Before it came to mean laptops, PCs, or even room-sized machines, “computer” was what you called a person who did mathematical calculations for a living. That job was vitally important during World War II. And, like many vital jobs on the homefront, it was turned over to women, so that men could be sent into battle. After Pearl Harbor, the military recruited women to be computers, calculating things like ballistics trajectories in top-secret enclaves at the University of Pennsylvania and the Monroe Army Base in California.
At the time, there weren’t a lot of women with college-level mathematics degrees, and so the calculators included women working on accounting degrees, and even talented high-schoolers. Some of the women chosen to be human computers went on to become the first programmers of the machine-computer ENIAC.
Jean Jennings Bartik was one of the women computers. In 1945, she was a recent graduate of Northwest Missouri State Teachers College, the school’s one math major. She lived on her parents’ farm, refusing the teaching jobs her father suggested, avoiding talk of marrying a farmer and having babies. Bartik was waiting on a job with the military. When a telegram arrived asking her to come right away, she took a late-night train and began new career in Philadelphia.
The war ended in 1945, but within a couple months of arriving in Philadelphia, Bartik was hired to work on a related project — an electronic computer that could do calculations faster than any man or woman. The Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer, created by Penn scientists John Mauchly and J. Presper Eckert Jr., weighed more than 30 tons and contained about 18,000 vacuum tubes. It recognized numbers, added, subtracted, multiplied, divided and a few other basic functions.
Men had built the machine, but Bartik and her colleagues debugged every vacuum tube and learned how to make it work, she said. Early on, they demonstrated to the military brass how the computer worked, with the programmers setting the process into motion and showing how it produced an answer. They handed out its punch cards as souvenirs. They’d taught the massive machine do math that would’ve taken hours by hand. But none of the women programmers was invited to the celebratory dinner that followed. Later, the heard they were thought of as models, placed there to show off the machine.
Everyone, man or woman, should be given credit.
its like she’s a fisherman and your a fish. she has you hooked and there’s nothing you can do but fight and fight, but your still HOOKED and you can’t break free. then she pulls you into her boat and for awhile she marvels at you. she doesn’t cut you up and try to eat you because you are a rare fish. she keeps you on board in a clear glass of water for her to observe until she’s tired of you and she wants something new. she throws you back into the ocean and you’re happy swimming, but cautious because you’ve been hooked before. then you smell something in the water. you search and search and come upon a dangling piece of bait. you’ve had it before. was it worth it? was it worth the struggle against her hook in your lip? you ponder and gaze at the bait. it bekons you and you give in. thinking maybe it’ll be different. but its not and you’re fighting and fighting and the cycle repeats but one day all the fighting will kill your spirit. you well… die from exhaustion from it all.
This came up when I searched scooby doo… sigh the Internet these days.
yo
HI MATT!!!!
snug as a bug ona rug
Richard: damn you must be happy as a bug:)
Myself: Are bugs really happy? (and yes… I’M HAPPY AS A BUG! ARE YOU KIDDING! HAHA)
Richard: haha have you heard of snug as a bug?
Myself: I don’t get that one either.
Myself: Bc if i ever see a bug i’ll crush him like this! Muhahaha e e e hahaha muu a a a!
Richard: awe i like bugs:)
The Beatles 1960s cartoon series. Still miles better than Yellow Submarine, that’s all I gotta say. There are very few, if any “fashion bandits” in that.
haha i love it!!! its so cute!!
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