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  1. Thomas Harold Flowers MBE (22 December 1905 – 28 October 1998) was an English engineer with the British General Post Office. During World War II, Flowers designed and built Colossus, the world's first programmable electronic computer, to help decipher encrypted German messages.

  2. 20 de mar. de 2012 · Thomas Harold Flowers (22 de dezembro de 1905 – Londres, 8 de novembro de 1998), engenheiro inglês inventor do equipamento Colossus, (o primeiro computador eletrônico e digital programável), utilizado pelas forças aliadas durante a II Guerra Mundial para decifrar as comunicações militares alemãs.

  3. 19 de mai. de 2023 · In the annals of computer history, one name often goes unnoticed, overshadowed by more prominent figures like Alan Turing and Charles Babbage. However, Tommy Flowers, an unassuming British engineer and mathematician, played a pivotal role in shaping the digital landscape we know today.

  4. 28 de set. de 2021 · O nome por trás do projeto foi o do engenheiro britânico Thomas Flowers (1905-1998), que bebeu muito do conhecimento de Turing e liderou o projeto do Colossus. Especula-se que o Colossus encurtou o período da guerra em dois anos porque forneceu informações preciosas aos estrategistas militares que permitiram os Aliados terem acesso a ...

  5. 31 de jul. de 2023 · Thomas Harold Flowers is the technical genius who created the worlds second electronic computer (after ABC of Atanasoff) and the world’s first electronic programmable computer—Colossus. Flowers, the son of a bricklayer, was born on December 22, 1905, at 160 Abbott Road in Poplar, London’s East End. He completed evening ...

  6. 9 de ago. de 2018 · Thomas H. Flowers: The hidden story of the Bletchley Park engineer who designed the code-breaking Colossus Computer Architecture: How a metaphor transformed the computing age. It began with an IBM industrial designer named Eliot Noyes.

  7. 7 de out. de 2023 · Thomas (Tommy) Harold Flowers, MBE (22 December 1905 – 28 October 1998) was a British engineer. During World War II Max Newman, Alan Turing, and other great minds at Bletchley Park codebreaking establishment, were already busy decoding messages produced the Enigma device.

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