Thomas Kurtz, mathematician, 1928-2024 - manbetx20客户端下载
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持manbetx3.0 大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
FT商学院

Thomas Kurtz, mathematician, 1928-2024

His invention of the Basic programming language paved the way for the personal computer revolution

Thomas Kurtz’s insight to tap time-sharing systems for educational purposes was, he said, a ‘completely nutty idea’ at the time

At the start of the 1960s, when most computers occupied an entire room, the world’s programmers could barely fill a baseball stadium. Only a few thousand specialists could wrangle arcane coding languages such as Fortran and Cobol, and the unwieldy mainframes they ran on.

By the mid-1970s, there were millions of programmers. Computing’s first step into the mainstream was driven by the work of Thomas Kurtz, who died this month at the age of 96, and his fellow Dartmouth College professor John Kemeny. In 1964, the pair created a simple, fast and intuitive programming language called Basic. “It was the first effort in the history of computing to try to bring computing . . . to the masses,” he recalled in a 2014 documentary.

“All of us who have written code in the past 60 years can thank Thomas Kurtz,” said Bill Gates, Microsoft’s co-founder, who as a teenager created his first computer program in Basic and launched Microsoft in 1975 with a version of Basic for microcomputers. “In the 1960s, when computers were massive, expensive and only available to scientists, he believed everyone should have access.”

From the start, Kurtz wanted to create a system that even humanities students at Dartmouth could use with just a couple of hours’ instruction. Basic — which stands for Beginner’s All-Purpose Symbolic Instruction Code — replaced the inscrutable commands of other coding languages with ordinary English words such as “LET”, “IF” and “THEN”.

It was developed alongside another innovation by Kemeny and Kurtz called “time sharing”, which allowed several people to use a mainframe computer simultaneously. Together, these ideas paved the way for the personal computer revolution of the 1970s and 80s, as well as the cloud computing industry that followed decades later.

Born in 1928 in the Chicago suburb of Oak Park, Kurtz trained as a mathematician, receiving his PhD from Princeton in 1956. That year, he was hired by Kemeny to teach maths at Dartmouth, where he would stay for nearly 40 years.

When Dartmouth got its own computer in 1959, Kemeny and Kurtz wanted it to be something everyone on campus could use. MIT was already using the concept of time sharing for research: instead of “batch processing” each job in full, time-sharing systems ran multiple jobs for one second at a time. Kurtz’s insight was to tap this for educational purposes, which he said was a “completely nutty idea” at the time.

Dartmouth’s first computer wasn’t capable of running a time-sharing system but Kurtz and Kemeny started hand-coding one, recruiting undergraduates to help. Kurtz’s edict to the students was: “In all cases where there is a choice between simplicity and efficiency, simplicity is chosen.”

If the Dartmouth time-sharing system was the forerunner of today’s operating systems, Basic was its first app. Its brilliance was in its instantaneity: a simple Basic program could produce a response in just a couple of seconds.

The General Electric 225 computer filled the basement of College Hall at Dartmouth. This photo was taken shortly after the first simultaneous execution of two Basic programs in 1964

An early morning test on May 1 1964 proved that both systems worked, when two Basic programs ran simultaneously on Dartmouth’s new General Electric mainframe using time sharing. Kurtz soon hooked it up to teletype machines around campus, which could send messages to the mainframe and then print the responses. Hundreds of students were soon using it and the Dartmouth network was later extended to universities around the US, via telephone lines.

“This notion of remote access, which predominates computing nowadays, aside from PCs . . . Tom was at the forefront of seeing where that was going to go,” says Stephen Garland, who met Kurtz while an undergraduate at Dartmouth and later became a professor there, steering development of the Dartmouth Time-Sharing System and Basic.

Kurtz believed 5mn people already knew how to write Basic by the time Microsoft launched its version for the Altair 8800. Many more versions followed, including by IBM and UK computer-maker Acorn, whose BBC Basic was used in many British schools in the 1980s.

While Kemeny, who died in 1992, has been the better known of the two, Kurtz deserves recognition as an “equal partner”, according to Garland.

The two professors foresaw that computing would be so widespread that universities needed to help their students understand it. “They realised that decisions would have to be made about computer use in society and it was better that large numbers of people understood what computing was,” said Garland, “so they were not taken in by jargon or the idea that the computer was always right.”

版权声明:本文版权归manbetx20客户端下载 所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

特朗普上台能否解决加拿大manbetx20客户端下载 疲软问题?

manbetx20客户端下载 学家表示,来自美国的冲击可能会使该国manbetx20客户端下载 摆脱麻木状态。

对在线教育集团的投资在AI兴起后急剧下降

教育科技公司融资创十年新低,该行业在疫情结束后难以维持订户增长。

“人质状态”:韩国在反对特朗普关税的斗争中陷入瘫痪

韩国企业担心,首尔的政治真空将使他们很容易受到关税和补贴损失的影响。

Meta将为雷朋眼镜添加显示屏,智能眼镜竞赛愈演愈烈

这家社交媒体集团加快了与苹果和谷歌竞争“增强现实”头显的计划。

美国前司法部负责人认为下届政府不会“彻底改变反垄断政策“

拜登政府的首席执行管预测,公众的要求将使其继任者不会完全放弃其强硬做法。

特朗普任命鲍威尔批评人士担任最高manbetx20客户端下载 职务

特朗普任命manbetx20客户端下载 学家斯蒂芬•米兰担任manbetx20客户端下载 顾问委员会主席,并任命亿万富翁投资者斯蒂芬•费恩伯格担任国防部副部长。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×