Three things you'll wish you owned that Claude Shannon invented

The Independent - Tech 

In its time the Google Doodle has celebrated mathematicians such as John Venn, George Boole and Hertha Marks Ayrton - as well codebreaker Alan Turing, the 100th anniversary of whose birth was 23 June 2012. Now it is the turn of Claude Shannon, who worked with Turing on Allied codebreaking during the Second World War - not at Bletchley Park, but in Washington, where Turing had been seconded in 1943 to bring the US up to speed with British cryptanalytic developments. Shannon was four years younger, 26 to Turing's 30. Although Shannon's war-time work was crucial to the Allied effort, he did devote some of his energies to more frivolous projects. In the 1070s, Shannon built the world's first juggling robot, using an Erector Set (the equivalent of a Mecanno set).

Duplicate Docs Excel Report

Title
None found

Similar Docs  Excel Report  more

TitleSimilaritySource
None found