Alan Mathison Turing

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Alan Turing - Alan Mathison Turing (June 23, 1912 – June 7, 1954) was a British mathematician, logician, and cryptographer.

Alan Turing Institute - The Alan Turing Institute was set up in Manchester, England by UMIST and the Victoria University of Manchester and comes under the umbrella of the Manchester Institute for Mathematical Sciences, the research arm of the School of Mathematics in the new University of Manchester. ...

Alan Turing Memorial - The Alan Turing Memorial, situated in the Sackville Park in Manchester, England, is in memory of the father of modern computing. Turing committed suicide in 1954 after being prosecuted by the police because of his (then illegal) homosexuality.

Alan Turing's Unorganized Machines - In a far-sighted 1948 report Alan Turing suggested that the infant human cortex was what he called an unorganized machine1. Turing defined the class of unorganized machines as largely random in their initial construction, but capable of being trained to perform particular tasks.


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Alan Mathison Turing (1912-1954) - ... to helping win World War II, he was persecuted for his homosexuality by his own government, and driven to suicide. Maintained by Turing biographer Andrew Hodges: extensive resources and links, online versions of several long essays on Turing.

Wired Archive: Alan Turing - Stories involving Turing.

Alan Mathison Turing - Undergraduate biographical essay by John M. Kowalik.

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