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Jean Bartik

Jean Bartik (née Betty Jean Jennings; December 27, 1924 – March 23, 2011) was one of the original six programmers for the ENIAC computer.

Jean Bartik
Born
Betty Jean Jennings

(1924-12-27)December 27, 1924
DiedMarch 23, 2011(2011-03-23) (aged 86)
Alma mater
SpouseWilliam Bartik
AwardsComputer Pioneer Award of the IEEE Computer Society (2008)
Engineering career
Employer(s)
ProjectsENIAC
Awards

Bartik studied mathematics in school then began work at the University of Pennsylvania, first manually calculating ballistics trajectories and then using ENIAC to do so. The other five ENIAC programmers were Betty Holberton, Ruth Teitelbaum, Kathleen Antonelli, Marlyn Meltzer, and Frances Spence. Bartik and her colleagues developed and codified many of the fundamentals of programming while working on the ENIAC, since it was the first computer of its kind.

After her work on ENIAC, Bartik went on to work on BINAC and UNIVAC, and spent time at a variety of technical companies as a writer, manager, engineer and programmer. She spent her later years as a real estate agent and died in 2011 from congestive heart failure complications.

Content-management framework Drupal's default theme, Bartik, is named in her honor.[1]

Early life and education edit

Born Betty Jean Jennings in Gentry County, Missouri in 1924,[2] she was the sixth of seven children. Her father, William Smith Jennings (1893–1971) was from Alanthus Grove, where he was a schoolteacher as well as a farmer. Her mother, Lula May Spainhower (1887–1988) was from Alanthus. Jennings had three older brothers, William (January 10, 1915) Robert (March 15, 1918); and Raymond (January 23, 1922); two older sisters, Emma (August 11, 1916) and Lulu (August 22, 1919), and one younger sister, Mable (December 15, 1928).[3][4][5]

In her childhood, she would ride on horseback to visit her grandmother, who bought the young girl a newspaper to read every day and became a role model for the rest of her life.[2] She began her education at a local one-room school, and gained local attention for her softball skill. In order to attend high school, she lived with her older sister in the neighboring town, where the school was located, and then began to drive every day despite being only 14. She graduated from Stanberry High School in 1941, aged 16.[6][7][8] She was given the title of salutatorian on her graduation.[9]

She attended Northwest Missouri State Teachers College now known Northwest Missouri State University, majoring in mathematics with a minor in English and graduated in 1945.[10] Jennings was awarded the only mathematics degree in her class.[3] Although she had originally intended to study journalism, she decided to change to mathematics because she had a bad relationship with her adviser.[11] Later in her life, she earned a master's degree in English at the University of Pennsylvania in 1967 and was awarded an honorary doctorate degree from Northwest Missouri State University in 2002.[3][12]

Career edit

 
Programmers Betty Jean Jennings (left) and Fran Bilas (right) operate the ENIAC's main control panel.

In 1945, the United States Army was recruiting mathematicians from universities to aid in the war effort; despite a warning by her adviser that she would be "a cog in a wheel" with the Army, and encouragement to become a mathematics teacher instead, Bartik decided to become a human computer. Bartik's calculus professor encouraged her to take the job at University of Pennsylvania because they had a differential analyzer.[8][11]

She applied to both IBM and the University of Pennsylvania at the age of 20. Although rejected by IBM, Jennings was hired by the University of Pennsylvania to work for Army Ordnance at Aberdeen Proving Ground, calculating ballistics trajectories by hand.[6][13]

While working there, Bartik met her future husband, William Bartik, who was an engineer working on a Pentagon project at the University of Pennsylvania. They married in December 1946.[11][13]

When the Electronic Numeric Integrator and Computer (ENIAC) was developed for the purpose of calculating the ballistic trajectories human computers like Bartik had been doing by hand, she applied to become a part of the project and was eventually selected to be one of its first programmers. Bartik was asked to set up problems for the ENIAC without being taught any techniques.[14]

Bartik and five other women (Betty Holberton, Marlyn Wescoff, Kathleen McNulty, Ruth Teitelbaum, and Frances Spence) were chosen to be the main programmers for the ENIAC.[8] They were known as the "Sensational Six."[15] Many other women who are often unrecognized contributed to the ENIAC during a period of wartime male labor shortage.[16]

Bartik, who became the co-lead programmer (with Betty Holberton), and the other four original programmers became extremely adept at running the ENIAC; with no manual to rely on, the group reviewed diagrams of the device, interviewed the engineers who had built it, and used this information to teach themselves the skills they needed.[11] Initially, they were not allowed to see the ENIAC's hardware at all since it was still classified and they had not received security clearance; they had to learn how to program the machine solely through studying schematic diagrams.[17] The six-woman team was also not initially given space to work together, so they found places to work where they could, in abandoned classrooms and fraternity houses.[11]

While the six women worked on ENIAC, they developed subroutines, nesting, and other fundamental programming techniques, and arguably invented the discipline of programming digital computers.[6][13][18] Bartik and the other ENIAC female programmers learned to physically modify the machine, moving switches and rerouting cables, in order to program it.[17][18]

In addition to performing the original ballistic trajectories they were hired to compute, the six female programmers soon became operators on the Los Alamos nuclear calculations, and generally expanded the programming repertoire of the machine.[11] Bartik's programming partner on the important trajectory program for the military that would prove that the ENIAC worked to specification was Betty Holberton, known at the time as Betty Snyder. Bartik and Holberton's program was chosen to introduce the ENIAC to the public and larger scientific community. That demonstration occurred on February 15, 1946, and was a tremendous success.[15] The ENIAC proved that it operated faster than the Mark I, a well known electromechanical machine at Harvard, and also showed that the work that would take a "human computer" 40 hours to complete could be done in 20 seconds.[12][8]

Bartik described the first public demonstration of the ENIAC in 1946:

The day ENIAC was introduced to the world was one of the most exciting days of my life. The demonstration was fabulous. ENIAC calculated the trajectory faster than it took the bullet to travel. We handed out copies of the calculations as they were run. ENIAC was 1,000 times faster than any machine that existed prior to that time. With its flashing lights, it also was an impressive machine illustrating graphically how fast it was actually computing.[11]

The public demonstration was a success, but most of the congratulations on its turnout were given to its engineers, John Mauchly and John Eckert.[8] Following the demonstration, in March 1946, she received a front-page feature in the Gentry County-based Stanberry Headlight, where it was written that, "[t]o acquaintances here of Miss Jennings, it is no great surprise to know that she is holding such an important position", due to her academic esteems.[9]

Bartik was later asked to form and lead a group of programmers to convert the ENIAC into a stored program computer, working closely with John von Neumann, Dick Clippinger,[19] and Adele Goldstine.[12]

Bartik converted the ENIAC into a stored program computer by March 1948.[12][8] As head of this process, Bartik was charged with the conversion that allowed the ENIAC to be turned into a rudimentary stored program computer to assist with Clippinger's wind tunnel programs, which allowed the ENIAC to operate more quickly, efficiently, and accurately.[8]

Letters between Bartik and Adele Goldstine were discovered by authors Thomas Haigh and Mark Priestley during the time of the project, as well as the fact that much of the 60-order code[20] was in Bartik's handwriting.[21]

After the end of the war, Bartik went on to work with the ENIAC designers John Eckert and John Mauchly,[14] and helped them develop the BINAC and UNIVAC I computers.[6][13] BINAC was the first computer to use magnetic tape instead of punch cards to store data and the first computer to utilize the twin unit concept. BINAC was purchased by Northrop Aircraft to guide the Snark missile, but the BINAC proved to be too large for their purposes. However, according to a Northrop Aircraft programmer, claims that the BINAC did not work once it was moved to Northrop Aircraft were erroneous and the BINAC was working well into the mid-1950s.[8] Besides BINAC, Jean's more important work involved her responsibilities in designing the UNIVAC's logic circuits among other UNIVAC programming and design tasks.[6] Bartik also co-programmed with her life-long friend Betty Holberton the first generative programming system (SORT/MERGE) for a computer.[7] Recalling her time working with Eckert and Mauchly on these projects, she described their close group of computer engineers as a "technical Camelot".[13][8][22][12]

In the early 1950s, once the Eckert-Mauchly Corporation was sold to Remington Rand, Bartik went on to help train on how to program and use the UNIVAC for the first six UNIVACs sold, including the programmers at the United States Census Bureau (first UNIVAC sold) and Atomic Energy Commission.[8] Later, Bartik moved to Philadelphia when her husband, William (Bill) Bartik, took a job with Remington Rand. Due to a company policy at the time about husbands and wives working together, Jean was asked to resign from the company. Between 1951 and 1954, prior to her first child's birth, Jean did mostly freelance programming assignments for John Mauchly and was a helpmate to her husband. Once her son was born, Jean walked away from her career in computing to concentrate on raising a family, during which time she had two other children with her husband.[6][8][22][12][7] It was sometime during this 1950s period that Bartik began going by the name "Jean" rather than her birth first name "Betty", which is what she had been known as during her ENIAC, UNIVAC and Remington-Rand years.

Even though Bartik played an integral part in developing ENIAC, her work at University of Pennsylvania and on the ENIAC remained obscure until her pioneering work was documented by Kathy Kleiman and the ENIAC Programmers Project. In 1986, Kleiman first met and identified the women who worked with the ENIAC.[23] Kleiman worked with PBS producer David Roland to record their oral histories and with documentary producers Jon Palfreman and Kate McMahon to produce the award-winning documentary The Computers (premiere 2014).[24][25] The women's work was also popularized by columnist Tom Petzinger in articles for the Wall Street Journal on Bartik and Holberton in 1996.[8][22][12][26][27]

Later life edit

After getting her master's degree from the University of Pennsylvania in 1967 and making the decision to divorce her husband, Bartik joined the Auerbach Corporation writing and editing technical reports on minicomputers.[6][11] Bartik remained with Auerbach for eight years, then moved among positions with a variety of other companies for the rest of her career as a manager, writer, and engineer.[6] Jean Bartik and William Bartik divorced by 1968.[13] Bartik ultimately retired from the computing industry in 1986 when her final employer, Data Decisions (a publication of Ziff-Davis), was sold; Bartik spent the following 25 years as a real estate agent.

Bartik died from congestive heart failure in a Poughkeepsie, New York nursing home on March 23, 2011. She was 86.[8][22][12][7]

Legacy edit

Starting in 1996, once the importance of their role in the development of computing was re-discovered, Bartik along with Betty Holberton and Bartik's other friend of over 60 years Kathleen Antonelli (ENIAC programmer and wife of ENIAC co-inventor John Mauchly) began to finally receive the acknowledgement and honors for their pioneering work in the early field of computing. Bartik and Antonelli became invited speakers both at home and abroad to share their experiences working with the ENIAC, BINAC and UNIVAC. Bartik especially went on to receive many honors and awards for her pioneering role programming the ENIAC, BINAC and UNIVAC, the latter of which helped to launch the commercial computer industry, and for turning the ENIAC into the world's first stored program computer.

In 2010, a documentary Top Secret Rosies: The Female "Computers" of WWII was released. The film centered around in-depth interviews of three of the six women programmers, focusing on the commendable patriotic contributions they made during World War II. The ENIAC was responsible for calculating bullet trajectories during the war.[10]

The ENIAC team is also the subject of the 2013 short documentary film The Computers. This documentary, created by Kathy Kleiman and the ENIAC Programmers Project,[28] combines actual footage of the ENIAC team from the 1940s with interviews with the female team members as they reflect on their time working together on the ENIAC. The Computers is the first part of a three-part documentary series, titled Great Unsung Women of Computing: The Computers, The Coders, and The Future Makers.[29]

Bartik wrote her autobiography Pioneer Programmer: Jean Jennings Bartik and the Computer that Changed the World[30] prior to her death in 2011 with the help of long-time colleagues, Dr. Jon T. Rickman and Kim D. Todd. The autobiography was published in 2013 by Truman State Press to positive reviews.

One of the best[according to whom?] pieces of advice Bartik ever received was: "Don't ever let anyone tell you that you can't do something because they think you can't. You can do anything, achieve anything, if you think you can and you educate yourself to succeed."[31] Encouraging girls and women to follow their dreams, she said, "If my life has proved anything, it is that women (and girls) should never be afraid to take risks and try new things."[12]

The Jean Jennings Bartik Computing Museum at Northwest Missouri State University in Maryville, Missouri is dedicated to the history of computing and Bartik's career.[32]

The default theme in the content management framework Drupal, was named Bartik for over a decade. It was named in her honor.[1]

Awards and honors edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Bartik". Drupal. February 22, 2010. Retrieved November 16, 2015.
  2. ^ a b Kathuria, Charvi (December 26, 2017). "Tech Women: Meet Jean Jennings Bartik, ENIAC Programmer". shethepeople. Retrieved August 23, 2022.
  3. ^ a b c . Computer History Museum. Archived from the original on March 11, 2016. Retrieved October 31, 2016.
  4. ^ "Bartik biography". www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk. Retrieved November 19, 2017.
  5. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on April 19, 2011.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i O'Connor, J. J.; Robertson, E. F. . www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk. Archived from the original on March 22, 2017. Retrieved June 26, 2016.
  7. ^ a b c d Reed, Jennifer (2016). Computer scientist Jean Bartik. Minneapolis. ISBN 978-1512413106. OCLC 938387267.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Bartik, Jean Jennings (2013). Rickman, Jon T.; Todd, Kim D. (eds.). Pioneer programmer: Jean Jennings Bartik and the computer that changed the world. Kirksville, Missouri: Truman State University Press. ISBN 9781612480862. OCLC 854828754.
  9. ^ a b Staff writer (March 14, 1946). "Betty Jennings in Scientific Work". The Stanberry Headlight: 1 – via Newspapers.com.
  10. ^ a b Smith, Gina (December 3, 2007). "Unsung innovators: Jean Bartik, ENIAC programmer". Computerworld. Retrieved October 22, 2022.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h Barkley Fritz, W. (1996). "The Women of ENIAC". IEEE Annals of the History of Computing. 18 (3): 13–28. doi:10.1109/85.511940.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i D., Todd, Kim (2015). Jean Jennings Bartik computer pioneer. Kirksville, Missouri. ISBN 978-1612481456. OCLC 935185503.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ a b c d e f Lohr, Steve (April 7, 2011). "Jean Bartik, Software Pioneer, Dies at 86". The New York Times. Retrieved April 8, 2011.
  14. ^ a b Beyer, Kurt (2009). Grace Hopper and the Invention of the Information Age. MIT Press. pp. 178–181. ISBN 978-0-262-01310-9.
  15. ^ a b Juavinett, Ashley (October 6, 2017). "5 facts about Jean Bartik, expert programmer of the world's first computer". Massive Science. Retrieved August 23, 2022.
  16. ^ Abbate, Janet (2012). Recoding gender : women's changing participation in computing. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press. ISBN 9780262018067. OCLC 813929041.
  17. ^ a b c "ENIAC Programmers". WITI Hall of Fame. Women in Technology International (WITI). Retrieved April 22, 2014.
  18. ^ a b Walter, Isaacson (October 6, 2015). The innovators: how a group of hackers, geniuses, and geeks created the digital revolution (First Simon & Schuster hardcover ed.). New York. ISBN 978-1476708706. OCLC 876012030.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  19. ^ "Richard F. Clippinger: Award Recipient". IEEE Computer Society. April 25, 2018. Retrieved June 8, 2022.
  20. ^ Clippinger, R. F. (1948). . U. S. Army. Archived from the original on March 21, 2021. Retrieved September 10, 2021. The converter ... has already been used to modify the 60-order code
  21. ^ Haigh, Thomas; Priestley, Mark; Rope, Crispin (2018). ENIAC in Action: making and remaking the modern computer. [S.l.]: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0262535175. OCLC 1002291949.
  22. ^ a b c d Reed, Jennifer (2016). Computer Scientist Jean Bartik (STEM Trailblazer Bios). Lerner Publications. ISBN 978-1512413106.
  23. ^ Kleiman, Kathy (April 17, 2018). "These 6 pioneering women helped create modern computers". ideas.ted.com. Retrieved May 9, 2023.
  24. ^ "ENIAC Programmers Project - Documentary Info". ENIAC Programmers Project. Retrieved May 9, 2023.
  25. ^ Muíneacháin, Conn Ó (March 2, 2018). "Podcast: Kathy Kleiman on the Women who Invented Coding [Audio]". Blacknight Solutions. Retrieved December 6, 2021.
  26. ^ "ENIAC Programmers Keynote at WITI New York Network Meeting 1998 presented by Jean Bartik, Kathleen Antonelli in Women in Technology International on 02/23/1998". Open Transcripts. February 23, 1998. Retrieved May 9, 2023.
  27. ^ Brown, David Scott (June 3, 2016). "The Women of ENIAC: Programming Pioneers". Techopedia. Retrieved May 9, 2023.
  28. ^ "Home". eniacprogrammers.org.
  29. ^ "Great Unsung Women of Computing: The Computers, The Coders, and The Future Makers". September 21, 2018.
  30. ^ Bartik, Jean Jennings; Bartik, Jean; Rickman, Jon T.; Todd, Kim D. (2013). Pioneer Programmer: Jean Jennings Bartik and the Computer that Changed the World. Truman State University Press. ISBN 978-1612480862.
  31. ^ Truman State University Press[dead link]
  32. ^ "Jean Jennings Bartik Computing Museum". Northwest Missouri State University. Retrieved June 27, 2016.
  33. ^ . Computer History Museum. Archived from the original on March 11, 2016. Retrieved May 23, 2013.
  34. ^ Kleiman, Kathy. "Jean Bartik: the untold story of a remarkable ENIAC programmer". Official Google Blog. Retrieved June 27, 2016.
  35. ^ a b "Betty Jean Jennings Bartik". IEEE Computer Society Awards. IEEE Computer Society. Retrieved April 22, 2014.

External links edit

External videos
  Jean Bartik and the ENIAC Women, "Computer History Museum", November 10, 2010
  Jean Jennings Bartik - ENIAC Pioneer, Computer History Museum, October 22, 2008
  • ENIAC Programmers documentary
  • Oral history from Bartik at the UNIVAC conference, Charles Babbage Institute
  • Jean Jennings Bartik Computing Museum at NWMSU
  • Bartik receives the Computer Pioneer Award

jean, bartik, elizabeth, jean, jennings, redirects, here, confused, with, elizabeth, joan, jennings, elizabeth, jennings, née, betty, jean, jennings, december, 1924, march, 2011, original, programmers, eniac, computer, bornbetty, jean, jennings, 1924, december. Elizabeth Jean Jennings redirects here Not to be confused with Elizabeth Joan Jennings or Elizabeth Jennings Jean Bartik nee Betty Jean Jennings December 27 1924 March 23 2011 was one of the original six programmers for the ENIAC computer Jean BartikBornBetty Jean Jennings 1924 12 27 December 27 1924Alanthus Grove Missouri USDiedMarch 23 2011 2011 03 23 aged 86 Alma materNorthwest Missouri State Teachers College B S 1945 University of Pennsylvania Master s 1967 SpouseWilliam BartikAwardsComputer Pioneer Award of the IEEE Computer Society 2008 Engineering careerEmployer s University of PennsylvaniaEckert Mauchly Computer CorporationAuerbach PublishersData DecisionsProjectsENIACAwardsWITI Hall of FameComputer History Museum Fellow 2008 Bartik studied mathematics in school then began work at the University of Pennsylvania first manually calculating ballistics trajectories and then using ENIAC to do so The other five ENIAC programmers were Betty Holberton Ruth Teitelbaum Kathleen Antonelli Marlyn Meltzer and Frances Spence Bartik and her colleagues developed and codified many of the fundamentals of programming while working on the ENIAC since it was the first computer of its kind After her work on ENIAC Bartik went on to work on BINAC and UNIVAC and spent time at a variety of technical companies as a writer manager engineer and programmer She spent her later years as a real estate agent and died in 2011 from congestive heart failure complications Content management framework Drupal s default theme Bartik is named in her honor 1 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Later life 4 Legacy 5 Awards and honors 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEarly life and education editBorn Betty Jean Jennings in Gentry County Missouri in 1924 2 she was the sixth of seven children Her father William Smith Jennings 1893 1971 was from Alanthus Grove where he was a schoolteacher as well as a farmer Her mother Lula May Spainhower 1887 1988 was from Alanthus Jennings had three older brothers William January 10 1915 Robert March 15 1918 and Raymond January 23 1922 two older sisters Emma August 11 1916 and Lulu August 22 1919 and one younger sister Mable December 15 1928 3 4 5 In her childhood she would ride on horseback to visit her grandmother who bought the young girl a newspaper to read every day and became a role model for the rest of her life 2 She began her education at a local one room school and gained local attention for her softball skill In order to attend high school she lived with her older sister in the neighboring town where the school was located and then began to drive every day despite being only 14 She graduated from Stanberry High School in 1941 aged 16 6 7 8 She was given the title of salutatorian on her graduation 9 She attended Northwest Missouri State Teachers College now known Northwest Missouri State University majoring in mathematics with a minor in English and graduated in 1945 10 Jennings was awarded the only mathematics degree in her class 3 Although she had originally intended to study journalism she decided to change to mathematics because she had a bad relationship with her adviser 11 Later in her life she earned a master s degree in English at the University of Pennsylvania in 1967 and was awarded an honorary doctorate degree from Northwest Missouri State University in 2002 3 12 Career edit nbsp Programmers Betty Jean Jennings left and Fran Bilas right operate the ENIAC s main control panel nbsp The ENIAC Programmers As Told By U S Chief Technology Officer Megan Smith source source Problems playing this file See media help In 1945 the United States Army was recruiting mathematicians from universities to aid in the war effort despite a warning by her adviser that she would be a cog in a wheel with the Army and encouragement to become a mathematics teacher instead Bartik decided to become a human computer Bartik s calculus professor encouraged her to take the job at University of Pennsylvania because they had a differential analyzer 8 11 She applied to both IBM and the University of Pennsylvania at the age of 20 Although rejected by IBM Jennings was hired by the University of Pennsylvania to work for Army Ordnance at Aberdeen Proving Ground calculating ballistics trajectories by hand 6 13 While working there Bartik met her future husband William Bartik who was an engineer working on a Pentagon project at the University of Pennsylvania They married in December 1946 11 13 When the Electronic Numeric Integrator and Computer ENIAC was developed for the purpose of calculating the ballistic trajectories human computers like Bartik had been doing by hand she applied to become a part of the project and was eventually selected to be one of its first programmers Bartik was asked to set up problems for the ENIAC without being taught any techniques 14 Bartik and five other women Betty Holberton Marlyn Wescoff Kathleen McNulty Ruth Teitelbaum and Frances Spence were chosen to be the main programmers for the ENIAC 8 They were known as the Sensational Six 15 Many other women who are often unrecognized contributed to the ENIAC during a period of wartime male labor shortage 16 Bartik who became the co lead programmer with Betty Holberton and the other four original programmers became extremely adept at running the ENIAC with no manual to rely on the group reviewed diagrams of the device interviewed the engineers who had built it and used this information to teach themselves the skills they needed 11 Initially they were not allowed to see the ENIAC s hardware at all since it was still classified and they had not received security clearance they had to learn how to program the machine solely through studying schematic diagrams 17 The six woman team was also not initially given space to work together so they found places to work where they could in abandoned classrooms and fraternity houses 11 While the six women worked on ENIAC they developed subroutines nesting and other fundamental programming techniques and arguably invented the discipline of programming digital computers 6 13 18 Bartik and the other ENIAC female programmers learned to physically modify the machine moving switches and rerouting cables in order to program it 17 18 In addition to performing the original ballistic trajectories they were hired to compute the six female programmers soon became operators on the Los Alamos nuclear calculations and generally expanded the programming repertoire of the machine 11 Bartik s programming partner on the important trajectory program for the military that would prove that the ENIAC worked to specification was Betty Holberton known at the time as Betty Snyder Bartik and Holberton s program was chosen to introduce the ENIAC to the public and larger scientific community That demonstration occurred on February 15 1946 and was a tremendous success 15 The ENIAC proved that it operated faster than the Mark I a well known electromechanical machine at Harvard and also showed that the work that would take a human computer 40 hours to complete could be done in 20 seconds 12 8 Bartik described the first public demonstration of the ENIAC in 1946 The day ENIAC was introduced to the world was one of the most exciting days of my life The demonstration was fabulous ENIAC calculated the trajectory faster than it took the bullet to travel We handed out copies of the calculations as they were run ENIAC was 1 000 times faster than any machine that existed prior to that time With its flashing lights it also was an impressive machine illustrating graphically how fast it was actually computing 11 The public demonstration was a success but most of the congratulations on its turnout were given to its engineers John Mauchly and John Eckert 8 Following the demonstration in March 1946 she received a front page feature in the Gentry County based Stanberry Headlight where it was written that t o acquaintances here of Miss Jennings it is no great surprise to know that she is holding such an important position due to her academic esteems 9 Bartik was later asked to form and lead a group of programmers to convert the ENIAC into a stored program computer working closely with John von Neumann Dick Clippinger 19 and Adele Goldstine 12 Bartik converted the ENIAC into a stored program computer by March 1948 12 8 As head of this process Bartik was charged with the conversion that allowed the ENIAC to be turned into a rudimentary stored program computer to assist with Clippinger s wind tunnel programs which allowed the ENIAC to operate more quickly efficiently and accurately 8 Letters between Bartik and Adele Goldstine were discovered by authors Thomas Haigh and Mark Priestley during the time of the project as well as the fact that much of the 60 order code 20 was in Bartik s handwriting 21 After the end of the war Bartik went on to work with the ENIAC designers John Eckert and John Mauchly 14 and helped them develop the BINAC and UNIVAC I computers 6 13 BINAC was the first computer to use magnetic tape instead of punch cards to store data and the first computer to utilize the twin unit concept BINAC was purchased by Northrop Aircraft to guide the Snark missile but the BINAC proved to be too large for their purposes However according to a Northrop Aircraft programmer claims that the BINAC did not work once it was moved to Northrop Aircraft were erroneous and the BINAC was working well into the mid 1950s 8 Besides BINAC Jean s more important work involved her responsibilities in designing the UNIVAC s logic circuits among other UNIVAC programming and design tasks 6 Bartik also co programmed with her life long friend Betty Holberton the first generative programming system SORT MERGE for a computer 7 Recalling her time working with Eckert and Mauchly on these projects she described their close group of computer engineers as a technical Camelot 13 8 22 12 In the early 1950s once the Eckert Mauchly Corporation was sold to Remington Rand Bartik went on to help train on how to program and use the UNIVAC for the first six UNIVACs sold including the programmers at the United States Census Bureau first UNIVAC sold and Atomic Energy Commission 8 Later Bartik moved to Philadelphia when her husband William Bill Bartik took a job with Remington Rand Due to a company policy at the time about husbands and wives working together Jean was asked to resign from the company Between 1951 and 1954 prior to her first child s birth Jean did mostly freelance programming assignments for John Mauchly and was a helpmate to her husband Once her son was born Jean walked away from her career in computing to concentrate on raising a family during which time she had two other children with her husband 6 8 22 12 7 It was sometime during this 1950s period that Bartik began going by the name Jean rather than her birth first name Betty which is what she had been known as during her ENIAC UNIVAC and Remington Rand years Even though Bartik played an integral part in developing ENIAC her work at University of Pennsylvania and on the ENIAC remained obscure until her pioneering work was documented by Kathy Kleiman and the ENIAC Programmers Project In 1986 Kleiman first met and identified the women who worked with the ENIAC 23 Kleiman worked with PBS producer David Roland to record their oral histories and with documentary producers Jon Palfreman and Kate McMahon to produce the award winning documentary The Computers premiere 2014 24 25 The women s work was also popularized by columnist Tom Petzinger in articles for the Wall Street Journal on Bartik and Holberton in 1996 8 22 12 26 27 Later life editAfter getting her master s degree from the University of Pennsylvania in 1967 and making the decision to divorce her husband Bartik joined the Auerbach Corporation writing and editing technical reports on minicomputers 6 11 Bartik remained with Auerbach for eight years then moved among positions with a variety of other companies for the rest of her career as a manager writer and engineer 6 Jean Bartik and William Bartik divorced by 1968 13 Bartik ultimately retired from the computing industry in 1986 when her final employer Data Decisions a publication of Ziff Davis was sold Bartik spent the following 25 years as a real estate agent Bartik died from congestive heart failure in a Poughkeepsie New York nursing home on March 23 2011 She was 86 8 22 12 7 Legacy editStarting in 1996 once the importance of their role in the development of computing was re discovered Bartik along with Betty Holberton and Bartik s other friend of over 60 years Kathleen Antonelli ENIAC programmer and wife of ENIAC co inventor John Mauchly began to finally receive the acknowledgement and honors for their pioneering work in the early field of computing Bartik and Antonelli became invited speakers both at home and abroad to share their experiences working with the ENIAC BINAC and UNIVAC Bartik especially went on to receive many honors and awards for her pioneering role programming the ENIAC BINAC and UNIVAC the latter of which helped to launch the commercial computer industry and for turning the ENIAC into the world s first stored program computer In 2010 a documentary Top Secret Rosies The Female Computers of WWII was released The film centered around in depth interviews of three of the six women programmers focusing on the commendable patriotic contributions they made during World War II The ENIAC was responsible for calculating bullet trajectories during the war 10 The ENIAC team is also the subject of the 2013 short documentary film The Computers This documentary created by Kathy Kleiman and the ENIAC Programmers Project 28 combines actual footage of the ENIAC team from the 1940s with interviews with the female team members as they reflect on their time working together on the ENIAC The Computers is the first part of a three part documentary series titled Great Unsung Women of Computing The Computers The Coders and The Future Makers 29 Bartik wrote her autobiography Pioneer Programmer Jean Jennings Bartik and the Computer that Changed the World 30 prior to her death in 2011 with the help of long time colleagues Dr Jon T Rickman and Kim D Todd The autobiography was published in 2013 by Truman State Press to positive reviews One of the best according to whom pieces of advice Bartik ever received was Don t ever let anyone tell you that you can t do something because they think you can t You can do anything achieve anything if you think you can and you educate yourself to succeed 31 Encouraging girls and women to follow their dreams she said If my life has proved anything it is that women and girls should never be afraid to take risks and try new things 12 The Jean Jennings Bartik Computing Museum at Northwest Missouri State University in Maryville Missouri is dedicated to the history of computing and Bartik s career 32 The default theme in the content management framework Drupal was named Bartik for over a decade It was named in her honor 1 Awards and honors editInductee Women in Technology International Hall of Fame 1997 17 Fellow Computer History Museum 2008 33 34 IEEE Computer Pioneer Award IEEE Computer Society 2008 35 Korenman Award from the Multinational Center for Development of Women in Technology 2009 6 35 See also editAdele Goldstine Betty Holberton Frances Spence Ruth Teitelbaum Marlyn Wescoff Kathleen Antonelli List of pioneers in computer science Timeline of women in scienceReferences edit a b Bartik Drupal February 22 2010 Retrieved November 16 2015 a b Kathuria Charvi December 26 2017 Tech Women Meet Jean Jennings Bartik ENIAC Programmer shethepeople Retrieved August 23 2022 a b c Jean Bartik Computer History Museum Archived from the original on March 11 2016 Retrieved October 31 2016 Bartik biography www history mcs st and ac uk Retrieved November 19 2017 Oral History Jean Bartik PDF Archived from the original PDF on April 19 2011 a b c d e f g h i O Connor J J Robertson E F Jean Bartik biography www groups dcs st and ac uk Archived from the original on March 22 2017 Retrieved June 26 2016 a b c d Reed Jennifer 2016 Computer scientist Jean Bartik Minneapolis ISBN 978 1512413106 OCLC 938387267 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c d e f g h i j k l m Bartik Jean Jennings 2013 Rickman Jon T Todd Kim D eds Pioneer programmer Jean Jennings Bartik and the computer that changed the world Kirksville Missouri Truman State University Press ISBN 9781612480862 OCLC 854828754 a b Staff writer March 14 1946 Betty Jennings in Scientific Work The Stanberry Headlight 1 via Newspapers com a b Smith Gina December 3 2007 Unsung innovators Jean Bartik ENIAC programmer Computerworld Retrieved October 22 2022 a b c d e f g h Barkley Fritz W 1996 The Women of ENIAC IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 18 3 13 28 doi 10 1109 85 511940 a b c d e f g h i D Todd Kim 2015 Jean Jennings Bartik computer pioneer Kirksville Missouri ISBN 978 1612481456 OCLC 935185503 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c d e f Lohr Steve April 7 2011 Jean Bartik Software Pioneer Dies at 86 The New York Times Retrieved April 8 2011 a b Beyer Kurt 2009 Grace Hopper and the Invention of the Information Age MIT Press pp 178 181 ISBN 978 0 262 01310 9 a b Juavinett Ashley October 6 2017 5 facts about Jean Bartik expert programmer of the world s first computer Massive Science Retrieved August 23 2022 Abbate Janet 2012 Recoding gender women s changing participation in computing Cambridge Mass MIT Press ISBN 9780262018067 OCLC 813929041 a b c ENIAC Programmers WITI Hall of Fame Women in Technology International WITI Retrieved April 22 2014 a b Walter Isaacson October 6 2015 The innovators how a group of hackers geniuses and geeks created the digital revolution First Simon amp Schuster hardcover ed New York ISBN 978 1476708706 OCLC 876012030 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Richard F Clippinger Award Recipient IEEE Computer Society April 25 2018 Retrieved June 8 2022 Clippinger R F 1948 A Logical Coding System Applied to the ENIAC Section VIII modified ENIAC U S Army Archived from the original on March 21 2021 Retrieved September 10 2021 The converter has already been used to modify the 60 order code Haigh Thomas Priestley Mark Rope Crispin 2018 ENIAC in Action making and remaking the modern computer S l MIT Press ISBN 978 0262535175 OCLC 1002291949 a b c d Reed Jennifer 2016 Computer Scientist Jean Bartik STEM Trailblazer Bios Lerner Publications ISBN 978 1512413106 Kleiman Kathy April 17 2018 These 6 pioneering women helped create modern computers ideas ted com Retrieved May 9 2023 ENIAC Programmers Project Documentary Info ENIAC Programmers Project Retrieved May 9 2023 Muineachain Conn o March 2 2018 Podcast Kathy Kleiman on the Women who Invented Coding Audio Blacknight Solutions Retrieved December 6 2021 ENIAC Programmers Keynote at WITI New York Network Meeting 1998 presented by Jean Bartik Kathleen Antonelli in Women in Technology International on 02 23 1998 Open Transcripts February 23 1998 Retrieved May 9 2023 Brown David Scott June 3 2016 The Women of ENIAC Programming Pioneers Techopedia Retrieved May 9 2023 Home eniacprogrammers org Great Unsung Women of Computing The Computers The Coders and The Future Makers September 21 2018 Bartik Jean Jennings Bartik Jean Rickman Jon T Todd Kim D 2013 Pioneer Programmer Jean Jennings Bartik and the Computer that Changed the World Truman State University Press ISBN 978 1612480862 Truman State University Press dead link Jean Jennings Bartik Computing Museum Northwest Missouri State University Retrieved June 27 2016 Jean Bartik Computer History Museum Archived from the original on March 11 2016 Retrieved May 23 2013 Kleiman Kathy Jean Bartik the untold story of a remarkable ENIAC programmer Official Google Blog Retrieved June 27 2016 a b Betty Jean Jennings Bartik IEEE Computer Society Awards IEEE Computer Society Retrieved April 22 2014 External links editExternal videos nbsp Jean Bartik and the ENIAC Women Computer History Museum November 10 2010 nbsp Jean Jennings Bartik ENIAC Pioneer Computer History Museum October 22 2008ENIAC Programmers documentary Oral history from Bartik at the UNIVAC conference Charles Babbage Institute Jean Jennings Bartik Computing Museum at NWMSU Bartik receives the Computer Pioneer Award Oral history given by Bartik to the Computer History Museum in 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jean Bartik amp oldid 1179387693, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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