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  1. www.encyclopedia.com › computers-and-computing-biographies › grace-hopperGrace Hopper - Encyclopedia.com

    8 de jun. de 2018 · Grace Hopper. With the longest active military career, Rear Admiral Grace Hopper (1906-1992) was also known as "Amazing Grace" and "Grand Old Lady of Software." She played an instrumental role in the development of the COBOL computer programming language. Grace Hopper, who rose through Navy ranks to become a rear admiral at age eighty-two, is ...

  2. www.encyclopedia.com › computers-and-computing-biographies › grace-murray-hopperGrace Murray Hopper - Encyclopedia.com

    14 de mai. de 2018 · HOPPER, GRACE MURRAY. (b. New York, New York, 9 December 1906, d. Washington, D.C., 1 January 1992), computer sciences, programming languages, COBOL. An admiral who never went to sea, Hopper owed her success in the U.S. Navy, as in civilian life, to her mastery of computers and computing. Entering the field at its very beginnings in the 1940s ...

  3. Grace Brewster Hopper. 1906-1992. American Mathematician and Computer Programmer. G race Hopper developed COBOL, a computer programming language, in the 1950s and her related innovations, such as compilers used for business processes, provided a foundation for more sophisticated computing systems. A computer software pioneer, Hopper encouraged ...

  4. Hopper, Grace Brewster Murray. ( b. 9 December 1906 in New York City; d. 1 January 1992 in Arlington, Virginia), naval officer, mathematician, and computer expert. Hopper was one of three children of Walter Fletcher Murray, an insurance broker, and Mary Campbell Van Home, a homemaker.

  5. Francis R. Mcbride. Grace, J (oseph) Peter, Jr. (b. 25 May 1913 in Manhasset, New York; d. 19 April 1995 in New York City), business executive who transformed a thriving family business into a multinational conglomerate in the course of a career whereby he headed a major U.S. corporation for nearly five decades.

  6. Grace Murray Hopper"> A ship in port is safe, but that is not what ships are built for. —Grace Murray Hopper. A joint project of Harvard University and International Business Machines (IBM), the Mark I was built at the IBM laboratory in Endicott, New York, and moved to the Cruft Lab where it was ready for operations by summer 1944.

  7. That is why two aggressive, ambitious gossip columnists, Louella Parsons and Hedda Hopper, yielded so much power. Their newspaper columns, read at their peak by 75 million every day, continually threatened to expose one world to the other. Louella Parsons seems to have had as many secrets as the tycoons she covered.

  8. Kelly, Grace (1928–1982) American stage and film actress who won an Academy Award, then walked away from Hollywood to marry the prince of Monaco. Name variations: Princess Grace of Monaco; Grace Grimaldi. Born on November 12, 1928, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; died in an automobile crash, age 52, on September 14, 1982; third of four ...

  9. www.encyclopedia.com › arts › news-wires-white-papers-and-booksHopper, Hedda - Encyclopedia.com

    HOPPER, HeddaBorn Elda Furry, 2 May 1885, Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania; died 1 February 1966, Los Angeles, CaliforniaDaughter of David E. and Margaret Miller Furry; married DeWolf Hopper, 1913 (divorced 1922); children: one son Source for information on Hopper, Hedda: American Women Writers: A Critical Reference Guide from Colonial Times to the Present dictionary.

  10. www.encyclopedia.com › reference › encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-mapsHoppe, Willie | Encyclopedia.com

    Hoppe, Willie. Willie Hoppe (William Frederick Hoppe) (hŏp´ē), 1887–1959, American billiards champion, b. Cornwall, N.Y. He practiced billiards from a very early age and gave exhibitions before he won (1906) his first world championship in Paris. Hoppe subsequently won many championships in three-cushion and the intricate balkline forms of ...

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