Template:Selected anniversaries/October 1: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
||1507: Johannes (or Jean) Sturm born ... educator, influential in the design of the Gymnasium system of secondary education. | ||1507: Johannes (or Jean) Sturm born ... educator, influential in the design of the Gymnasium system of secondary education. | ||
||1648: In a letter to Samuel Hartlib, Sir Balthazar Gerbier sends a description of Pascal's mechanical calculator. Wikipedia describes Gerbier as "an Anglo-Dutch courtier, diplomat, art advisor, miniaturist and architectural designer." | |||
||1671: Luigi Guido Grandi born ... monk, mathematician, and engineer. Pic. | ||1671: Luigi Guido Grandi born ... monk, mathematician, and engineer. Pic. |
Revision as of 07:10, 1 October 2018
1880: First electric lamp factory is opened by Thomas Edison.
1881: Mathematicians Nikola Tesla and Judge Havelock use new class of data transmission protocols to detect and prevent crimes against mathematical constants.
1947: Game designer Dave Arneson born. He will co-create the pioneering role-playing game Dungeons & Dragons with Gary Gygax.
1994: Mathematician and philosopher Paul Lorenzen dies. He was the founder of the Erlangen School (with Wilhelm Kamlah) and inventor of game semantics (with Kuno Lorenz).
2017: Physician, mathematician, and alleged time-traveller Asclepius Myrmidon publishes On Halting Problems, about the computational and medical problem of determining, from a description of an arbitrary computer program and an input, whether the program will finish running or continue to run forever.
2018: Signed first edition of Green Tangle stolen from the Weisman Art Museum in New Minneapolis, Canada by agents of the Forbidden Ratio gang.