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Examples
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Liskov is only the second woman to win the Turing award.
Barbara Liskov wins the 2008 Turing Award Peggy 2009
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Women in Science: Barbara Liskov wins the 2008 Turing Award skip to main | skip to sidebar
Barbara Liskov wins the 2008 Turing Award Peggy 2009
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Open Objects: An easy candidate for Ada Lovelace Day - Barbara Liskov, winner of the 2008 Turing Award skip to main | skip to sidebar
An easy candidate for Ada Lovelace Day - Barbara Liskov, winner of the 2008 Turing Award Mia 2009
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The first woman to be awarded a Ph.D. from a Computer Science department (in 1968 from Stanford University), Liskov revolutionized the programming field with groundbreaking research that underpins virtually every modern computer application for both consumers and businesses.
Archive 2009-03-01 Mia 2009
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The first woman to be awarded a Ph.D. from a Computer Science department (in 1968 from Stanford University), Liskov revolutionized the programming field with groundbreaking research that underpins virtually every modern computer application for both consumers and businesses.
An easy candidate for Ada Lovelace Day - Barbara Liskov, winner of the 2008 Turing Award Mia 2009
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The award cites Liskov for her foundational innovations to designing and building the pervasive computer system designs that power daily life.
Archive 2009-03-01 Mia 2009
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She figured out what she, in her book “Program Development in Java”, modestly calls “the substitution principle”, but everyone else in the world calls “the Liskov substitution principle”.
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In particular, Liskov developed two programming languages, CLU in the 1970s and Argus in the 1980s, that formed the underpinnings for languages like Java and C++, commonly used to write software applications for personal computers and the Internet.
Barbara Liskov wins the 2008 Turing Award Peggy 2009
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The award cites Liskov for her foundational innovations to designing and building the pervasive computer system designs that power daily life.
An easy candidate for Ada Lovelace Day - Barbara Liskov, winner of the 2008 Turing Award Mia 2009
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Liskov was instrumental in the development of computer languages that allowed data abstraction, which is fundamental to many programs that we all use today.
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