Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The App Inventor team was led by Hal Abelson [1] and Mark Friedman. [2] In the second half of 2011, Google released the source code, terminated its server, and provided funding to create The MIT Center for Mobile Learning, led by App Inventor creator Hal Abelson and fellow MIT professors Eric Klopfer and Mitchel Resnick. [3]
Harold Abelson (born April 26, 1947) [2] is an American mathematician and computer scientist. He is a professor of computer science and engineering in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), a founding director of both Creative Commons [5] and the Free Software Foundation, [6] creator of the MIT App Inventor platform ...
Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs (SICP) is a computer science textbook by Massachusetts Institute of Technology professors Harold Abelson and Gerald Jay Sussman with Julie Sussman. It is known as the "Wizard Book" in hacker culture. [1]
Dan Bricklin, creator of the original spreadsheet [6] Sergey Brin, co-founder of Google [7] Danny Cohen, Israeli-American Internet pioneer; first to run a visual flight simulator across the ARPANet [8] Robert Fano, Italian-American information theorist [9] Ed Feigenbaum, artificial intelligence, Turing Award (1994) [10] William F. Friedman ...
MIT OpenCourseWare (MIT OCW) is an initiative of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) to publish all of the educational materials from its undergraduate- and graduate-level courses online, freely and openly available to anyone, anywhere.
StarLogo is an agent-based simulation language developed by Mitchel Resnick, Eric Klopfer, and others at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Media Lab and Scheller Teacher Education Program in Massachusetts.
The first version to bear the MicroWorlds name was released in 1993 for MS-DOS and Mac called MicroWorlds Project Builder. Two modules were released to accompany the software called "Math Links" and "Language Arts." [2] [3] MicroWorlds 2.0 was released in 1996 for Windows 95 and in 1998 for Mac.
NetLogo was designed by Uri Wilensky, in the spirit of the programming language Logo, to be "low threshold and no ceiling".It teaches programming concepts using agents in the form of turtles, patches, links and the observer. [2]