Adele Katz Goldstine: Difference between revisions

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Katz Goldstine died in 1964.
Katz Goldstine died in 1964.


[[Category:Computers and information processing|Katz]] [[Category:General topics for engineers|Katz]] [[Category:Mathematics|Katz]]
[[Category:Computers and information processing|Katz]] [[Category:Scientific tools and discoveries|Katz]] [[Category:Mathematics|Katz]]


[[Category:Mathematics]]
[[Category:Mathematics]]

Revision as of 13:34, 16 May 2012

Adele Katz Goldstine

Adele Katz was born in New York City in 1920. She attended Hunter College and received her masters at the University of Michigan, becoming a mathematician. She married Herman Heine Goldstine – who was involved in the early development of computers – in 1941.

At the Moore School of Electrical Engineering in Philadelphia, a group known as the ENIAC girls was programming the first general-purpose electronic computer, which Katz Goldstine joined in 1942. She was the first programmer for ENIAC, as well as writing its documentation and operating manual.

Katz Goldstine died in 1964.