gary
23-06-2012, 01:22 AM
Google today celebrates today what would have been the 100th birthday of Alan Turing (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Turing)
where they have depicted a Universal Turing Machine operating on their home page (http://www.google.com.au/).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_Turing_machine
Any computer that can emulate a Universal Turing Machine can emulate any other computer.
Turing left behind an incredible legacy with regards the mathematical principals of
computation. How computation may well underpin many of the driving forces of
nature itself is yet to be fully understood, but no doubt such a future understanding
will be traced back to some of the work of Turing.
When it was revealed in the 1970's that the British had broken the German
codes during WWII, it came as a shock to most of us and as details emerged
over the construction of Colossus (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colossus_computer) and the contributions of people such as
Turing, we were in awe.
There was certainly a mad scramble to re-write the history books.
How many lives were saved by the efforts of this group?
We will probably never know with any certainty.
But of course Turing met with the saddest of treatment and met with the saddest
of ends. Yet he was beyond doubt one of the greatest heroes of WWII and one of the
greatest minds of the 20th Century.
where they have depicted a Universal Turing Machine operating on their home page (http://www.google.com.au/).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_Turing_machine
Any computer that can emulate a Universal Turing Machine can emulate any other computer.
Turing left behind an incredible legacy with regards the mathematical principals of
computation. How computation may well underpin many of the driving forces of
nature itself is yet to be fully understood, but no doubt such a future understanding
will be traced back to some of the work of Turing.
When it was revealed in the 1970's that the British had broken the German
codes during WWII, it came as a shock to most of us and as details emerged
over the construction of Colossus (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colossus_computer) and the contributions of people such as
Turing, we were in awe.
There was certainly a mad scramble to re-write the history books.
How many lives were saved by the efforts of this group?
We will probably never know with any certainty.
But of course Turing met with the saddest of treatment and met with the saddest
of ends. Yet he was beyond doubt one of the greatest heroes of WWII and one of the
greatest minds of the 20th Century.