Computer Science Superheroes

Video edited on Kapwing

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Vint Cerf is known as one founders of the Internet. He helped build how the Internet is framed, and he helped design TCP/IP protocols back in 1973. He first started to build TCP/IP protocols to use a pack-switching and connect a group of computers. These protocols made possible Wi-Fi, the World Wide Web, and the Ethernet. He became president of an organization that operates the DNS systems called the ICANN. The Internet Society was also co-founded by Vint Cerf. He also recieved the ACM Alan Turing Award in 2004. He serves now since 2005, as the vice president of Google, and he works to have new Internet-based products and services.

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In 1945, Alan Turing went to the team National Physics Labrotary in London to help build the first electronic, program-stored, digital computer. Even though the team lost the race, according to Britanica, it states that Turing made the first specification for a "electronic stored-program based all-purpose digital computer." Turing also envisioned something called the Turing machine, which can process instructions on tapes of paper and produce an output. Alan Turing is also recognized for helping to crack the German's Enigma which created their code. He made a machine called the Bombe, that deciphered the Enigma, and this gave an edge to the allies to help win the war. He also made the Turing Test. The Turing Test verified whether something has artifical intelligence and could think. This is when a person asks another person and a machine a set of questions. The person does not know who is machine or human. At the end, the person guesses who is human and if the person guesses wrong, the machine passed the Turing Test. The greatest award a person can recieve in computer science is the Alan Turing Award, named after him.

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