Moreover, the way the IT profession in developed economies like the UK's is evolving demands a suite of skills that includes - alongside deep enough technical knowledge - business relationship management capabilities, commercial awareness, and team communication. Not all women are rich in these so-called "softer" skills, just as not all men are bereft of them. Nonetheless, the tendencies are usually clear.
So, who was Ada Lovelace, and what did she do? By writing out a method for calculating Bernoulli numbers onCharles Babbage's analytical engine, now on display at the Science Museum in London, Lovelace was the first person to have programmed a computer.
She shared the spirit of scientific enquiry shown by Byron, her father, whose fascination, while at Cambridge, with telescopes and galvanism is well known. Byron's name is synonymous with European romanticism at its most revolutionary. His daughter's collaboration with Charles Babbage on the "thinking machine" puts her at the confluence of two radical phenomena: information technology and female emancipation.
Conceiving Ada(1999) - Lynn Hershman-Leeson
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In this award-winning film which was the first to use "virtual sets," Academy-Award ® winner Tilda Swinton embodies Lady Ada Lovelace, daughter of Romantic poet Lord Byron, and the mathematics genius who developed what became the world's first computer language 100 years before computers were invented. Ada's story is channeled through Emmy (Francesca Faridany), a contemporary computer scientist researching artificial life. By using her own DNA genetic code, Emmy collapses time and is able to communicate directly with Ada. Realizing how parallel their lives are, she embarks on the task of "saving" Ada. In the process, the borders between past and present, virtual and real, blur and Ada and Emmy both recognize the implications their place in time.
This film also features John Perry Barlow, Bruce Sterling and Timothy Leary with music by The Residents.