
Ada Lovelace (1815-1852) was born Augusta Ada Byron, the
only legitimate child of Annabella Milbanke and the poet Lord Byron. Her
mother, Lady Byron, had mathematical training (Byron called her his 'Princess
of Parallelograms') and insisted that Ada ,
who was tutored privately, study mathematics too - an unusual education for a
woman.
Perhaps more importantly, the article contained statements
by Ada that
from a modern perspective are visionary. She speculated that the Engine 'might
act upon other things besides number... the Engine might compose elaborate and
scientific pieces of music of any degree of complexity or extent'. The idea of
a machine that could manipulate symbols in accordance with rules and that
number could represent entities other than quantity mark the fundamental
transition from calculation to computation. Ada was the first to explicitly articulate
this notion and in this she appears to have seen further than Babbage. She has
been referred to as 'prophet of the computer age'. Certainly she was the first
to express the potential for computers outside mathematics. In this the tribute
is well-founded.
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