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Regarding Programmers And Web Development Groups |
| WITI - Hall Of Fame - Web Development. The first programmers started out as "Computers." This was the name given by the Army to a group of over 80 women working at the University of Pennsylvania during World War II calculating ballistics trajectories - complex differential equations - by hand. When the Army agreed to fund an experimental project, the first all-electronic digital computer, six "Computers" were selected in 1945 to be its first programmers. They were Kathleen McNulty Mauchly Antonelli, Jean Jennings Bartik, Frances Snyder Holberton, Marlyn Wescoff Meltzer, Frances Bilas Spence and Ruth Lichterman Teitelbaum.
The ENIAC was the first all-electronic digital computer, a machine of approximately 18,000 vacuum tubes and forty black 8-foot panels. Because the ENIAC project was classified, the programmers were denied access to the machine they were supposed to tame into usefulness until they received their security clearances. As the first programmers, they had no programming manuals or courses, only the logical diagrams to help them figure out how to make the ENIAC work.
They had none of the programming tools of today. Instead, the programmers had to physically program the ballistics program by using the 3000 switches and dozens of cables and digit trays to physically route the data and program pulses through the machine. Therefore, the description for the first programming job might have read: "Requires physical effort, mental creativity, innovative spirit, and a high degree of patience."
On February 15, 1946, the ENIAC Computer was unveiled to the public and press. It ran the ballistics trajectory programmed by the six programmers and captured the world's imagination.
WITI - Hall of Fame
WITI HALL OF FAME
The ENIAC Programmers
Kathleen McNulty Mauchly Antonelli, Jean Jennings Bartik, Frances Snyder Holberton, Marlyn Wescoff Meltzer, Frances Bilas Spence and Ruth Lichterman Teitelbaum
(profiles at the time of induction in 1997)
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| 10 Types Of Programmers You'll Encounter In The Field | 10 Things
| TechRepublic.Com - Web Development. 10 types of programmers you'll encounter in the field | 10 Things
10 types of programmers you'll encounter in the field
Programmers enjoy a reputation for being peculiar people. In fact, even within the development community, there are certain programmer archetypes that other programmers find strange. Here are 10 types of programmers you are likely to run across. Can you think of any more?
| TechRepublic.com
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Date : November 5th, 2007
Author : Justin James
Category : 10 things , Programming and development
Tags: Team , Problem , Programmer , Programming , Martyr , Fanboy , Vince , Ninja , Theoretician , Code Cowboy
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Note: This information is also available as a PDF download .
#1: Gandalf
This programmer type looks like a short-list candidate to play Gandalf in The Lord of the Rings . He (or even she!) has a beard halfway to his knees, a goofy looking hat, and may wear a cape or a cloak in the winter. Luckily for the team, this person is just as adept at working magic as Gandalf. Unluckily for the team, they will need to endure hours of stories from Gandalf about how he or she to walk uphill both ways in the snow to drop off the punch cards at the computer room. The Gandalf type is your heaviest hitter, but you try to leave them in the rear and call them up only in times of desperation.
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Online portal of Internet Technology Architecture and Development: Application Development Trends Delivers Strategic And Tactical Information About Emerging Software Trends And Technology To IT Technical Management. Although Simple Programs Can Be Written In A Few Hours, Programs That Use Complex Mathematical Formulas Whose Solutions Can Only Be Approximated Or That Draw Data From Many Existing Systems May Require More Than A Year Of Work. In Most Cases, Several Programmers Work Together As A Team Under A Senior Programmer’s Supervision.
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Website about Software Developers - WITI's Web site provides visitors with news, career opportunities, articles and info to empower women through technology.
Technologies. * J2EE: EJB, JSP, Servlets, JSF, JSTL, JCA, JMS, JTA, JNDI, JDBC, JMX, RMI, etc. * Frameworks: Struts, Hibernate, JPA, iBATIS, JBoss AOP, Spring, JSF, AJAX, GWT, YUI, Flex/Flash, JUnit, and Jakarta common libraries. * Integration: Web Services on Axis and WebMethods; as well as the Web Service Standards such as SOAP, WSDL and UDDI.
* Also experience with .NET and other major Microsoft technologies.
Languages: * JAVA: J2SE, J2EE, EJB, JSP, Servlets, JDBC, JFC/Swing, Networking, Beans, RMI, CORBA, Security, etc. * C/C++: MFC, DBLIB, Internet Services, DAO, ODBC, DLL; gcc, ANSI C, POSIX, STD, TCP Socket, etc. * HTML, DHTML, JavaScript, ActionScript, PHP, Perl, XML, XSLT. * Visual Basic, C#. * As well as Fortran, Turbo Pascal and Assembler. * UML: Enterprise Architect, Rational Rose, Together, Magic Draw, etc.
EIS, Servers, databases: * Application Servers: JBoss, WebSphere, WebLogic, Tomcat and Oracle Application Server; * Web Servers: Apache HTTP web server and MS IIS. * SAP/R3 * ORACLE: PL/SQL, Pro*C/C++, Oracle Developer, Inter Media/Text, Replication, Oracle AS, OCI, DBA. * MySQL: DBA, Clustering * MSSQL: Transact-SQL, DBLIB, DBA * DB2 UDB: SQL PL, DBA * Also MS Access, Sybase, Oracle Power Object and Clipper..
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