For faster navigation, this Iframe is preloading the Wikiwand page for Bruger:Doc Daneeka/Sandkasse.

Bruger:Doc Daneeka/Sandkasse

Miniprojekt: Wikificering

[redigér | rediger kildetekst]

Nogle artikler er velskrevne, men fordi få artikler linker til dem, bliver de ikke læst alligevel. Det vil jeg gerne ændre på. Her er en liste over artikler som enten er velskrevne, eller som jeg gerne vil forbedre med en minimal indsats, men som efterfølgende skal linkes ordentligt til.

Artikler som bør skrives, forbedres eller omdøbes (ikke sorteret)

[redigér | rediger kildetekst]

Følgende liste er artikler som jeg bør vende tilbage til, men ikke tager stilling til nu fordi jeg er midt i gang med at skrive noget. Nogle af dem behøver muligvis ikke deres egne artikler.

Datalogi, VCS, Version Control System, Versionsstyring, Teksteditor, Program, Softwaredesign, Softwareudviklingsproces, Softwareudviklingsmetodik, Softwareudviklingsmetodologi, Softwareudviklingsmetodik, Plaintext, Rentekst, Verifikation (software), Kvalitetssikring (software) eller Kvalitetskontrol (software) (Kvalitetskontrol findes allerede), Korrekthed (datalogi), Fumlebræt (eng. Plugboard eller Breadboard), Kode, Kildekode, Programmel, Aflusning (software), Debugging, Afprøvning (software), von Neumann-arkitektur, Højniveau-programmeringssprog, compiler (etymologi-afsnit), metonymi, metonisk cyklus, semantik og syntaks i programmeringssprog, Computational Tree Logic (CTL), Binary Decision Diagram eller Binært beslutningsdiagram (BDD), Makefile, Web-framework, Softwareframework, errata (eller måske erratum?), forgrening (generel artikel om forgreninger af alle slags), forbedre Protokol (edb) til også at beskrive Kommunikationsprotokol og Kryptografisk protokol og i det hele taget Netværksprotokol lidt mere. Interaktiv fortolker (REPL), Operator, Operatorpræcedens, Lambda (betydningen fra programmeringssprog, henvisning til Lambda-kalkulus]], Lambda-kalkulus, gøre præfiks tvetydig så den indeholder præfiksnotation, Infix, Infix-operator, bivirkning som i betydningen "sideeffekt" fra programmering. Hukommelseshåndtering (hukommelsesallokering), proces (styresystem)

Oversætter, Dokumentation m.fl.

[redigér | rediger kildetekst]
  • Oversætter er en stub som beskriver erhvervet. Udvid stubben.
  • Dokumentation beskriver ikke softwaredokumentation
  • Lås peger på nøgle selvom den datalogiske betydning af lås er synonym med semafor. Artiklen om semaforer nævner ikke at man kan bruge dem til at simulere låsemekanismer. Der mangler altså en lås (datalogi)
  • Compiler skal forbedres (se TODO på Diskussion:Compiler.

Open Source-licenser

[redigér | rediger kildetekst]

Fork inden for datalogi: systemkald, forkbombe, forgrening (softwareudvikling), en komponent i et filsystem

Store dataloger: Dette er primært en liste af dataloger, jeg ønsker at skrive om.

Edsgar Dijkstra, John Backus, Robin Milner, Alfred Aho, Adi Shamir, Gene Amdahl (AMD), Andrew Appel, Charles Babbage, Daniel J. Bernstein, Vinton Cerf, Alonzo Church, Edmund M. Clarke (model checking), John Cocke (RISC), Erik Demaine (computational origami), Ernest Allen Emerson (model checking + computational tree logic m/ Edmund M. Clarke), Kurt Gödel, Adele Goldberg (Smalltalk), C. A. R. Hoare (Hoare), David A. Huffman, Bill Joy (Sun Microsystems, BSD UNIX, vi, csh), Brian W. Kernighan el. Brian Kernighan, Donald Knuth, Charles E. Leierson, Rasmus Lerdorf (høhø), John McCarthy, Simon Peyton Jones, David A. Patterson, Dennis Ritchie, Ron Rivest, Leonard Adleman, Bruce Schneier, Claude Shannon, Bjarne Stroustrup, Poul-Henning Kamp, Ken Thompson, Jeffrey D. Ullman, Philip Wadler, Peter J. Weinberger (W i AWK)

Stephen Cook og Robert Floyd (NP-komplethed)), James Cooley (hurtige Fourier-transformationer),

Man kunne inddele dem i små temaer som fx: NP-komplethed, AWK (tre personer), kvinder,

Kvindelige dataloger:

Timeline of women in computing

[redigér | rediger kildetekst]
Ada Lovelace, considered to be the first computer programmer.
  • 1842: Ada Lovelace (1815–1852), was an analyst of Charles Babbage's analytical engine and is often described as the "first computer programmer."[1]
  • 1893: Henrietta Swan Leavitt joined the Harvard "computers", a group of women engaged in the production of astronomical data at Harvard. She was instrumental in discovery of the cepheid variable stars, which are evidence for the expansion of the universe.
  • 1926: Grete Hermann published the foundational paper for computerized algebra. It was her doctoral thesis, titled "The Question of Finitely Many Steps in Polynomial Ideal Theory", and published in Mathematische Annalen.
  • 1940s: American women were recruited to do ballistics calculations and program computers during WWII. Around 1943-1945, these women "computers" used a Differential Analyzer in the basement of the Moore School of Electrical Engineering to speed up their calculations, though the machine required a mechanic to be totally accurate and the women often rechecked the calculations by hand.[2]
  • 1942: Hedy Lamarr (1913–2000), was an actress and the co-inventor of an early form of spread-spectrum broadcasting.
  • 1943: Women worked as WREN Colossus operators during WW2 at Bletchley Park.
  • 1943: The wives of scientists at Los Alamos were first organized as "computers" on the Manhattan Project.
  • 1946: Betty Jennings, Betty Snyder, Fran Bilas, Kay McNulty, Marlyn Wescoff, and Ruth Lichterman were the original programmers of the ENIAC.
  • 1949: Grace Hopper (1906–1992), was a United States Navy officer and the first programmer of the Harvard Mark I, known as the "Mother of COBOL". She developed the first ever compiler for an electronic computer, known as A-0.
  • 1958: Orbital calculations for the United States' Explorer 1 satellite were solved by the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory's all-female "computers", many of whom were recruited out of high school.
    Mechanical calculators were supplemented with logarithmic calculations performed by hand.[3][4]
  • 1961: Dana Ulery (1938-), was the first female engineer at Jet Propulsion Laboratory, developing real-time tracking systems using a North American Aviation Recomp II, a 40-bit word size computer.
  • 1962: Jean E. Sammet (1928-), developed the FORMAC programming language. She was also the first to write extensively about the history and categorisation of programming languages in 1969,
    and became the first female president of the Association for Computing Machinery in 1974.
  • 1965: Mary Allen Wilkes was the first person to use a computer in a private home (in 1965) and the first developer of an operating system (LAP) for the first minicomputer (LINC).
  • 1965: Sister Mary Kenneth Keller (1914? - 1985) became the first American woman to earn a PhD in Computer Science in 1965.[5] Her thesis was titled "Inductive Inference on Computer Generated Patterns."[6]
  • 1970?: Susan Nycum did early computer security and computer law/intellectual property for Datamation.
  • 1972: Adele Goldberg (1945-), was one of the designers and developers of the Smalltalk language.
  • 1972: Karen Spärck Jones (1935–2007), was a pioneer of information retrieval and natural language processing.
  • 1972: Sandy Kurtzig founded ASK Computer Systems, an early Silicon Valley startup.
  • 1973: Lynn Conway (1938-), led the "LSI Systems" group, and co-authored Introduction to VLSI Systems.
  • 1975?: Phyllis Fox worked on the PORT portable mathematical/numerical library.
  • 1978: Sophie Wilson (?), designed the Acorn Microcomputer.
  • 1978: The Association for Women in Computing was founded in Washington, D.C. in 1978.
  • 1979: Carol Shaw (?), was a game designer and programmer for Atari Corp. and Activision.
  • 1980: Carla Meninsky (?), was the game designer and programmer for Atari 2600 games Dodge 'Em and Warlords.
  • 1982?: Lorinda Cherry worked on the Writers WorkBench (wwb) for Bell Labs.
  • 1983: Janese Swanson (with others) developed the first of the Carmen Sandiego games. She went on to found Girl Tech.
  • 1984: Roberta Williams (1953-), did pioneering work in graphical adventure games for personal computers, particularly the King's Quest series.
  • 1984: Susan Kare (1954-), created the icons and many of the interface elements for the original Apple Macintosh in the 1980s, and was an original employee of NeXT, working as the Creative Director.
  • 1985: Radia Perlman (1951-), invented the Spanning Tree Protocol. She has done extensive and innovative research, particularly on encryption and networking. She received the USENIX Lifetime Achievement Award in 2007, among numerous others.
  • 1985: Irma Wyman (~1927-), was the first Honeywell CIO.
  • 1986: Hannah Smith was the "Girlie tipster" for CRASH (magazine).
  • 1988: Éva Tardos (1957-), was the recipient of the Fulkerson Prize for her research on design and analysis of algorithms.
  • 1989: Frances E. Allen (1932-), became the first female IBM Fellow in 1989. In 2006 she became the first female recipient of the ACM's Turing Award.
  • 1992: A photograph of the all-female parody pop group Les Horribles Cernettes appears on the recently created World Wide Web, the first photo there according to media reports.[7][8]
  • 1993: Shafi Goldwasser (1958-), a theoretical computer scientist, was a two-time recipient of the Gödel Prize for research on complexity theory, cryptography and computational number theory, and the invention of zero-knowledge proofs.
  • 1993: Barbara Liskov, together with Jeannette Wing, developed the Liskov substitution principle. Liskov was also the winner of the Turing Prize in 2008.
  • 1994: Sally Floyd (~1953-), is most renowned for her work on Transmission Control Protocol.
  • 1996: Xiaoyuan Tu (1967-), was the first female recipient of the ACM's Doctoral Dissertation Award.[9]
  • 1997: Anita Borg (1949–2003), was the founding director of the Institute for Women and Technology (IWT).
  • 1999: Marissa Mayer (1975-), was the first female engineer hired at Google, and was later named Vice President of Search Product and User Experience.
  • 2001: Audrey Tang (1981-), was the initiator and leader of the Pugs project.
  • 2003: Ellen Spertus earned a PhD in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from MIT in 1998 with the notable thesis "ParaSite: Mining the structural information on the World-Wide Web."
  • 2004: Jeri Ellsworth (1974-), was a self-taught computer chip designer and creator of the C64 Direct-to-TV.
  • 2005: Mary Lou Jepsen (1965-), was the founder and chief technology officer of One Laptop Per Child (OLPC), and the founder of Pixel Qi.
  • 2005: Ruchi Sangvi became the first female engineer at Facebook.[10]
  • 2006: Maria Klawe (1951-), was the first woman to become President of Harvey Mudd College since its founding in 1955 and was ACM president from 2002 until 2004.
  1. ^ J. Fuegi and J. Francis. "Lovelace & Babbage and the creation of the 1843 'notes'". Annals of the History of Computing 25(4) (Oct-Dec 2003): 18-26. doi:10.1109/MAHC.2003.1253887
  2. ^ Gumbrecht, Jamie (8 February 2011). "Rediscovering WWII's female 'computers'". CNN. Archived from the original on 10 May 2012.
  3. ^ "JPL Computers". NASA JPL.
  4. ^ Conway, Erik (27 marts 2007). "Women Made Early Inroads at JPL". NASA/JPL. Arkiveret fra originalen 10 maj 2012.((cite web)): CS1-vedligeholdelse: Dato automatisk oversat (link)
  5. ^ Steel, Martha Vickers (2001). "Women in Computing: Experiences and Contributions Within the Emerging Computing Industry". Computing History Museum.
  6. ^ "UW-Madison Computer Science Ph.D.s Awarded, May 1965 - August 1970". UW-Madison Computer Sciences Department. Hentet 2010-11-08.
  7. ^ How the first photo was posted on the Web 20 years ago - Telegraph
  8. ^ LHC: The First Band on the Web
  9. ^ ACM Awards 1996, ACM.
  10. ^ BBC News - Ruchi Sanghvi: Facebook's pioneer woman
{{bottomLinkPreText}} {{bottomLinkText}}
Bruger:Doc Daneeka/Sandkasse
Listen to this article

This browser is not supported by Wikiwand :(
Wikiwand requires a browser with modern capabilities in order to provide you with the best reading experience.
Please download and use one of the following browsers:

This article was just edited, click to reload
This article has been deleted on Wikipedia (Why?)

Back to homepage

Please click Add in the dialog above
Please click Allow in the top-left corner,
then click Install Now in the dialog
Please click Open in the download dialog,
then click Install
Please click the "Downloads" icon in the Safari toolbar, open the first download in the list,
then click Install
{{::$root.activation.text}}

Install Wikiwand

Install on Chrome Install on Firefox
Don't forget to rate us

Tell your friends about Wikiwand!

Gmail Facebook Twitter Link

Enjoying Wikiwand?

Tell your friends and spread the love:
Share on Gmail Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Buffer

Our magic isn't perfect

You can help our automatic cover photo selection by reporting an unsuitable photo.

This photo is visually disturbing This photo is not a good choice

Thank you for helping!


Your input will affect cover photo selection, along with input from other users.

X

Get ready for Wikiwand 2.0 🎉! the new version arrives on September 1st! Don't want to wait?