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  1. George Elmer Forsythe (January 8, 1917 – April 9, 1972) was an American computer scientist and numerical analyst who founded and led Stanford University's Computer Science Department. [1] Forsythe came to Stanford in the Mathematics Department in 1959, and served as professor and chairman of the Computer Science department from ...

  2. George Elmer Forsythe (8 de janeiro de 1917 — 9 de abril de 1972 [1]) foi um cientista da computação estadunidense. Livros [ editar | editar código-fonte ] Dynamic Meteorology (with William Gustin and Jörgen Holmboy), John Wiley , New York, 1945, 375pp.

  3. Summary. George Forsythe was a American mathematician and computer scientist who was responsible for the rapid development of computer science. View five larger pictures. Biography. George Forsythe was born into a Quaker family.

  4. George Forsythe andthe Development of Computer Science. byDonald E. Knuth. Thesudden death ofGeorge Forsythe this spring was considered such combinatorial algorithms to be a part of. a serious loss to everyone associated wi computing. h numerical analysis [46, p.7], and he regarded automatic When we recall the many things hecontributed to the ...

  5. George Forsythe was the founder of the Department of Computer Science at Stanford, one of the first independent departments of computer science in the country. Sandra, his wife, overcame gender-related academic adversity to become a force in computer science in her own right.

  6. George Forsythe (1917-1972) George Forsythe was the founder of the Department of Computer Science at Stanford University and an early proponent of the key role that numerical mathematics and computing would play in the scientific and engineering worlds. Biography and Publications. An account of George Forsythe's life: " George Forsythe and the ...

  7. 2007 marks the 50th anniversary of the arrival of George Forsythe at Stanford University. George ushered in a new era of computational mathematics both at Stanford and elsewhere. Over the past 50 years, Stanford has produced a continuous stream of outstanding scholars in computational mathematics. This progeny now inhabits the higher reaches of ...