Grace Hopper

Overview

Grace Murray Hopper was an American computer scientist, mathematician, and US Navy rear admiral who demonstrated how everyday languages could be converted into code that computers could understand. COBOL, the mainframe programming language behind $3T in daily transactions worldwide, originated from a language created by Hopper, the first female individual recipient of the National Medal of Technology.

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  • Grace Hopper was inspired to join the armed forces after the attack on Pearl Harbor

    Despite being too old to enlist and weighing below the required minimum to serve, Hopper was granted an exemption and assigned to work on the first electromechanical computer produced in the US. She and her team spent three months using the device to solve equations needed to design the implosion mechanism for the atomic bomb.

  • FLOW-MATIC was the first programming language resembling the English language

    As part of the team working on UNIVAC—the first commercially produced electronic digital computer in the US—Grace Hopper helped develop the system that enabled nonprogrammers and businesspeople without a strong mathematics background to use the machine effectively, thereby enhancing the computer's commercial viability.

  • Grace Hopper described serving in the US Navy as the highest award she received

    Despite retiring from the US Naval Reserve in 1966 at 60, as stipulated by Navy regulations, Hopper was repeatedly recalled for her pioneering expertise in computer science. By 1983, three years before her final retirement, she would give lectures about 200 days a year to computer scientists at military bases, college campuses, and businesses on behalf of the Navy.

  • Watch Grace Hopper's appearance on the 'Late Show with David Letterman'

    During this comedic interview, Hopper describes her 43.5 years in the Navy, an anecdote about when President Reagan promoted her, and provides a visual aid to explain the transmission of information at the nanosecond scale via electricity.

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