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INTRODUCTION
1. History of a remarkable
Man Call “Alan Turing”.
2. Study Life.
3. Work life during the world
war 2 period.
4. His achievement after the
world war.
5. His jail life leading to his
dead.
6. A Story video of Alan
Turing
STUDY LIFE
1. Alan Turing was born on
23 June, 1912, in
London.
2. Turing studied
mathematics at
Cambridge University.
and subsequently taught
there, working in the
quantum mechanics.
3. In 1936, Turing went to
Princeton University in
America, returning to
England in 1938
WORK LIFE DURING THE WORLD WAR 2
PERIOD
Enigma
Bombe
1.
He began to work secretly part-time for
the British cryptanalytic department.
Government Code and Cypher School
2.
during world war II he took full-time work at
its headquarters, Bletchley Park.
3.
he played a vital role in deciphering the
messages encrypted by the German Enigma
machine.
4.
German computer Enigma generated a
constantly changing code which was
impossible for people to decipher .
5.
Turing's one of the first steps toward a
digital computer lead in a team that
designed a machine known as a bombe managed to crack Enigma's codes, giving
the Allies the break they desperately
needed in fighting Germany .
6.
He became a well-known and rather
eccentric figure at Bletchley
HIS ACHIEVEMENT AFTER THE WORLD
WAR
1.
After the war, He turned his thoughts to the
development of a machine that would
logically process information.
2.
He worked first for the National Physical
Laboratory (1945-1948).
3.
In 1949 at Manchester University where he
directed the computing laboratory and
developed a body of work that helped to form
basis field of artificial intelligence. which was
later published in 1969. This was one of the
first times the concept of artificial intelligence
was raised
HIS JAIL LIFE LEADING TO HIS
DEAD
1.
Turing was accustomed to being a non-conformist
and felt marginalized because of his
homosexuality.
2.
To avoid prison, he accepted injections of
oestrogen for a year.
3.
In that era, homosexuals were considered a
security risk as they were open to blackmail. He
no longer work for GCHQ.
4.
He committed suicide by taking potassium
cyanide on 7 June, 1954.
5.
official explanation was "moment of mental
imbalance".
6.
His mother claimed he was embarrassed about his
sexuality.
7.
When he died, He left the world a permanent
legacy. Computers have revolutionized so many
aspects of our world that today it is hard to
imagine life without them.
STORY VIDEO OF
ALAN TURING
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XGCs3Q9Friw
referencing
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/people/alan_turing#poochmy6