Sentences with phrase «grace hopper»

Grace Hopper Aluminum Geek Cuff Bracelet - Women Computer Pioneer - Women of Science - Computer Science Jewelry
Grace Hopper Last week, I received a resume for review and it was bad enough to make me write this post.
ETHICAL CHALLENGES OF SECURING CLIENT DATA In 1946, computer pioneer Grace Hopper was busy working as a programmer on one of the world's early supercomputers: Harvard's Mark II back when each computer was the size of an entire room.
I'll keep my fingers crossed that we will see all of them soon as part of the ongoing, never - ending «She Persisted» series: Ada Lovelace, Louise Bourgeois, Bob Bland, Patti Smith, Hypatia, Billie Holiday, Rebecca Solnit, Grace Hopper, Maya Angelou, Mary Robinson, Mutter Teresa, Marie Curie, Anne Frank, Helen Keller, Rosa Parks, Jane Goodall, Tracy Chapman, Patrisse Cullors, Sojourner Truth...
Artist and educator Faith Ringgold will design the new Grace Hopper College dining hall windows, the college's Window Commission Committee announced on Feb. 15.
Grace Hopper made amazing contributions to the field of computer science that helped develop computers as we use them today.
This entry in the Major Women in Science series profiles nine women who became movers and shakers in the field of engineering, including Grace Hopper, an early computer engineer who also created computer languages.
It then focuses on three women engineers: pioneer Grace Hopper; Shaundra Bryant Daily, an African American electrical engineer who studied affective computing; and Jean Yang, who emigrated from China and became a computer scientist.
With a year filled of new experiences he is often reminded of a quote from Rear Admiral Grace Hopper who said, «A ship in port is safe, but that's not what it's built for.»
Including Grace Hopper, Ada Lovelace, Hypatia, Sophie Germaine, Hedy Lamarr, and Marie Curie.
I am a sophomore in Grace Hopper College and a Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Major.
Obama also awarded two late luminaries: Grace Hopper, known as «the first lady of software,» who died in 1992, and Elouise Cobell, a tribal activist who advocated for Native Americans, who died in 2011.
As the Grace Hopper Celebration approaches, it's a good time for the small group of leaders across the tech industry to pause and evaluate if they are doing enough (and doing it systematically) to effect real change.
This week, the Grace Hopper Celebration for Women in Computing will come to Arizona, for the 20th anniversary of the conference designed to connect, inspire and guide women in computing.
We're Grace Hopper and Katherine Johnson and Sally Ride.
The author of Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead (Knopf, March 2013) and founder of LeanIn.org, Sandberg spoke this morning at the Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing conference in Minneapolis.
Bug If you have referred to a tech problem as a bug, you can thank pioneers including Thomas Edison and U.S. Navy Rear Admiral Grace Hopper.
OK, sure, not everyone will recognize your costume right off the bat, but that's even more reason to consider dressing as Grace Hopper or Katherine Johnson.
One was Lt. Grace Hopper, who helped program the Harvard Mark I computer in the early 1940s.
Around the same time that Grace Hopper was doing so at Harvard, the women of ENIAC were developing the use of subroutines.
We intentionally engage with communities such as Women Who Code, Grace Hopper and Lesbians Who Tech to build relationships with talent who might otherwise not be familiar with our company.

Not exact matches

A year after gracing the cover of Life magazine, Dennis Hopper was now an outcast in Hollywood.
Dennis Hopper, Joe Strummer, Grace Jones and Courtney Love all team up for 1980s spaghetti western from director Alex Cox.
James Ellroy, Perfidia Stephen Rebello, Alfred Hitchcock and the Making of Psycho Stephen Tobolowsky, The Dangerous Animals Club Jennifer Grant, Good Stuff: A Reminiscence of My Father, Cary Grant Piper Laurie, Learning to Live Out Loud John Grisham, Bleachers James Earl Jones, Voices and Silences Henry Bromell, Panic Howard A. Rodman, Savage Grace Fay Wray, On the Other Hand Betty Comden, Off Stage Budd Boetticher, When in Disgrace Michael Powell, A Life in Movies Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnston, Too Funny For Words Stephen Rebello and Edward Margulies, Bad Movies We Love John Waters, Trash Trilogy and The Obsessions of John Waters Louis Sacher, Holes Leonard Maltin, Leonard Maltin's Movie & Video Guide Richard Condon, The Manchurian Candidate Jack Palance, The Forest of Love Roger Ebert, Ebert's Little Movie Glossary Terry Jones, Nicobobinus and The Fly - By - Night Bernie Brillstein, The Little Stuff Matters Most Mia Farrow, What Falls Away Andre Dubus III, House of Sand and Fog John Boyne, The Boy in the Striped Pajamas Dennis Hopper, Out of the Sixties James Stewart, Jimmy Stewart and His Poems Mark Frost, The Greatest Game Ever Played Sam Staggs, Born to be Hurt: The Untold Story of Imitation of Life
As the story goes, pioneer computer programmer Admiral Grace Murray Hopper coined the phrase in the early 1940s, when her computer crashed.
Just as COBOL is more important to computing that Grace Murry Hopper, so are games more important to gaming than Phil Fish.
Artists in the Whitney's permanent collection include: Josef Albers, Thomas Hart Benton, Louise Bourgeois, Charles Burchfield, Dan Christensen, Ronald Davis, Stuart Davis, Richard Diebenkorn, Arthur Dove, William Eggleston, Helen Frankenthaler, Arshile Gorky, Grace Hartigan, Marsden Hartley, Robert Henri, Eva Hesse, Hans Hofmann, Edward Hopper, Jasper Johns, Franz Kline, Willem de Kooning, Lee Krasner, Ronnie Landfield, John Marin, Robert Motherwell, Louise Nevelson, Barnett Newman, Kenneth Noland, Jackson Pollock, Robert Rauschenberg, Man Ray, Morgan Russell, Mark Rothko, Cindy Sherman, Andy Warhol, and others.
Black Brook 18 radiates like an electric Rothko; Untitled Landscape I is like the largest folk painting ever made, and as magical; Untitled Cityscape 5 combines the mysteries of Goya's black paintings and Hopper's solitude; and Snow Scene 2 shows Katz embodying the state of grace that poet Wallace Stevens called «a mind of winter.»
Starring Grace Kelly and a wheelchair - bound James Stewart as a pair of accidental peeping Toms, Alfred Hitchcock's suspense classic takes on one of Edward Hopper's more ominous themes: looking through a window into the private, often sinister world next door.
Artists represented include Josef Albers, Joe Andoe, Donald Baechler, Thomas Hart Benton, Lucile Blanch, Louise Bourgeois, Charles Burchfield, Alexander Calder, Ching Ho Cheng, Dan Christensen, Greg Colson, Ronald Davis, Stuart Davis, Richard Diebenkorn, Arthur Dove, William Eggleston, Helen Frankenthaler, Arshile Gorky, Keith Haring, Grace Hartigan, Marsden Hartley, Robert Henri, Carmen Herrera, Eva Hesse, Hans Hofmann, Edward Hopper, Jasper Johns, Corita Kent, Franz Kline, Terence Koh, Willem de Kooning, Lee Krasner, Ronnie Landfield, John Marin, Knox Martin, John McCracken, John McLaughlin, Robert Motherwell, Bruce Nauman, Louise Nevelson, Barnett Newman, Kenneth Noland, Paul Pfeiffer, Jackson Pollock, Larry Poons, Maurice Prendergast, Kenneth Price, Robert Rauschenberg, Man Ray, Mark Rothko, Morgan Russell, Albert Pinkham Ryder, Cindy Sherman, John Sloan, Frank Stella, Andy Warhol, and hundreds of others.
Also estimated and designed fabrication drawings of a new dust hopper system for a W.R. Grace plant.
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