator.
  • Miller, Clair Cain. "Ada Lovelace, 1815–1852," New York Times, 8 March 2018.
  • Moore, Doris Langley (1977), Ada, Countess of Lovelace, John Murray, ISBN 0-7195-3384-8.
  • Moore, Doris Langley (1961), The Late Lord Byron, Philadelphia: Lippincott, ISBN 978-0-06-013013-8, OCLC 358063.
  • Stein, Dorothy (1985), Ada: A Life and a Legacy, MIT Press Series in the History of Computing, Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, ISBN 978-0-262-19242-2.
  • Toole, Betty Alexandra (1992), Ada, the Enchantress of Numbers: A Selection from the Letters of Ada Lovelace, and her Description of the First Computer, Strawberry Press, ISBN 978-0-912647-09-8.
  • Toole, Betty Alexandra (1998), Ada, the Enchantress of Numbers: Prophet of the Computer Age, Strawberry Press, ISBN 978-0-912647-18-0.
  • Turney, Catherine (1972), Byron's Daughter: A Biography of Elizabeth Medora Leigh, Scribner, ISBN 978-0-684-12753-8
  • Woolley, Benjamin (February 1999), The Bride of Science: Romance, Reason, and Byron's Daughter, AU: Pan Macmillan, ISBN 978-0-333-72436-1, retrieved 7 April 2013.
  • Woolley, Benjamin (February 2002) [1999], The Bride of Science: Romance, Reason, and Byron's Daughter, McGraw-Hill Ryerson, ISBN 978-0-07-138860-3, retrieved 7 April 2013.

Further reading

External links

  • "Ada's Army gets set to rewrite history at Inspirefest 2018" by Luke Maxwell, 4 August 2018
  • Works by Ada Lovelace at Open Library
  • "Untangling the Tale of Ada Lovelace" by Stephen Wolfram, December 2015
  • . Women in Science. SDSC. Archived from the original on 25 December 2018. Retrieved 17 August 2001.
  • "Ada Byron, Lady Lovelace". Biographies of Women Mathematicians. Agnes Scott College.
  • "Papers of the Noel, Byron and Lovelace families". UK: Archives hub. Archived from the original (archive) on 24 April 2012.
  • "Ada Lovelace & The Analytical Engine". Babbage. Computer History.
  • . Educause. Archived from the original (archive) on 10 August 2009.
  • . Tech TV vault. G4 TV. Archived from the original on 25 December 2018. Retrieved 25 February 2007.
  • "Ada Lovelace" (streaming). In Our Time (audio). UK: BBC Radio 4. 6 March 2008.
  • "Ada Lovelace's Notes and The Ladies Diary". Yale.
  • "The fascinating story Ada Lovelace". Sabine Allaeys – via YouTube.
  • "Ada Lovelace, the World's First Computer Programmer, on Science and Religion". Maria Popova (Brain). 10 December 2013.
  • "How Ada Lovelace, Lord Byron's Daughter, Became the World's First Computer Programmer". Maria Popova (Brain). 10 December 2014.
  • O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Ada Lovelace", MacTutor History of Mathematics archive, University of St Andrews

lovelace, microarchitecture, microarchitecture, augusta, king, countess, lovelace, née, byron, december, 1815, november, 1852, english, mathematician, writer, chiefly, known, work, charles, babbage, proposed, mechanical, general, purpose, computer, analytical,. For the microarchitecture see Ada Lovelace microarchitecture Augusta Ada King Countess of Lovelace nee Byron 10 December 1815 27 November 1852 was an English mathematician and writer chiefly known for her work on Charles Babbage s proposed mechanical general purpose computer the Analytical Engine She was the first to recognise that the machine had applications beyond pure calculation and to have published the first algorithm intended to be carried out by such a machine As a result she is often regarded as the first computer programmer 2 3 4 The Right HonourableThe Countess of LovelaceDaguerreotype by Antoine Claudet c 1843 One of only two known photographs 1 BornThe Hon Augusta Ada Byron 1815 12 10 10 December 1815London EnglandDied27 November 1852 1852 11 27 aged 36 Marylebone London EnglandResting placeChurch of St Mary Magdalene Hucknall Nottingham EnglandKnown forMathematics computingSpouseWilliam King Noel 1st Earl of Lovelace m 1835 wbr ChildrenByron King Noel Viscount Ockham and 12th Baron Wentworth Anne Blunt 15th Baroness Wentworth Ralph King Milbanke 2nd Earl of LovelaceParentsLord Byron Lady ByronSignatureAda Byron was the only legitimate child of poet Lord Byron and Lady Byron 5 All of Byron s other children were born out of wedlock to other women 6 Byron separated from his wife a month after Ada was born and left England forever Four months later he commemorated the parting in a poem that begins Is thy face like thy mother s my fair child ADA sole daughter of my house and heart 7 He died in Greece when Ada was eight Her mother remained bitter and promoted Ada s interest in mathematics and logic in an effort to prevent her from developing her father s perceived insanity Despite this Ada remained interested in him naming her two sons Byron and Gordon Upon her death she was buried next to him at her request Although often ill in her childhood Ada pursued her studies assiduously She married William King in 1835 King was made Earl of Lovelace in 1838 Ada thereby becoming Countess of Lovelace Her educational and social exploits brought her into contact with scientists such as Andrew Crosse Charles Babbage Sir David Brewster Charles Wheatstone Michael Faraday and the author Charles Dickens contacts which she used to further her education Ada described her approach as poetical science 8 and herself as an Analyst amp Metaphysician 9 When she was eighteen her mathematical talents led her to a long working relationship and friendship with fellow British mathematician Charles Babbage who is known as the father of computers She was in particular interested in Babbage s work on the Analytical Engine Lovelace first met him in June 1833 through their mutual friend and her private tutor Mary Somerville Between 1842 and 1843 Ada translated an article by the military engineer Luigi Menabrea later Prime Minister of Italy about the Analytical Engine supplementing it with an elaborate set of notes simply called Notes Lovelace s notes are important in the early history of computers containing what many consider to be the first computer program that is an algorithm designed to be carried out by a machine Other historians reject this perspective and point out that Babbage s personal notes from the years 1836 1837 contain the first programs for the engine 10 She also developed a vision of the capability of computers to go beyond mere calculating or number crunching while many others including Babbage himself focused only on those capabilities 11 Her mindset of poetical science led her to ask questions about the Analytical Engine as shown in her notes examining how individuals and society relate to technology as a collaborative tool 6 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Childhood 1 2 Adult years 1 3 Education 1 4 Death 2 Work 2 1 First computer program 2 2 Insight into potential of computing devices 2 3 Distinction between mechanism and logical structure 2 4 Controversy over contribution 3 In popular culture 3 1 1810s 3 2 1970s 3 3 1990s 3 4 2000s 3 5 2010s 3 6 2020s 4 Commemoration 5 Bicentenary 6 Publications 7 Publication history 8 See also 9 Explanatory notes 10 References 11 General and cited sources 12 Further reading 13 External linksBiographyChildhood Lord Byron expected his child to be a glorious boy and was disappointed when Lady Byron gave birth to a girl 12 The child was named after Byron s half sister Augusta Leigh and was called Ada by Byron himself 13 On 16 January 1816 at Lord Byron s command Lady Byron left for her parents home at Kirkby Mallory taking their five week old daughter with her 12 Although English law at the time granted full custody of children to the father in cases of separation Lord Byron made no attempt to claim his parental rights 14 but did request that his sister keep him informed of Ada s welfare 15 Ada Byron aged four On 21 April Lord Byron signed the deed of separation although very reluctantly and left England for good a few days later 16 Aside from an acrimonious separation Lady Byron continued throughout her life to make allegations about her husband s immoral behaviour 17 This set of events made Lovelace infamous in Victorian society Ada did not have a relationship with her father He died in 1824 when she was eight years old Her mother was the only significant parental figure in her life 18 Lovelace was not shown the family portrait of her father until her 20th birthday 19 Ada Byron aged seven by Alfred d Orsay 1822 Somerville College Oxford Lovelace did not have a close relationship with her mother She was often left in the care of her maternal grandmother Judith Hon Lady Milbanke who doted on her However because of societal attitudes of the time which favoured the husband in any separation with the welfare of any child acting as mitigation Lady Byron had to present herself as a loving mother to the rest of society This included writing anxious letters to Lady Milbanke about her daughter s welfare with a cover note saying to retain the letters in case she had to use them to show maternal concern 20 In one letter to Lady Milbanke she referred to her daughter as it I talk to it for your satisfaction not my own and shall be very glad when you have it under your own 21 Lady Byron had her teenage daughter watched by close friends for any sign of moral deviation Lovelace dubbed these observers the Furies and later complained they exaggerated and invented stories about her 22 Ada Byron aged seventeen 1832 Lovelace was often ill beginning in early childhood At the age of eight she experienced headaches that obscured her vision 13 In June 1829 she was paralyzed after a bout of measles She was subjected to continuous bed rest for nearly a year something which may have extended her period of disability By 1831 she was able to walk with crutches Despite the illnesses she developed her mathematical and technological skills When Ada was twelve years old this future Lady Fairy as Charles Babbage affectionately called her decided she wanted to fly Ada Byron went about the project methodically thoughtfully with imagination and passion Her first step in February 1828 was to construct wings She investigated different material and sizes She considered various materials for the wings paper oilsilk wires and feathers She examined the anatomy of birds to determine the right proportion between the wings and the body She decided to write a book Flyology illustrating with plates some of her findings She decided what equipment she would need for example a compass to cut across the country by the most direct road so that she could surmount mountains rivers and valleys Her final step was to integrate steam with the art of flying 6 Ada Byron had an affair with a tutor in early 1833 She tried to elope with him after she was caught but the tutor s relatives recognised her and contacted her mother Lady Byron and her friends covered the incident up to prevent a public scandal 23 Lovelace never met her younger half sister Allegra the daughter of Lord Byron and Claire Clairmont Allegra died in 1822 at the age of five Lovelace did have some contact with Elizabeth Medora Leigh the daughter of Byron s half sister Augusta Leigh who purposely avoided Lovelace as much as possible when introduced at court 24 Adult years Watercolour portrait of Ada King Countess of Lovelace c 1840 possibly by Alfred Edward Chalon Lovelace became close friends with her tutor Mary Somerville who introduced her to Charles Babbage in 1833 She had a strong respect and affection for Somerville 25 and they corresponded for many years Other acquaintances included the scientists Andrew Crosse Sir David Brewster Charles Wheatstone Michael Faraday and the author Charles Dickens She was presented at Court at the age of seventeen and became a popular belle of the season in part because of her brilliant mind 26 By 1834 Ada was a regular at Court and started attending various events She danced often and was able to charm many people and was described by most people as being dainty although John Hobhouse Byron s friend described her as a large coarse skinned young woman but with something of my friend s features particularly the mouth 27 This description followed their meeting on 24 February 1834 in which Ada made it clear to Hobhouse that she did not like him probably due to her mother s influence which led her to dislike all of her father s friends This first impression was not to last and they later became friends 28 On 8 July 1835 she married William 8th Baron King becoming Lady King They had three homes Ockham Park Surrey a Scottish estate on Loch Torridon in Ross shire and a house in London They spent their honeymoon at Worthy Manor in Ashley Combe near Porlock Weir Somerset The Manor had been built as a hunting lodge in 1799 and was improved by King in preparation for their honeymoon It later became their summer retreat and was further improved during this time From 1845 the family s main house was Horsley Towers built in the Tudorbethan fashion by the architect of the Houses of Parliament Charles Barry 29 30 and later greatly enlarged to Lovelace s own designs They had three children Byron born 1836 Anne Isabella called Annabella born 1837 and Ralph Gordon born 1839 Immediately after the birth of Annabella Lady King experienced a tedious and suffering illness which took months to cure 28 Ada was a descendant of the extinct Barons Lovelace and in 1838 her husband was made Earl of Lovelace and Viscount Ockham meaning Ada became the Countess of Lovelace 31 In 1843 44 Ada s mother assigned William Benjamin Carpenter to teach Ada s children and to act as a moral instructor for Ada 32 He quickly fell for her and encouraged her to express any frustrated affections claiming that his marriage meant he would never act in an unbecoming manner When it became clear that Carpenter was trying to start an affair Ada cut it off 33 In 1841 Lovelace and Medora Leigh the daughter of Lord Byron s half sister Augusta Leigh were told by Ada s mother that Ada s father was also Medora s father 34 On 27 February 1841 Ada wrote to her mother I am not in the least astonished In fact you merely confirm what I have for years and years felt scarcely a doubt about but should have considered it most improper in me to hint to you that I in any way suspected 35 She did not blame the incestuous relationship on Byron but instead blamed Augusta Leigh I fear she is more inherently wicked than he ever was 36 In the 1840s Ada flirted with scandals firstly from a relaxed approach to extra marital relationships with men leading to rumours of affairs 37 and secondly from her love of gambling She apparently lost more than 3 000 on the horses during the later 1840s 38 The gambling led to her forming a syndicate with male friends and an ambitious attempt in 1851 to create a mathematical model for successful large bets This went disastrously wrong leaving her thousands of pounds in debt to the syndicate forcing her to admit it all to her husband 39 She had a shadowy relationship with Andrew Crosse s son John from 1844 onwards John Crosse destroyed most of their correspondence after her death as part of a legal agreement She bequeathed him the only heirlooms her father had personally left to her 40 During her final illness she would panic at the idea of the younger Crosse being kept from visiting her 41 Education From 1832 when she was seventeen her mathematical abilities began to emerge 26 and her interest in mathematics dominated the majority of her adult life 42 Her mother s obsession with rooting out any of the insanity of which she accused Byron was one of the reasons that Ada was taught mathematics from an early age She was privately educated in mathematics and science by William Frend William King a and Mary Somerville the noted 19th century researcher and scientific author In the 1840s the mathematician Augustus De Morgan extended her much help in her mathematical studies including study of advanced calculus topics including the numbers of Bernoulli that formed her celebrated algorithm for Babbage s Analytical Engine 43 In a letter to Lady Byron De Morgan suggested that Ada s skill in mathematics might lead her to become an original mathematical investigator perhaps of first rate eminence 44 Lovelace often questioned basic assumptions through integrating poetry and science Whilst studying differential calculus she wrote to De Morgan I may remark that the curious transformations many formulae can undergo the unsuspected and to a beginner apparently impossible identity of forms exceedingly dissimilar at first sight is I think one of the chief difficulties in the early part of mathematical studies I am often reminded of certain sprites and fairies one reads of who are at one s elbows in one shape now and the next minute in a form most dissimilar 45 Sonnet titled The Rainbow in Lovelace s own hand Somerville College Lovelace believed that intuition and imagination were critical to effectively applying mathematical and scientific concepts She valued metaphysics as much as mathematics viewing both as tools for exploring the unseen worlds around us 46 Death Painting of Lovelace seated at a piano by Henry Phillips 1852 Although in great pain at the time she agreed to sit for the painting as her father Lord Byron had been painted by Phillips father Thomas Phillips Lovelace died at the age of 36 on 27 November 1852 47 from uterine cancer 48 The illness lasted several months in which time Annabella took command over whom Ada saw and excluded all of her friends and confidants Under her mother s influence Ada had a religious transformation and was coaxed into repenting of her previous conduct and making Annabella her executor 49 She lost contact with her husband after confessing something to him on 30 August which caused him to abandon her bedside It is not known what she told him 50 She was buried at her request next to her father at the Church of St Mary Magdalene in Hucknall Nottinghamshire A memorial plaque written in Latin to her and her father is in the chapel attached to Horsley Towers citation needed WorkThroughout her life Lovelace was strongly interested in scientific developments and fads of the day including phrenology 51 and mesmerism 52 After her work with Babbage Lovelace continued to work on other projects In 1844 she commented to a friend Woronzow Greig about her desire to create a mathematical model for how the brain gives rise to thoughts and nerves to feelings a calculus of the nervous system 53 She never achieved this however In part her interest in the brain came from a long running pre occupation inherited from her mother about her potential madness As part of her research into this project she visited the electrical engineer Andrew Crosse in 1844 to learn how to carry out electrical experiments 54 In the same year she wrote a review of a paper by Baron Karl von Reichenbach Researches on Magnetism but this was not published and does not appear to have progressed past the first draft 55 In 1851 the year before her cancer struck she wrote to her mother mentioning certain productions she was working on regarding the relation of maths and music 56 Portrait of Ada by British painter Margaret Sarah Carpenter 1836 Lovelace first met Charles Babbage in June 1833 through their mutual friend Mary Somerville Later that month Babbage invited Lovelace to see the prototype for his difference engine 57 She became fascinated with the machine and used her relationship with Somerville to visit Babbage as often as she could Babbage was impressed by Lovelace s intellect and analytic skills He called her The Enchantress of Number 58 b In 1843 he wrote to her Forget this world and all its troubles and if possible its multitudinous Charlatans every thing in short but the Enchantress of Number 58 During a nine month period in 1842 43 Lovelace translated the Italian mathematician Luigi Menabrea s article on Babbage s newest proposed machine the Analytical Engine 59 With the article she appended a set of notes 60 Explaining the Analytical Engine s function was a difficult task many other scientists did not grasp the concept and the British establishment had shown little interest in it 61 Lovelace s notes even had to explain how the Analytical Engine differed from the original Difference Engine 62 Her work was well received at the time the scientist Michael Faraday described himself as a supporter of her writing 63 The notes are around three times longer than the article itself and include in Note G 64 in complete detail a method for calculating a sequence of Bernoulli numbers using the Analytical Engine which might have run correctly had it ever been built 65 only Babbage s Difference Engine has been built completed in London in 2002 66 Based on this work Lovelace is now considered by many to be the first computer programmer 2 and her method has been called the world s first computer program 67 Others dispute this because some of Charles Babbage s earlier writings could be considered computer programs Note G also contains Lovelace s dismissal of artificial intelligence She wrote that The Analytical Engine has no pretensions whatever to originate anything It can do whatever we know how to order it to perform It can follow analysis but it has no power of anticipating any analytical relations or truths This objection has been the subject of much debate and rebuttal for example by Alan Turing in his paper Computing Machinery and Intelligence 68 Most modern computer scientists argue that this view is outdated and that computer software can develop in ways that cannot necessarily be anticipated by programmers 69 Lovelace and Babbage had a minor falling out when the papers were published when he tried to leave his own statement criticising the government s treatment of his Engine as an unsigned preface which could have been mistakenly interpreted as a joint declaration When Taylor s Scientific Memoirs ruled that the statement should be signed Babbage wrote to Lovelace asking her to withdraw the paper This was the first that she knew he was leaving it unsigned and she wrote back refusing to withdraw the paper The historian Benjamin Woolley theorised that His actions suggested he had so enthusiastically sought Ada s involvement and so happily indulged her because of her celebrated name 70 Their friendship recovered and they continued to correspond On 12 August 1851 when she was dying of cancer Lovelace wrote to him asking him to be her executor though this letter did not give him the necessary legal authority Part of the terrace at Worthy Manor was known as Philosopher s Walk it was there that Lovelace and Babbage were reputed to have walked while discussing mathematical principles 63 First computer program Lovelace s diagram from note G the first published computer algorithm In 1840 Babbage was invited to give a seminar at the University of Turin about his Analytical Engine Luigi Menabrea a young Italian engineer and the future Prime Minister of Italy transcribed Babbage s lecture into French and this transcript was subsequently published in the Bibliotheque universelle de Geneve in October 1842 Babbage s friend Charles Wheatstone commissioned Ada Lovelace to translate Menabrea s paper into English She then augmented the paper with notes which were added to the translation Ada Lovelace spent the better part of a year doing this assisted with input from Babbage These notes which are more extensive than Menabrea s paper were then published in the September 1843 edition of Taylor s Scientific Memoirs under the initialism AAL 71 Ada Lovelace s notes were labelled alphabetically from A to G In note G she describes an algorithm for the Analytical Engine to compute Bernoulli numbers It is considered to be the first published algorithm ever specifically tailored for implementation on a computer and Ada Lovelace has often been cited as the first computer programmer for this reason 72 73 The engine was never completed and so her program was never tested 74 In 1953 more than a century after her death Ada Lovelace s notes on Babbage s Analytical Engine were republished as an appendix to B V Bowden s Faster than Thought A Symposium on Digital Computing Machines 75 The engine has now been recognised as an early model for a computer and her notes as a description of a computer and software 65 Insight into potential of computing devices In her notes Ada Lovelace emphasised the difference between the Analytical Engine and previous calculating machines particularly its ability to be programmed to solve problems of any complexity 76 She realised the potential of the device extended far beyond mere number crunching In her notes she wrote The Analytical Engine might act upon other things besides number were objects found whose mutual fundamental relations could be expressed by those of the abstract science of operations and which should be also susceptible of adaptations to the action of the operating notation and mechanism of the engine Supposing for instance that the fundamental relations of pitched sounds in the science of harmony and of musical composition were susceptible of such expression and adaptations the engine might compose elaborate and scientific pieces of music of any degree of complexity or extent 77 78 This analysis was an important development from previous ideas about the capabilities of computing devices and anticipated the implications of modern computing one hundred years before they were realised Walter Isaacson ascribes Ada s insight regarding the application of computing to any process based on logical symbols to an observation about textiles When she saw some mechanical looms that used punchcards to direct the weaving of beautiful patterns it reminded her of how Babbage s engine used punched cards to make calculations 79 This insight is seen as significant by writers such as Betty Toole and Benjamin Woolley as well as the programmer John Graham Cumming whose project Plan 28 has the aim of constructing the first complete Analytical Engine 80 81 82 According to the historian of computing and Babbage specialist Doron Swade Ada saw something that Babbage in some sense failed to see In Babbage s world his engines were bound by number What Lovelace saw was that number could represent entities other than quantity So once you had a machine for manipulating numbers if those numbers represented other things letters musical notes then the machine could manipulate symbols of which number was one instance according to rules It is this fundamental transition from a machine which is a number cruncher to a machine for manipulating symbols according to rules that is the fundamental transition from calculation to computation to general purpose computation and looking back from the present high ground of modern computing if we are looking and sifting history for that transition then that transition was made explicitly by Ada in that 1843 paper 2 Distinction between mechanism and logical structure Lovelace recognized the difference between the details of the computing mechanism as covered in a 1834 article on the Difference Engine 83 and the logical structure of the Analytical Engine on which the article she was reviewing dwelt She noted that different specialists might be required in each area The 1834 article chiefly treats it under its mechanical aspect entering but slightly into the mathematical principles of which that engine is the representative but giving in considerable length many details of the mechanism and contrivances by means of which it tabulates the various orders of differences M Menabrea on the contrary exclusively developes the analytical view taking it for granted that mechanism is able to perform certain processes but without attempting to explain how and devoting his whole attention to explanations and illustrations of the manner in which analytical laws can be so arranged and combined as to bring every branch of that vast subject within the grasp of the assumed powers of mechanism It is obvious that in the invention of a calculating engine these two branches of the subject are equally essential fields of investigation They are indissolubly connected though so different in their intrinsic nature that perhaps the same mind might not be likely to prove equally profound or successful in both 64 Note A Controversy over contribution Though Lovelace is often referred to as the first computer programmer some biographers computer scientists and historians of computing claim otherwise Allan G Bromley in the 1990 article Difference and Analytical Engines All but one of the programs cited in her notes had been prepared by Babbage from three to seven years earlier The exception was prepared by Babbage for her although she did detect a bug in it Not only is there no evidence that Ada ever prepared a program for the Analytical Engine but her correspondence with Babbage shows that she did not have the knowledge to do so 84 Bruce Collier who later wrote a biography of Babbage wrote in his 1970 Harvard University PhD thesis that Lovelace made a considerable contribution to publicizing the Analytical Engine but there is no evidence that she advanced the design or theory of it in any way 85 Eugene Eric Kim and Betty Alexandra Toole consider it incorrect to regard Lovelace as the first computer programmer as Babbage wrote the initial programs for his Analytical Engine although the majority were never published 86 Bromley notes several dozen sample programs prepared by Babbage between 1837 and 1840 all substantially predating Lovelace s notes 87 Dorothy K Stein regards Lovelace s notes as more a reflection of the mathematical uncertainty of the author the political purposes of the inventor and above all of the social and cultural context in which it was written than a blueprint for a scientific development 88 Doron Swade a specialist on history of computing known for his work on Babbage discussed Lovelace during a lecture on Babbage s analytical engine He explained that Ada was only a promising beginner instead of genius in mathematics that she began studying basic concepts of mathematics five years after Babbage conceived the analytical engine so she could not have made important contributions to it and that she only published the first computer program instead of actually writing it But he agrees that Ada was the only person to see the potential of the analytical engine as a machine capable of expressing entities other than quantities 89 In his book Idea Makers Stephen Wolfram defends Lovelace s contributions While acknowledging that Babbage wrote several unpublished algorithms for the Analytical Engine prior to Lovelace s notes Wolfram argues that there s nothing as sophisticated or as clean as Ada s computation of the Bernoulli numbers Babbage certainly helped and commented on Ada s work but she was definitely the driver of it Wolfram then suggests that Lovelace s main achievement was to distill from Babbage s correspondence a clear exposition of the abstract operation of the machine something which Babbage never did 90 In popular culture An illustration inspired by the A E Chalon portrait created for the Ada Initiative which supported open technology and women 1810s Lord Byron wrote the poem Fare Thee Well to his wife Lady Byron in 1816 following their separation after the birth of Ada Lovelace In the poem he writes 91 And when thou would st solace gather When our child s first accents flow Wilt thou teach her to say Father Though his care she must forego When her little hands shall press thee When her lip to thine is pressed Think of him whose prayer shall bless thee Think of him thy love had blessed Should her lineaments resembleThose thou never more may st see Then thy heart will softly trembleWith a pulse yet true to me 1970s Lovelace is portrayed in Romulus Linney s 1977 play Childe Byron 92 1990s In the 1990 steampunk novel The Difference Engine by William Gibson and Bruce Sterling 93 Lovelace delivers a lecture on the punched cards programme which proves Godel s incompleteness theorems decades before their actual discovery In the 1997 film Conceiving Ada 94 a computer scientist obsessed with Ada finds a way of communicating with her in the past by means of undying information waves In Tom Stoppard s 1993 play Arcadia the precocious teenage genius Thomasina Coverly a character apparently based on Ada Lovelace the play also involves Lord Byron comes to understand chaos theory and theorises the second law of thermodynamics before either is officially recognised 95 96 2000s Lovelace features in John Crowley s 2005 novel Lord Byron s Novel The Evening Land as an unseen character whose personality is forcefully depicted in her annotations and anti heroic efforts to archive her father s lost novel 97 2010s The 2015 play Ada and the Engine by Lauren Gunderson portrays Lovelace and Charles Babbage in unrequited love and it imagines a post death meeting between Lovelace and her father 98 99 Lovelace and Babbage are the main characters in Sydney Padua s webcomic and graphic novel The Thrilling Adventures of Lovelace and Babbage The comic features extensive footnotes on the history of Ada Lovelace and many lines of dialogue are drawn from actual correspondence 100 Lovelace and Mary Shelley as teenagers are the central characters in Jordan Stratford s steampunk series The Wollstonecraft Detective Agency 101 Lovelace identified as Ada Augusta Byron is portrayed by Lily Lesser in the second season of The Frankenstein Chronicles She is employed as an analyst to provide the workings of a life sized humanoid automaton The brass workings of the machine are reminiscent of Babbage s analytical engine Her employment is described as keeping her occupied until she returns to her studies in advanced mathematics 102 Lovelace and Babbage appear as characters in the second season of the ITV series Victoria 2017 Emerald Fennell portrays Lovelace in the episode The Green Eyed Monster 103 The Cardano cryptocurrency platform which was launched in 2017 uses Ada as the name for their cryptocurrency and Lovelace as the smallest sub unit of an Ada 104 Lovelace is the name given to the operating system designed by the character Cameron Howe in Halt and Catch Fire Lovelace is a primary character in the 2019 Big Finish Doctor Who audio play The Enchantress of Numbers starring Tom Baker as the Fourth Doctor and Jane Slavin as his current companion WPC Ann Kelso Lovelace is played by Finty Williams In 2019 Lovelace is a featured character in the play STEM FEMMES by Philadelphia theater company Applied Mechanics 105 2020s Lovelace features as a character in Spyfall Part 2 the second episode of Doctor Who series 12 which first aired on BBC One on 5 January 2020 106 The character was portrayed by Sylvie Briggs alongside characterisations of Charles Babbage and Noor Inayat Khan In 2021 Nvidia named its GPU architecture featured in the RTX 4000 Series Ada Lovelace after her It is also the first Nvidia architecture to feature both a first and last name 107 108 Commemoration Blue plaque to Ada Lovelace in St James s Square London The computer language Ada created on behalf of the United States Department of Defense was named after Lovelace 109 The reference manual for the language was approved on 10 December 1980 and the Department of Defense Military Standard for the language MIL STD 1815 was given the number of the year of her birth In 1981 the Association for Women in Computing inaugurated its Ada Lovelace Award 110 111 Since 1998 the British Computer Society BCS has awarded the Lovelace Medal 112 and in 2008 initiated an annual competition for women students 113 BCSWomen sponsors the Lovelace Colloquium an annual conference for women undergraduates 113 Ada College is a further education college in Tottenham Hale London focused on digital skills 114 Ada Lovelace Day is an annual event celebrated on the second Tuesday of October 115 which began in 2009 116 Its goal is to raise the profile of women in science technology engineering and maths and to create new role models for girls and women in these fields Events have included Wikipedia edit a thons with the aim of improving the representation of women on Wikipedia in terms of articles and editors to reduce unintended gender bias on Wikipedia The Ada Initiative was a non profit organisation dedicated to increasing the involvement of women in the free culture and open source movements 117 The Engineering in Computer Science and Telecommunications College building in Zaragoza University is called the Ada Byron Building 118 The computer centre in the village of Porlock near where Lovelace lived is named after her Ada Lovelace House is a council owned building in Kirkby in Ashfield Nottinghamshire near where Lovelace spent her infancy 119 120 In 2012 a Google Doodle and blog post honoured her on her birthday 4 121 In 2013 Ada Developers Academy was founded and named after her The mission of Ada Developers Academy is to diversify tech by providing women and gender diverse people the skills experience and community support to become professional software developers to change the face of tech 122 On 17 September 2013 the BBC Radio 4 biography programme Great Lives devoted an episode to Ada Lovelace she was sponsored by TV presenter Konnie Huq 123 As of November 2015 all new British passports have included an illustration of Lovelace and Babbage 124 125 In 2017 a Google Doodle honoured her with other women on International Women s Day 126 On 2 February 2018 Satellogic a high resolution Earth observation imaging and analytics company launched a NuSat type micro satellite named in honour of Ada Lovelace 127 In March 2018 The New York Times published a belated obituary for Ada Lovelace 128 On 27 July 2018 Senator Ron Wyden submitted in the United States Senate the designation of 9 October 2018 as National Ada Lovelace Day To honor the life and contributions of Ada Lovelace as a leading woman in science and mathematics The resolution S Res 592 129 was considered and agreed to without amendment and with a preamble by unanimous consent In November 2020 it was announced that Trinity College Dublin whose library had previously held forty busts all of them of men was commissioning four new busts of women one of whom was to be Lovelace 130 External video 9 Millbank Ada Lovelace Sculpture Takes Her Place In Westminster St Edward March 7 2022 In March 2022 a statue of Ada Lovelace was installed at the site of the former Ergon House in the City of Westminster London honoring its scientific history The redevelopment was part of a complex with Imperial Chemical House 131 The statue was sculpted by Etienne and Mary Millner and based on the portrait by Margaret Sarah Carpenter The sculpture was unveiled on International Women s Day 2022 It stands on the 7th floor of Millbank Quarter overlooking the junction of Dean Bradley Street and Horseferry Road 132 In September 2022 Nvidia announced the Ada Lovelace graphics processing unit GPU microarchitecture 133 BicentenaryThe bicentenary of Ada Lovelace s birth was celebrated with a number of events including 134 The Ada Lovelace Bicentenary Lectures on Computability Israel Institute for Advanced Studies 20 December 2015 31 January 2016 135 136 Ada Lovelace Symposium University of Oxford 13 14 October 2015 137 Ada Ada Ada a one woman show about the life and work of Ada Lovelace using an LED dress premiered at Edinburgh International Science Festival on 11 April 2015 138 and continued to touring internationally to promote diversity on STEM at technology conferences 139 140 businesses government and educational organisations 141 142 Special exhibitions were displayed by the Science Museum in London England 143 and the Weston Library 144 part of the Bodleian Library in Oxford England PublicationsLovelace Ada King Ada the Enchantress of Numbers A Selection from the Letters of Lord Byron s Daughter and her Description of the First Computer Mill Valley CA Strawberry Press 1992 ISBN 978 0 912647 09 8 Menabrea Luigi Federico Lovelace Ada 1843 Sketch of the Analytical Engine invented by Charles Babbage with notes by the translator Translated by Ada Lovelace In Richard Taylor ed Scientific Memoirs Vol 3 London Richard and John E Taylor pp 666 731 Publication historySix copies of the 1843 first edition of Sketch of the Analytical Engine with Ada Lovelace s Notes 64 have been located Three are held at Harvard University one at the University of Oklahoma and one at the United States Air Force Academy 145 On 20 July 2018 the sixth copy was sold at auction to an anonymous buyer for 95 000 146 A digital facsimile of one of the copies in the Harvard University Library is available online In December 2016 a letter written by Ada Lovelace was forfeited by Martin Shkreli to the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance for unpaid taxes owed by Shkreli 147 See also Computer programming portal Biography portalAi Da robot Code Debugging the Gender Gap List of pioneers in computer science Timeline of women in science Women in computing Women in STEM fieldsExplanatory notes William King her tutor and William King her future husband were not related Some writers give it as Enchantress of Numbers References Only known photographs of Ada Lovelace in Bodleian Display Bodleian 2015 Retrieved 10 October 2017 a b c Fuegi amp Francis 2003 Phillips Ana Lena November December 2011 Crowdsourcing Gender Equity Ada Lovelace Day and its companion website aims to raise the profile of women in science and technology American Scientist 99 6 463 doi 10 1511 2011 93 463 a b Ada Lovelace honoured by Google doodle The Guardian London 10 December 2012 Retrieved 10 December 2012 Ada Lovelace Biography biography com 6 May 2021 a b c Toole Betty Alexandra 1987 Poetical Science The Byron Journal 15 55 65 doi 10 3828 bj 1987 6 Last leaving England I Personal Lyric and Elegiac Lord Byron 1881 Poetry of Byron bartleby com Retrieved 31 January 2018 Toole 1998 pp 234 235 Toole 1998 pp 156 157 Ventana al Conocimiento 9 December 2015 Ada Lovelace Original and Visionary but No Programmer Fuegi amp Francis 2003 pp 19 25 a b Turney 1972 p 35 a b Stein 1985 p 17 Stein 1985 p 16 Woolley 1999 p 80 Turney 1972 pp 36 38 Woolley 1999 pp 74 77 Turney 1972 p 138 Woolley 1999 p 10 Woolley 1999 pp 85 87 Woolley 1999 p 86 Woolley 1999 p 119 Woolley 1999 pp 120 21 Turney 1972 p 155 Woolley 1999 pp 138 40 a b Turney 1972 p 138 Turney 1972 pp 138 39 a b Turney 1972 p 139 A History of the County of Surrey Volume 3 Parishes East Horsley Retrieved 26 February 2017 Horsley Towers is a large house standing in a park of 300 acres the seat of the Earl of Lovelace The old house was rebuilt about 1745 The present house was built by Sir Charles Barry for Mr Currie on a new site between 1820 and 1829 in Elizabethan style Mr Currie who owned the combined manors 1784 1829 rebuilt most of the houses in the village and restored the church Wright Brian 2015 Andrew Crosse and the mite that shocked the world The life and work of an electrical pioneer Matador p 262 ISBN 978 1 78462 438 5 New York Fifty Years Ago Macon Georgia Telegraph Macon Georgia 9 April 1841 p 3 via NewspaperArchive com Woolley 1999 pp 285 86 Woolley 1999 pp 289 96 Turney 1972 p 159 Turney 1972 p 160 Moore 1961 p 431 Woolley 1999 p 302 Schaffer Simon Babbage s Dancer the hypermedia research centre Archived from the original on 28 June 2003 Retrieved 4 August 2017 Woolley 1999 pp 340 42 Woolley 1999 pp 336 37 Woolley 1999 p 361 Stein 1985 pp 28 30 Thomas J Misa Charles Babbage Ada Lovelace and the Bernoulli Numbers in Ada s Legacy Cultures of Computing from the Victorian to the Digital Age edited by Robin Hammerman and Andrew L Russell ACM Books 2015 pp 18 20 doi 10 1145 2809523 Stein 1985 p 82 Toole 1998 p 99 Toole 1998 pp 91 100 December 1852 1a MARYLEBONE Augusta Ada Lovelace Register of Deaths GRO Baum 1986 pp 99 100 Woolley 1999 p 370 Woolley 1999 p 369 Woolley 1999 p 198 Woolley 1999 pp 232 33 Woolley 1999 p 305 Woolley 1999 pp 310 14 Woolley 1999 pp 315 17 Woolley 1999 p 335 Toole 1998 pp 36 38 a b Wolfram Stephen 10 December 2015 Untangling the Tale of Ada Lovelace Then on Sept 9 Babbage wrote to Ada expressing his admiration for her and famously describing her as Enchantress of Number and my dear and much admired Interpreter Yes despite what s often quoted he wrote Number not Numbers Huskey Velma R Huskey Harry D 1980 Lady Lovelace and Charles Babbage Annals of the History of Computing 2 4 299 329 doi 10 1109 MAHC 1980 10042 S2CID 2640048 Menabrea 1843 Woolley 1999 p 265 Woolley 1999 p 267 a b Woolley 1999 p 307 a b c Sketch of The Analytical Engine with notes upon the Memoir by the Translator Switzerland fourmilab ch October 1842 Retrieved 28 March 2014 a b Hammerman Robin Russell Andrew L eds 2015 Ada s Legacy Cultures of Computing from the Victorian to the Digital Age Morgan amp Claypool doi 10 1145 2809523 ISBN 978 1 97000 149 5 S2CID 62018931 The Babbage Engine Computer History Museum 2008 Gleick J 2011 The Information A History a Theory a Flood London Fourth Estate pp 116 118 Turing Alan 2004 Stuart Shieber ed Computing Machinery and Intelligence The Turing Test Verbal Behavior as the Hallmark of Intelligence MIT Press 67 104 ISBN 978 0 262 26542 3 Natale Simone Henrickson Leah 4 March 2022 The Lovelace effect Perceptions of creativity in machines New Media amp Society 146144482210772 doi 10 1177 14614448221077278 ISSN 1461 4448 S2CID 247267997 Archived from the original on 27 January 2022 Retrieved 9 March 2022 Alt URL Woolley 1999 pp 277 80 Green Christopher 2001 Charles Babbage the Analytical Engine and the Possibility of a 19th Century Cognitive Science York University Retrieved 2 September 2018 Simonite Tom 24 March 2009 Short Sharp Science Celebrating Ada Lovelace the world s first programmer New Scientist Archived from the original on 27 March 2009 Parker Matt 2014 Things to Make and Do in the Fourth Dimension Farrar Straus amp Giroux p 261 ISBN 978 0 374 27565 5 Kim amp Toole 1999 Bowden B V ed 1953 Faster than Thought A Symposium on Digital Computing Machines London Pitman OCLC 1053355 OL 13581728M Toole 1998 pp 175 82 Lovelace Ada Menabrea Luigi 1842 Sketch of the Analytical Engine invented by Charles Babbage Esq Scientific Memoirs Richard Taylor 694 Hooper Rowan 16 October 2012 Ada Lovelace My brain is more than merely mortal New Scientist Retrieved 16 October 2012 Isaacson Walter 18 September 2014 Walter Isaacson on the Women of ENIAC Fortune Toole 1998 pp 2 3 14 Woolley 1999 pp 272 77 Kent Leo 17 September 2012 The 10 year plan to build Babbage s Analytical Engine Humans Invent Archived from the original on 14 October 2012 Retrieved 16 October 2012 Lardner D July 1834 Babbage s calculating engine Edinburgh Review 263 327 quote In WikiSource and also reprinted in The works of Charles Babbage Vol 2 p 119ff Retrieved 11 October 2022 Bromley Allan G 1990 Difference and Analytical Engines PDF In Aspray William ed Computing Before Computers Ames Iowa State University Press pp 59 98 ISBN 0 8138 0047 1 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 p 89 Collier Bruce 1970 The Little Engines That Could ve The Calculating Machines of Charles Babbage PhD Harvard University Retrieved 18 December 2015 Chapter 3 Kim amp Toole 1999 p 76 Bromley Allan G July September 1982 Charles Babbage s Analytical Engine 1838 PDF IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 4 3 197 217 doi 10 1109 mahc 1982 10028 S2CID 2285332 Archived from the original PDF on 26 February 2021 Retrieved 25 December 2015 p 197 Stein Dorothy K 1984 Lady Lovelace s Notes Technical Text and Cultural Context Victorian Studies 28 1 33 67 p 34 Swade Doron 12 May 2008 Charles Babbage and Difference Engine No 2 Speech Talks at Google Mountain View CA Talks at Google via YouTube Archived from the original on 22 November 2021 Retrieved 29 November 2018 Wolfram Stephen 2016 Idea Makers Personal Perspectives on the Lives amp Ideas of Some Notable People Wolfram Media pp 45 98 ISBN 978 1 57955 003 5 Byron George Gordon Poems of the Separation The Works of Lord Byron via Wikisource Klein Alvin 13 May 1984 Theatre in review A lusty Byron in Rockland The New York Times ProQuest 425075032 Plant Sadie 1995 The Future Looms Weaving Women and Cybernetics In Featherstone Mike Burrows Roger eds Cyberspace Cyberbodies Cyberpunk Cultures of Technological Embodiment SAGE Publications in association with Theory Culture amp Society School of Human Studies University of Teesside pp 45 64 ISBN 978 1 84860 914 3 Holden Stephen 26 February 1999 Conceiving Ada Calling Byron s Daughter Inventor of a Computer The New York Times ProQuest 2235172968 Leithauser Brad 8 August 2013 Tom Stoppard s Arcadia at Twenty The New Yorker Profile Gale Edwards 1994 Director of Arcadia for the Sydney Theatre Company Straub Peter 5 June 2005 Byron s heir Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 10 November 2013 Hurwitt Sam Ada and the Memory Engine KQED Archived from the original on 6 September 2015 Costello Elizabeth 22 October 2015 Ada and the Memory Engine Love by the Numbers SF Weekly Archived from the original on 6 April 2016 Retrieved 14 November 2015 Doctorow Cory 5 October 2009 Comic about Ada Lovelace and Charles Babbage BoingBoing Retrieved 10 October 2014 Moyer Edward 13 April 2012 Can Jane Austen steampunk spark girls science fire Retrieved 26 February 2017 Lily Lesser IMDb Retrieved 29 November 2018 The Green Eyed Monster IMDb 14 January 2018 Cardano ADA is now available on Coinbase Coinbase 19 March 2021 Archived from the original on 20 September 2022 Retrieved 5 April 2021 The blockchain s native token ADA is named after the 19th century mathematician Ada Lovelace Reinckens Mina STEM FEMMES centers women in science with theater www broadstreetreview com Retrieved 24 February 2021 Dawson Nick 13 January 2020 Historical computing pioneer Ada Lovelace from Hinckley stars in BBC s Doctor Who Leicester Mercury Retrieved 14 December 2020 Hampton Jaime 20 September 2022 Nvidia Introduces New Ada Lovelace GPU Architecture OVX Systems Omniverse Cloud HPCwire Retrieved 20 October 2022 Aaron Klotz 20 September 2022 GeForce RTX 4090 RTX 4080 GPU Roundup Tom s Hardware Retrieved 20 October 2022 Mrs Augusta Ada King Countess of Lovelace IT History Society 21 December 2015 Archived from the original on 15 June 2018 Retrieved 21 December 2017 Webster Valerie J 2000 Awards Honors amp Prizes United States and Canada Gale Group ISBN 978 0 7876 3401 8 Association for Women in Computing Retrieved 1 June 2017 Lovelace Lecture amp Medal BCS Archived from the original on 26 August 2006 a b BCSWomen Lovelace Colloquium UK Davis Anna 10 March 2016 New college in north London will boost women in tech sector London Evening Standard Retrieved 16 March 2016 Ada Lovelace Day Celebrating the achievements of women in science technology engineering and maths findingada com Retrieved 27 March 2023 Ada Lovelace Day We should never forget the first computer programmer The Independent 8 October 2018 Archived from the original on 8 October 2018 Retrieved 27 February 2019 Aurora Valerie 13 December 2011 An update on the Ada Initiative LWN retrieved 5 October 2012 Ada Byron Building Town centre landmark renovated to boost Kirkby s economy Mansfield and Ashfield Chad 11 May 2017 Retrieved 29 November 2018 Ada Lovelace House Is Officially Opened Woodhead Construction 18 October 2017 Retrieved 29 November 2018 Honouring computing s 1843 visionary Lady Ada Lovelace Google Doodles 9 December 2012 Retrieved 10 December 2012 History Ada Developers Academy Retrieved 23 February 2021 Series 31 Konnie Huq on Ada Lovelace Great Lives BBC Radio 4 Introducing the new UK passport design PDF HM Passport Office Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 20 April 2018 Office All photographs HM Passport 3 November 2015 New UK passport design in pictures The Guardian International Women s Day 2017 Google Doodles 8 March 2017 Retrieved 8 March 2017 Clark Stephen 2 February 2018 China lofts earthquake research craft with cluster of smaller satellites Spaceflight Now Retrieved 4 February 2018 Miller Claire Cain 8 March 2018 A gifted mathematician who is now recognized as the first computer programmer The New York Times ProQuest 2611777591 Retrieved 25 January 2023 Ron Wyden 25 July 2018 S Res 592 115th Congress 2017 2018 A resolution designating October 9 2018 as National Ada Lovelace Day and honoring the life and legacy of Ada Lovelace the first computer programmer congress gov Retrieved 9 October 2018 Burns Sarah 26 November 2020 Four new statues to end Trinity Long Room s men only image The Irish Times Retrieved 29 November 2020 Millbank amp Ergon House Eric Parry Retrieved 30 November 2022 Public Art Proposal for Ergon House For approval by Westminster City Council PDF Planning Alerts Document Repository Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 7 March 2022 Sam Machkovec 20 September 2022 Nvidia s Ada Lovelace GPU generation 1 599 for RTX 4090 899 and up for 4080 Ars Technica Ada Lovelace Day Findingada com Archived from the original on 28 December 2015 via Internet Archive Ada Lovelace Bicentenary Lectures on Computability Ada Lovelace Day FindingAda com 31 January 2016 Retrieved 11 January 2016 The Ada Lovelace Bicentenary Lectures on Computability Israel Institute for Advanced Studies 31 January 2016 Retrieved 11 January 2016 Ada Lovelace Symposium Celebrating 200 Years of a Computer Visionary Podcasts UK University of Oxford Retrieved 11 January 2016 Brochure Downloads Edinburgh International Science Festival Retrieved 9 October 2018 Busquets Jordi Pueyo 19 April 2018 4 400 bombillas para la silenciada historia de la mujer que escribio la primera app en 1843 4 400 light bulbs for the silenced story of the woman who wrote the first app in 1843 El Pais in Spanish ISSN 1134 6582 Retrieved 9 October 2018 Gorey Colm 11 October 2016 Meet the woman bringing the magic of Ada Lovelace to the masses Silicon Republic Retrieved 9 October 2018 Ada Ada Ada adatheshow com 2016 Scratchweb 16 May 2017 Ada Ada Ada retrieved 9 October 2018 Ada Lovelace UK Science Museum London Retrieved 11 January 2016 Bodleian Libraries celebrates Ada Lovelace s 200th birthday with free display and Wikipedia editathons UK Bodleian Libraries Retrieved 11 January 2016 Sketch of the analytical engine invented by Charles Babbage Esq Harvard University Library Retrieved 9 April 2019 Rare book by world s first computer programmer sells for 95 000 mooreallen co uk 23 July 2018 Archived from the original on 10 October 2018 Retrieved 9 April 2019 Mangan Dan 23 April 2018 Fight brews over Shkreli s Wu Tang album as pharma bro gets banned by securities industry CNBC Retrieved 23 June 2020 General and cited sourcesBaum Joan 1986 The Calculating Passion of Ada Byron Archon ISBN 978 0 208 02119 9 Elwin Malcolm 1975 Lord Byron s Family John Murray Essinger James 2014 Ada s algorithm How Lord Byron s daughter Ada Lovelace launched the digital age Melville House Publishing ISBN 978 1 61219 408 0 Fuegi J Francis J October December 2003 Lovelace amp Babbage and the creation of the 1843 notes PDF Annals of the History of Computing 25 4 16 26 doi 10 1109 MAHC 2003 1253887 S2CID 40077111 archived from the original PDF on 15 February 2020 Hammerman Robin Russell Andrew L 2015 Ada s Legacy Cultures of Computing from the Victorian to the Digital Age Association for Computing Machinery and Morgan amp Claypool doi 10 1145 2809523 ISBN 978 1 970001 51 8 S2CID 62018931 Isaacson Walter 2014 The Innovators How a Group of Hackers Geniuses and Geeks Created the Digital Revolution Simon amp Schuster Kim Eugene Toole Betty Alexandra 1999 Ada and the First Computer Scientific American 280 5 76 81 Bibcode 1999SciAm 280e 76E doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0599 76 Lewis Judith S July August 1995 Princess of Parallelograms and her daughter Math and gender in the nineteenth century English aristocracy Women s Studies International Forum 18 4 387 394 doi 10 1016 0277 5395 95 80030 S Marchand Leslie 1971 Byron A Portrait John Murray Menabrea Luigi Federico 1843 Sketch of the Analytical Engine Invented by Charles Babbage Scientific Memoirs 3 archived from the original on 15 September 2008 retrieved 29 August 2008 With notes upon the memoir by the translator Miller Clair Cain Ada Lovelace 1815 1852 New York Times 8 March 2018 Moore Doris Langley 1977 Ada Countess of Lovelace John Murray ISBN 0 7195 3384 8 Moore Doris Langley 1961 The Late Lord Byron Philadelphia Lippincott ISBN 978 0 06 013013 8 OCLC 358063 Stein Dorothy 1985 Ada A Life and a Legacy MIT Press Series in the History of Computing Cambridge MA The MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 19242 2 Toole Betty Alexandra 1992 Ada the Enchantress of Numbers A Selection from the Letters of Ada Lovelace and her Description of the First Computer Strawberry Press ISBN 978 0 912647 09 8 Toole Betty Alexandra 1998 Ada the Enchantress of Numbers Prophet of the Computer Age Strawberry Press ISBN 978 0 912647 18 0 Turney Catherine 1972 Byron s Daughter A Biography of Elizabeth Medora Leigh Scribner ISBN 978 0 684 12753 8 Woolley Benjamin February 1999 The Bride of Science Romance Reason and Byron s Daughter AU Pan Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 72436 1 retrieved 7 April 2013 Woolley Benjamin February 2002 1999 The Bride of Science Romance Reason and Byron s Daughter McGraw Hill Ryerson ISBN 978 0 07 138860 3 retrieved 7 April 2013 Further readingJennifer Chiaverini 2017 Enchantress of Numbers Dutton 426 pp Christopher Hollings Ursula Martin and Adrian Rice 2018 Ada Lovelace The Making of a Computer Scientist Bodleian Library 114 pp Miranda Seymour 2018 In Byron s Wake The Turbulent Lives of Byron s Wife and Daughter Annabella Milbanke and Ada Lovelace Pegasus 547 pp Jenny Uglow 22 November 2018 Stepping Out of Byron s Shadow The New York Review of Books vol LXV no 18 pp 30 32 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ada Lovelace Wikiquote has quotations related to Ada Lovelace Ada s Army gets set to rewrite history at Inspirefest 2018 by Luke Maxwell 4 August 2018 Works by Ada Lovelace at Open Library Untangling the Tale of Ada Lovelace by Stephen Wolfram December 2015 Ada Lovelace Founder of Scientific Computing Women in Science SDSC Archived from the original on 25 December 2018 Retrieved 17 August 2001 Ada Byron Lady Lovelace Biographies of Women Mathematicians Agnes Scott College Papers of the Noel Byron and Lovelace families UK Archives hub Archived from the original archive on 24 April 2012 Ada Lovelace amp The Analytical Engine Babbage Computer History Ada amp the Analytical Engine Educause Archived from the original archive on 10 August 2009 Ada Lovelace Countess of Controversy Tech TV vault G4 TV Archived from the original on 25 December 2018 Retrieved 25 February 2007 Ada Lovelace streaming In Our Time audio UK BBC Radio 4 6 March 2008 Ada Lovelace s Notes and The Ladies Diary Yale The fascinating story Ada Lovelace Sabine Allaeys via YouTube Ada Lovelace the World s First Computer Programmer on Science and Religion Maria Popova Brain 10 December 2013 How Ada Lovelace Lord Byron s Daughter Became the World s First Computer Programmer Maria Popova Brain 10 December 2014 O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Ada Lovelace MacTutor History of Mathematics archive University of St Andrews Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ada Lovelace amp oldid 1155127602, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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