Programming Invented by Women – Forgotten By History

Long before computers fit on desks—or in pockets—“computers” were people. During World War II, six brilliant women were recruited to program ENIAC, the world’s first electronic computer. With no manuals, no programming languages, and no precedent, they invented the very idea of programming—teaching a machine how to think step by step. These women—Kathleen McNulty, Jean Jennings Bartik, Betty Snyder Holberton, Marlyn Wescoff Meltzer, Ruth Lichterman Teitelbaum, and Frances Bilas Spence—translated human problems into machine logic by hand-wiring panels and switches. They pioneered debugging, optimization, and reusable routines decades before the field had names for them. When

Steve Jobs – The College Dropout Who Changed the World.

Did You Know – Who Was The College Dropout Who Changed the World. Welcome back to Did You Know — where untold stories become unforgettable.  Today, we’re diving into the life of a young man who walked away from college, stared down failure, and rewrote the rules of innovation. His name? Steve Jobs. You may know him as the co-founder of Apple — but the road he took to get there was anything but straight. Born in 1955 and adopted by Paul and Clara Jobs in California, Steve showed early