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  1. 30 de jul. de 2011 · William Newman, son of Professor Newman, recently described the enduring friendship between his parents and Turing: “Max Newman supported Alan Turing and collaborated with him for nearly 20 ...

  2. Abstract. This discussion between Turing, Newman, R. B. Braithwaite, and G. Jefferson was recorded by the BBC on 10 January 1952 and broadcast on BBC Radio on the 14th, and again on the 23rd, of that month. This is the earliest known recorded discussion of artificial intelligence. The anchor man of the discussion is Richard Braithwaite (1900–90).

  3. Turing made contributions to the extra orders added in the Ferranti Mark 1, notably the random number generator. It is also likely that he and Newman influenced the comprehensive set of instructions provided on the Manchester Mark 1 in connection with the double length accumulator, since they required multi-length arithmetic for their Mersenne Primes work.

  4. Donald Michie [147], who himself worked at Bletchley Park contemporaneously with Alan Turing and Max Newman (1897-1984), Turing's mentor at Cambridge in the 1930s [79]).

  5. Maxwell Herman Alexander Newman, known to all his friends as' Max', was born in Chelsea, London on February 7, 1897, and died on February 22, 1984. His family name was originally Neumann, his father having come from Germany. Max changed his name by deed poll in 1916. He went to school in Dulwich from 1904 to 1908 and from there to the City of ...

  6. Turing's life was so short that further events will soon mark the fiftieth anniversary of his death on 7 June 2004. But in that span between 1912 and 1954 Alan Turing did pioneering work, encompassing the foundations of computer science, which still continues to stimulate and inspire. As this volume illustrates, the breadth and depth of Turing ...

  7. Alan Mathison Turing was born on 23 June 1912, at Warrington Lodge, Warrington Avenue, London to Julius Mathison Turing and Ethel Sara Stoney. Julius worked in the Indian Civil Service, so until he retired in 1926 he fostered his children, Alan and John, out to English homes, in particular with the aptly named Wards in St Leonards-on-Sea.