Fran Allen Wins Turing Award
shoemortgage writes "The Association for Computing Machinery has named Frances E. Allen the recipient of the 2006 A.M. Turing Award for contributions that fundamentally improved the performance of computer programs in solving problems, and accelerated the use of high performance computing. Allen,74, is the first woman to receive the Turing Award in the 41 years of its history. She retired from IBM in 2002."
From TFA:
Great: she’s the next Countess of Lovelace; but child-birth isn’t democratic, and there’s nothing fundamental about engineering that makes it likewise democratic.
In other words: rare women will continue to be rare women; don’t agitate us with “it’s about time” propaganda.
If not, I think they should give it to him next year. And, if we're lucky, maybe at some point they can dedge up a Native American with some mediocre qualifications too.
-Eric
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
...Does this mean she's a cylon?
Ryan Fenton
I was glad to hear Fran Allen had won the Turing prize and went searching for an inspirational quote that would help me to appreciate the genius that sets her apart from other humans.
But alas... I only found these.
So I'm left wondering... maybe Fran Allen IS a computer...(?)
In which case... I'm excited! Fran Allen deserves the Turing prize!
So, what kind of test did she have to complete to qualify?
TC - My Photos..
who cares, computers are just a fad, they're never going to catch on anyway.
Without getting too far into discussing whether she merited the award or not, since I'm not really qualified to judge. I find it interesting that her Wikipedia entry was only created on 6 February 2007 by a username that has made no other edits. I've always found the Wikipedia coverage of computer science fairly comprehensive.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fran_AllenEdit history of Jtaylord
And I'm not alone on that, her Wikipedia entry is only two weeks old.
She narrowly beat out a nun with the same name who lived 200 years ago, for first place in a Google search (they get an unimpressive 30k hits combined).
It is quite possible that she is a unacknowledged genius, but it is no surprise that the first reaction isn't "finally!" from most people.
Presumably, we will learn a lot more about her now. Maybe some FORTRAN parallelization experts will outline her contributions for us.
lu3rication. You notwithstanding, Suffering *BSD forwards we must member. GNAA (GAY *BSD has lost more
I'm surprised Grace Hopper never received the award. When I was coming up in the industry she was always cited as one of the great pioneers of computing.
I'm not a computer scientist, so I don't know offhand if she deserves the award. However, I know a foolproof way to figure out if she does
Just put either her, or a previous winner of the award, in a sealed room and let me ask converse with them via slips of paper passed back and forth. If I can't tell the difference, then she must deserve the award.
Now, if only I can come up with a clever name for this test...
Arr! Read The Government Manual for New Pirates!
How do you know she is a woman?
> You are a woman, right?
> Yes
> Prove it
> I have boobs and a kootch and wear dresses
> And what else?
> Uhh, stockings and high heels?
> Good, what else?
> And panties
> What kind of panties?
> Sheer black with open crotch.
> How do I know you're really a woman and not some man faking me out?
> Here's a picture
Frances wants to send you a picture.
You accept the picture.
> Wow, you're gorgeous! Hey, I thought you were in your 70's!
> Uhhh, yeah, this is from when I was younger.
> Nobody was taking pictures of themselves like this 50 years ago!
> Uhhh, I was.
> That's a Sammy Sosa Louisville Slugger in the picture.
> Uhhhh, I have to go thx bye!
> Wait!
>
> Wait!
> What?
> Don't go, I don't really care.
>
> So, what are you wearing with the panties?
(-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
I, for one, shall greet our new 'female geek' overlords.
(sorry for that - but the overlord-semi-joke was posted only once here - until now.)
"we are all atheists about most of the gods that societies have ever believed in. Some of us just go one god further."
Man, this is sad. I was scanning the RSS and I read "Frat Aliens Win ..." and of course I clicked the link immediately based on that :).
!hoD
I thought she discovered the Fran Allen belts.
Only three things are certain; death, taxes, and apocryphal quotations - Ben Franklin.
I'll take it as a challenge, and see how many names I recognize without looking them up.
2005 Naur, Peter: The N of BNF, even if he prefer the N to stand for "Normal". He is most known here for mandating the use of Danish translations of computer terms when he worked at DIKU.
2004 Cerf, Vinton G. 2004 Kahn, Robert E: Someone in Al Gore's staff.
2003 Kay, Alan: Always talking about nothing at all,
2002 Adleman, Leonard M. 2002 Rivest, Ronald L. 2002 Shamir, Adi: Adleman should be last, I would not recognize the names individually.
2001 Dahl, Ole-Johan 2001 Nygaard, Kristen: I'll simulate knowledge of then one, if you get the message.
2000 Yao, Andrew Chi-Chih 1999 Brooks, Frederick P. 1998 Gray, James: Dunno
1997 Engelbart, Douglas: Just some wimp.
1996 Pnueli, Amir 1995 Blum, Manuel 1994 Feigenbaum, Edward 1994 Reddy, Raj 1993 Hartmanis, Juris 1993 Stearns, Richard E. 1992 Lampson, Butler W.: Dunno
1991 Milner, Robin: Something with semantics...
1990 Corbato, Fernando J. 1989 Kahan, William (Velvel) 1988 Sutherland, Ivan 1987 Cocke, John 1986 Hopcroft, John 1986 Tarjan, Robert 1985 Karp, Richard M.: Dunno.
1984 Wirth, Niklaus: You can call him by value; or you can call him by name.
1983 Ritchie, Dennis M. 1983 Thompson, Ken: Doug McIllroy should have been there.
1982 Cook, Stephen A. 1981 Codd, Edgar F.: Dunno.
1980 Hoare, C. Antony R. : More formalisms.
1979 Iverson, Kenneth E. 1978 Floyd, Robert W : Dunno
1977 Backus, John: SOME WORK ON AUTOMATED FORMULA TRANSLATION.
1976 Rabin, Michael O. 1976 Scott, Dana S. 1975 Newell, Allen 1975 Simon, Herbert A.: Dunno
1974 Knuth, Donald E. : Worst case of "to write the perfect thesis, you must find the perfect pen" EVER.
1973 Bachman, Charles W.: Dunno.
1972 Dijkstra, E. W.: How to GOTO along the shortest path. He don't like Wirthless, so I like him.
1971 McCarthy, John: (when (version 2.0) 'ready-p)
1970 Wilkinson, J. H.: Dunno.
1969 Minsky, Marvin: Not half as smart as his computer.
1968 Hamming, Richard 1967 Wilkes, Maurice V 1966 Perlis, A. J.: Dunno.
--
Summary: 22 dunno's and 15 knowns (by year), so I guess you are right that I shouldn't expect to recognize the name. They do all have Wikipedia pages, but of course these might be written *because* they received the award. From the descriptions there, a handful of the "dunno" invented something I recognize (which is almost like recognizing them), but the rest just "made contributions to" which is more difficult to judge.
Alan Turing never won the Grace Murray Hopper Award either, so that seems fair.
Well, him being dead well before the GH award was invented could explain it, but none the less. Having an award named after you kind of make up for not winning an award.
She was the first person to realise you could use computers for other things than computing mathematical formulas, and that it should be programmable in a language resembling english. To realize that in that time must have taken an insane amount of insight. Many advances come from seeing a problem, and solving it. But she didn't really have problem to see! Everybody else thought she was crazy, that it could never be done. Computers performed mathematical calculations and were programmed using assembly or machine code! Where did she get those ideas?
Well, I am not an engineer. I have known a few who were majoring in Engineering and employed as various types of Engineers thereafter. Pretty much all of them noted a low female Engineering population in University. For the most part this was seen by them as being due to the fact that Male Engineers resented the presence of women in their faculty, and tended to actively (and often boorishly) discourage them by making sure they knew they were not wanted. It wouldn't suprise me to see this attitude in those professors teaching Engineering as well.
I know when women entered the Infantry up here in Canada (CFB Petawawa if you are interested), I was working at one of the Regimental Training schools - and the CO called all of the personnel in the unit into a huge meeting. They were of course all male, as I am. He let it be known that the first women were about to be processed through the school shortly - and he wanted everyone to know that they would failed, and ensure we worked to that end because he knew that women were unsuitable to the trade. What he said was approximately "We all know the first female infanteers are coming here to the RCR Battleschool in the next few weeks. We all know they *will* fail the course, right? I just want to make sure we are all on the same page. There will be no women in the Infantry".
I wouldn't be suprised to see that its the Enginners themselves who are discouraging women from getting involved in Engineering. I know a female friend of mine attempted to major in it and I think she gave up due to the endless hassling she received from other (male) students. I wouldn't be at all suprised to hear that that was a common experience for women getting involved in any aspect of Engineering. I sincerely hope I am wrong and the low population is due to some other cause.
"The first time I got drunk, I got married. The second time I bought a chimpanzee, after that I stayed sober" Arian Seid
A few years ago, I created something at least to stub level for all the Turing award winners who didn't already have articles. So, yes, at the time some of them got articles because they'd gotten the award. But I expect they've been improved considerably since then.
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo
--Andy Finkel (J. Klass?)
I'm going to RTFA for this, but why is the article just saying "whoa, a turing award recipient didn't have the Y-chromosome", and not saying *what* she got it for? If her work is so noteworthy as to be deserving of the Turing award, isn't it worth a mention on Slashdot? The real story isn't just that a woman got it, for once, but also what she got it for.
Most, if not all, articles where men get some award, the focus tends to be the work they did, not the fact that they have an extra appendage dangling between their legs...
Didn't Grace Hopper win the Turing Award years ago?