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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Robin_MilnerRobin Milner - Wikipedia

    Milner was born in Yealmpton, near Plymouth, England into a military family. He gained a King's Scholarship to Eton College in 1947, and was awarded the Tomline Prize (the highest prize in Mathematics at Eton) in 1952. Subsequently, he served in the Royal Engineers, attaining the rank of Second Lieutenant. He then enrolled at King's College ...

    • None, as Milner never did a PhD
  2. Nacionalidade. Britânico. Prêmios. Prêmio Turing (1991), Prêmio Friedrich L. Bauer (1994) Campo (s) Ciência da computação. Arthur John Robin Gorell Milner ( Plymouth, 13 de janeiro de 1934) é um informático britânico . Foi eleito membro da Royal Society em 1988 .

  3. Learn about Robin Milner's recent work on computation theory and informatics, including ubiquitous computing and bigraphs. He is a professor at Cambridge and Edinburgh, and a pioneer of the Laboratory for Foundations of Computer Science.

  4. 1 de mai. de 2024 · Robin Milner (born Jan. 13, 1934, Yealmpton, Devon, Eng.—died March 20, 2010, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire) was an English computer scientist and winner of the 1991 A.M. Turing Award, the highest honour in computer science, for his work with automatic theorem provers, the ML computer programming language, and a general theory of ...

    • William L. Hosch
  5. The calculus of communicating systems ( CCS) is a process calculus introduced by Robin Milner around 1980 and the title of a book describing the calculus. Its actions model indivisible communications between exactly two participants. The formal language includes primitives for describing parallel composition, choice between actions ...

  6. 1 de jun. de 2010 · CCS was succeeded by a more general theory of concurrency called pi calculus, which incorporated dynamic generation, and bigraphs, a theory of ubiquitous computing. For his work on LCF, ML, and CCS, Milner received the ACM A.M. Turing Award in 1991.

  7. Working in challenging areas of computer science for twenty years, Robin Milner has established an international reputation for three distinct achievements, each of which has had a marked, important, and widespread effect on both the theory and practice of computer science.