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  1. cientista de computação, matemático, professor universitário. Prêmios. Prêmio Turing (1981), Prêmio Pioneiro da Computação (1996) Empregador (a) IBM. Obras destacadas. Autômato Celular de Codd, A relational model of data for large shared data banks. Causa da morte. enfarte agudo do miocárdio.

  2. Edgar Frank "Ted" Codd (19 August 1923 – 18 April 2003) was an English computer scientist who, while working for IBM, invented the relational model for database management, the theoretical basis for relational databases and relational database management systems.

  3. www.ibm.com › history › edgar-coddEdgar F. Codd | IBM

    Edgar F. “TedCodd was a mathematician and computer scientist best known for his trailblazing work on the relational model that led to the multibillion-dollar database industry. The revolutionary power of relational databases is taken for granted today, but in 1970 the concept was merely theoretical. That’s when Codd, an Oxford-educated ...

  4. Edgar Frank Codd (Figura 3) propõe o modelo de dados relacional, que se tornou um marco em como pensar em banco de dados. Ele desconectou a estrutura lógica do banco de dados do método de armazenamento físico. Este sistema se tornou padrão desde então. Figura 3.

  5. 10 de mai. de 2024 · Edgar Frank Codd (born August 19, 1923, Portland, Dorset, England—died April 18, 2003, Williams Island, Florida, U.S.) was a British-born American computer scientist and mathematician who devised the “ relational ” data model, which led to the creation of the relational database, a standard method of retrieving and storing ...

  6. Introdução. As Doze regras de Codd são um conjunto de treze regras (enumeradas de zero a doze) propostas por Edgar F. Codd, um contumaz do modelo relacional para banco de dados, designado para definir o que é necessário para que um sistema de gerenciamento de banco de dados para ser considerado relacional. [ 1][ 2] Elas são às ...

  7. Codds computing career began in 1949, when he joined IBM in New York City as a programming mathematician, developing programs for the Selective Sequence Electronic Calculator (IBM’s first electronic—or at least electromechanical—computer, a huge and noisy vacuum tube machine).